Sentences with phrase «of a paper describing the work published»

«We believe members of the astronomical community could greatly benefit in their exoplanet hunting and characterization studies with this new laser frequency comb instrument,» says Xu Yi, a graduate student in Vahala's lab and the lead author of a paper describing the work published in the January 27, 2016, issue of the journal Nature Communications.

Not exact matches

A paper describing the work will be published this spring in the Journal of Computational Biology.
The research team from the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology headed by Professor Susanne Mandrup are publishing a paper entitled «Browning of human adipocytes requires KLF11 and reprogramming of PPAR super-enhancers» in the January 1 edition of the scientific journal Genes & Development that describes their results from working with «brite» fat cells.
The work was described in a paper, «High - temperature performance of MoS2 thin - film transistors: Direct current and pulse current - voltage characteristics,» that was just published in the Journal of Applied Physics.
He is lead author on a paper describing the work, published June 27 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
«It sounds like magic but the idea of non-line-of-sight imaging is actually feasible,» said Gordon Wetzstein, assistant professor of electrical engineering and senior author of the paper describing this work, published March 5 in Nature.
Llinás is the leader of an international team of scientists whose paper describing their research will be published in the journal Nature on the Advance Online Publication website, www.nature.com on 23 February 2014 along with a second paper, which describes related work led by Andy Waters (University of Glasgow) and Oliver Billker (Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute).
The work is described in a paper published online this week by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Price is first author on a paper describing the work, published April 2 in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Now, ScienceInsider has learned that some of the labs involved in producing the two papers describing the work had not attempted to reproduce the technique before the papers were published.
The work described in the new paperpublished December 8, 2017, in Science — was led by three young UCSF researchers: Tomasz Nowakowski, PhD, an assistant professor of anatomy; Alex Pollen, PhD, an assistant professor of neurology; and Aparna Bhaduri, PhD, when all three were post-doctoral researchers in the UCSF lab of Arnold Kriegstein, MD, PhD, the new paper's senior author.
In their paper published in Nature the physicists from the University's College of Science, working with an international collaborative team at CERN, describe the first observation of spectral line shapes in antihydrogen, the antimatter equivalent of hydrogen.
The theory work, described in a paper recently published as an Editor's Suggestion in Physical Review Letters (PRL), identifies key patterns that would be proof of the existence of a so - called «critical point» in the transition among different phases of nuclear matter.
In my seminars, I often describe an accomplishment using «we» to show the members of my academic audience how little it does to help their cases: «In the Smith lab, we do work in the blah - blah field, and we've published, in several high - impact journals, a series of papers showing that blah - blah and blah - blah are interrelated.»
To do this, as they describe in Applied Physics Letters, from AIP Publishing, the team developed an approach to nondestructively identify and quantify the concentration of light - absorbing molecules known as chromophores in ancient paper, the culprit behind the «yellowing» of the cellulose within ancient documents and works of art.
The work described in this article will be published in a paper titled «In situ modeling of multimodal floral cues attracting wild pollinators across environments,» in the journal PNAS.
Eduard Rusu, a postdoctoral researcher at UC Davis, is first author on one of five papers describing the work, due to be published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
Published on behalf of the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (SETAC), Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry is multidisciplinary in scope and publishes papers describing original experimental or theoretical work that significantly advances understanding in the area of environmental toxicology, environmental chemistry and hazard or risk assessment.
«The complete surprise to us was that although most forms of PKC make inflammation worse, PKC - delta happens to be the opposite, a natural protective mechanism,» says George King, M.D., Joslin Chief Scientific Officer and corresponding author on a paper describing the work published in the journal Circulation Research.
The work described in the new paperpublished Dec. 8, 2017, in Science — was led by three young UCSF researchers: Tomasz Nowakowski, PhD, an assistant professor of anatomy; Alex Pollen, PhD, an assistant professor of neurology; and Aparna Bhaduri, PhD, when all three were post-doctoral researchers in the UCSF lab of Arnold Kriegstein, MD, PhD, the new paper's senior author.
Contributions from scientists working in all areas of NMR, ESR and NQR are invited, and papers describing applications in all branches of chemistry, structural biology and materials chemistry are published.
In a paper being published online today in Neuron, Gladstone Investigator Anatol Kreitzer, PhD, and Talia Lerner, PhD, who worked at Gladstone while completing her graduate studies at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), describe how a protein called RGS4 normally helps regulate the activity of neurons in the striatum — the part of the brain that controls movement.
A paper describing the work, «A Radiographic Study on the Utility of Cranial Vault Outlines for Positive Identifications,» is published online in the Journal of Forensic Sciences.
Shreejoy J. Tripathy, who worked in Urban's lab when he was a graduate student in the joint Carnegie Mellon / University of Pittsburgh Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition (CNBC) Program in Neural Computation, selected more than 10,000 published papers that contained physiological data describing how neurons responded to various inputs.
Robert Motherwell: Early Collages, published to accompany an exhibition devoted exclusively to Motherwell's works on paper from the 1940s and early 1950s, reexamines the origins of the artist's style and his revelatory encounter with the papier collé technique that he described in 1944 as «the greatest of our discoveries.»
Last year, the LSUC's Working Group on ABS published a discussion paper describing four possible models for the delivery of legal services in Ontario, and five key areas to consider when evaluating the viability of these.
A paper describing the work was recently published in the Journal of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology.
In a new research paper published this week, MIT engineers describe how they were able to devise a system wherein wireless routers at a mass gathering can more seamlessly work together and, in turn, reduce the incidence of interference and inadvertently throttled Internet access.
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