Most importantly, the two retrieval measures offered converging evidence regarding the direction of maternal preference, both indicating preferential maternal care toward home - staying pups (see also Fig. 4 and Supporting Discussion: Variables Influencing Maternal Care, which are published as supporting information
on the PNAS web site).
From reports of test subjects, this study produced an interesting «heat map» of the location of sensations associated with various basic emotions, which you can see
on the PNAS site via the link above — or by clicking on the hot body image accompanying the story text.
I have posted
on the PNAS paper on my weblog — Comments
On The PNAS Article «Expert Credibility In Climate Change» By Anderegg Et Al 2010 [http://pielkeclimatesci.wordpress.com/2010/06/21/comments-on-the-pnas-article-expert-credibility-in-climate-change-by-anderegg-et-al-2010/]
Re: david watt (Feb 2 03:56), also by Study: trees are growing faster because of climate change USA Today — citing Smithsonian Environmental Research Center Forests are growing faster, climate change appears to driving accelerated growth based
on a PNAS paper by Parker and McMahon Feb. 1 to be posted.
IMO, your limited critique of Inhofe's list of 17 is in stark contrast with your comments to date
on the PNAS paper.
Finally, as noted
on the PNAS website, papers that are «communicated» (or «contributed», yet another possibility) by a PNAS Editorial Board Member are * also * required to be reviewed.
Reviews must be submitted
on the PNAS review form, and the identity of the referees must not be revealed to the authors.
Here's what I see
on PNAS concerning Anderegg's paper:
Chambers» co-authors
on the PNAS paper were Alan Di Vittorio of Berkeley Lab and Robinson Negron - Juarez, Daniel Marra, Joerg Tews, Dar Roberts, Gabriel Ribeiro, Susan Trumbore and Niro Higuchi of other institutions, including INPA, Brazil; Tulane University, USA; Noreca Consulting Inc, Canada; the University of California at Santa Barbara, USA; and the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, Germany.
If you gave a quiz on this to the all the scientists
on the PNAS list (the group that is most commonly recognized as climate scientists, and i suspect that you do not see tsonis, swanson, weiss on this list), a substantial number would not pass it.
I did not see the code or data
on the PNAS site (aside from the supplemental), although I'll admit I'm not completely familiar with PNAS.
To address the possibility that OspC is required for immune evasion, we inoculated severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice in parallel with WT, ospC mutant, and complemented clones (Table 4, which is published as supporting information
on the PNAS web site).
In an idle moment David Korasick, a graduate fellow in the Strader and Jez labs and first author
on the PNAS article, did a back - of - the - envelope calculation to put a number on the complexity of the system they were trying to understand.
Other authors
on the PNAS «atlas» study include past or present members of the Ansari lab, members of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and researchers at the Morgridge Institute for Research.
«This work shows that dendritic spines, which are sub-micrometer compartments within individual neurons, are the prime candidates for the initial tag of transient, millisecond synaptic activity that eventually orchestrates memory traces in the brain lasting tens of years,» said Shahid Khan, senior scientist at the Molecular Biology Consortium at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and a co-author
on the PNAS paper.
Not exact matches
The large 5 - year study, published
on September 13, 2011 by
PNAS, found that a new dad's testosterone levels fall sharply (34 %) when bringing home the baby.
The New York Times reported
on a study by
PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences) describes how human milk sugars protect and coat the newborn's digestive tract.
[BOX 1] Annual Meeting, 1978 Annual Meeting, Denver, 1977
PNAS - Annual Meeting, Boston, 1976 OOS: Panel
on Native American Scientists
PNAS Panel Meeting, May 17, 1976 Washington Amer.
The findings, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS), define a mechanism in which the oncogenes turn
on a protein called RSK2 that is required for cancer cells to move.
The technology and the mode of action method published in the highly ranked journal
PNAS involves using lactic acid bacteria as vectors to produce and deliver a human chemokine
on site in the wounds.
Five days later, those that had taken BCAAs had normal levels of the amino acids and performed better
on a learning task (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, DOI: 10.1073 /
pnas.0910280107).
In the study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS), the researchers found that these indirect effects explain,
on average, 28 per cent of the total plant productivity response, and are almost equal to the size of direct effects
on evapotranspiration (ET)-- the sum of evaporation and plant transpiration from the land to the atmosphere..
But a recent study in
PNAS suggested that wind (and other renewables) will fall short of slashing carbon emissions, because there just isn't enough of it in the U.S. Based
on data from a company owned by one of the study's authors, this map's white areas show where wind turbines would be most effective — but because wind isn't available all the time, they'd only produce roughly 50 percent of the energy wind turbines could at maximum capacity.
On average, volunteers estimated that their hands were two - thirds wider than in reality, and their fingers a third shorter (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, DOI: 10.1073 /
pnas.1003483107).
This caused the animals» blood pressure to drop, and it even stayed low
on a high - salt diet (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, DOI: 10.1073 /
pnas.0908882).
In this latest advance reported in
PNAS, the Wyss team showed that the human gut -
on - a-chip's unique ability to co-culture intestinal cells with living microbes from the normal gut microbiome for an extended period of time, up to two weeks, could allow breakthrough insights into how the microbial communities that flourish inside our GI tracts contribute to human health and disease.
In their study, which has just been published in the journal
PNAS, the researchers demonstrate that the defence protein docks
on to a specific target in the nematode: a modified sugar found
on the surfaces of the worm's intestinal cells but also
on those of molluscs like snails.
However, in a new paper published in Proceedings of the National of Sciences USA (
PNAS) scientists from the University of Helsinki, Faculty of Science, show that key environmental parameters, namely climate - related primary productivity, biodiversity, and pathogen stress have strong influence
on the global pattern of population densities of ethnographically documented hunter - gatherers.
The team reported in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS) that patients with chronic pain reported
on average a 64 % reduction in pain
on one scale.
He points out that the
PNAS study determined that the participants benefited
on average.
On the one side, there's Moggie the Mass Murderer, which sees cats as directly responsible for the extinction of many species of mammal, bird and reptile (63, according to a recent
PNAS paper).
Wall was the senior and corresponding author
on a paper, titled «Cell Rejuvenation and Social Behaviors Promoted by LPS Exchange in Myxobacteria» that was published in the May 18 online issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS).
In research recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS), Weizmann Institute scientists report
on a method of precisely characterizing an individual's sense of smell, which they call an «olfactory fingerprint.»
In a 2013 analysis of the myPersonality data published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS), a team led by Kosinski showed that the pattern of people's likes
on Facebook is enough to predict their personal traits such as gender, race, political persuasion, and even sexuality.
«When that happened, some killer whales, which had been preying
on big whales, had to do other things to make a living,» says James Estes, a research scientist in Santa Cruz, California, for the U.S. Geological Survey and coauthor of the
PNAS article.
Using their star power and connections, the foursome have pushed their ideas
on conspicuous occasions, a number of which they created themselves: a session at the National Academy of Sciences» annual meeting that Varmus described as «heated;» a briefing by Krischner, Tilghman, and Varmus at the President's Council of Advisors
on Science and Technology; a meeting at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute that «brought together some senior... influencers to talk about the problem;» a new paper about that meeting that will soon appear in
PNAS; and a presentation by Kirschner at the Future of Research symposium organized by Boston - area postdocs in October.
The second study, also published today in
PNAS, looked at what motivates male chimps to risk life and limb
on patrol missions.
The outcomes of this article published this week in
PNAS, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, raise several questions some of which are expected to be immediately dealt with, although dependent
on the availability of funding.
Jackson, a volcanologist by training who led an earlier study at the ALS
on Roman seawater concrete, is the lead author of a paper describing this study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS) titled «Mechanical Resilience and Cementitious Processes in Imperial Roman Architectural Mortar.»
The paper, published in
PNAS on Monday, examined pollution data and death records to see whether coal burning, long a source of air pollution, could have damaged public health across northern China in the 1990s.
In a companion study published online
on 1 September in the American Sociological Review, Evans, Rzhetsky, and Jacob Foster — an assistant professor of sociology at the University of California, Los Angeles, who is also a co-author of the
PNAS paper — found that this possibility of prize - winning is «the most plausible explanation» for why researchers take the risks they do.
Their results are published in the scientific journal
PNAS on October 24, 2016.
In a paper published this week in
PNAS, EMBL scientists show how different types of molecules
on the top and bottom of a leaf keep each other in check, ensuring the leaf grows flat.
These findings are published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS)
on February 19, 2018.
The recent research published in the
PNAS article, builds
on work reported earlier this year in Nature Chemical Biology, which was led by York, and involved Professor Bernard Henrissat, of CNRS, Aix - Marseille Université, Marseille, France.
The strain of HIV someone is first infected with, and its capacity to replicate in the body, can have a lasting influence
on how the virus disrupts the immune system, according to a study to be published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS).
This result is published in the
PNAS on 29 September 2014.
The research was published online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS)
on August 8.
Government officials and
PNAS and, until today, Retrovirology, have held off
on publishing the two new papers because of the clashing conclusions between U.S. agencies.
Their study published online ahead of print in
PNAS Early Edition suggests a new therapeutic strategy for patients with Duchene muscular dystrophy, a progressive neuromuscular condition, caused by a lack of dystrophin, that usually leaves patients unable to walk
on their own by age 10 - 15.