Sentences with phrase «study author paul»

If you add sugar or cream to it, you'll blunt the effect, so drink it black, study author Paul J. Arciero says.
«Many studies have looked at average snowfall over a season in climate models, but there's less known about these very heavy snowfalls,» says study author Paul O'Gorman, an associate professor in MIT's Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences.
«We know that anisomycin causes the large release of neurotransmitters,» says senior study author Paul Gold, a professor in the university's Brain and Cognition Division.
The finding is exciting «because it suggests that the seasonal flu vaccine boosts antibody responses and may provide some measure of protection against a new pandemic strain that could emerge from the avian population,» said senior study author Paul G. Thomas, PhD, an Associate Member in the Department of Immunology at St. Jude.
«This is encouraging because the safety profile of anti-muscarinic drugs is well - characterized, with more than 20 years of clinical application for a variety of indications in Europe,» said senior study author Paul Fernyhough, PhD, professor in the departments of pharmacology and therapeutics and physiology at the University of Manitoba in Canada.
«Cancer therapies that attack the lipid composition of the cell membrane would be an entirely new class of anticancer drugs,» says co-senior study author Paul Beales, of the University of Leeds in the UK.

Not exact matches

Chief strategist Paul Jankowski, who not only authored the study, but also the accompanying book Speak America Too: Your Guide To Building Powerful Brands In The New Heartland, says the proclamation is purposefully provocative.
Built having studied some of the greatest Christian authors, Galatians is a perfect companion for Paul's letter.
Brian Dodd (Doctor of New Testament Studies, Sheffield University) is the author of «Empowered Church Leadership: Ministry in the Spirit According to Paul [Downers Grove: Intervarsity Press, 1991].
The problem, as Paul S. Echlin, M.D. of the Elliott Sports Medicine Clinic in Burlington, Ontario, Canada and author of the Canadian study, points out, is that the «young athlete is often caught between competing demands of the adults around them» and «sometimes make decisions based on the adult whom they perceive to have the most influence on their success, and also whom they wish most to please for a variety of reasons.»
BARRINGTON Karen Rogers, professor of gifted studies at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minn., and author of «Reforming Gifted Education: Matching the Program to the Child,» will talk about four things parents must ask of schools for their gifted children at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Hough Street School, 310 S. Hough St.. The program is sponsored by the Barrington Council for the Gifted and Talented, and there is a $ 5 fee for non-members at...
Clinical Psychologist (USA) Dr Brooke Magnanti Feona Attwood, Professor of Media & Communication at Middlesex University Martin Barker, Emeritus Professor at University of Aberystwyth Jessica Ringrose, Professor, Sociology of Gender and Education, UCL Institute of Education Ronete Cohen MA, Psychologist Dr Meg John Barker, Senior Lecturer in Psychology, The Open University Kath Albury, Associate Professor, UNSW Australia Myles Jackman, specialist in obscenity law Dr Helen Hester, Middlesex University Justin Hancock, youth worker and sex educator Ian Dunt, Editor in Chief, Politics.co.uk Ally Fogg, Journalist Dr Emily Cooper, Northumbria University Gareth May, Journalist Dr Kate Egan, Lecturer in Film Studies, Aberystwyth University Dr Ann Luce, Senior Lecturer in Journalism and Communication, Bournemouth University John Mercer, Reader in Gender and Sexuality, Birmingham City University Dr. William Proctor, Lecturer in Media, Culture and Communication, Bournemouth University Dr Jude Roberts, Teaching Fellow, University of Surrey Dr Debra Ferreday, Senior Lecturer in Sociology, Lancaster University Jane Fae, author of «Taming the beast» a review of law / regulation governing online pornography Michael Marshall, Vice President, Merseyside Skeptics Society Martin Robbins, Journalist Assoc. Prof. Paul J. Maginn (University of Western Australia) Dr Lucy Neville, Lecturer in Criminology, Middlesex University Alix Fox, Journalist and Sex Educator Dr Mark McCormack, Senior Lecturer in Sociology, Durham University Chris Ashford, Professor of Law and Society, Northumbria University Diane Duke, CEO Free Speech Coalition (USA) Dr Steve Jones, Senior Lecturer in Media, Northumbria University Dr Johnny Walker, Lecturer in Media, Northumbria University
In the early study draft, author Paul Heisig noted that gas «drilling, extraction, transport via pipelines, and underground storage» could inadvertently introduce methane into drinking water supplies.
«In the early study draft, author Paul Heisig noted that gas «drilling, extraction, transport via pipelines, and underground storage» could inadvertently introduce methane into drinking water supplies,» Capital New York's Scott Waldman wrote.
Surprisingly these same people are just as affected as everyone else on other tasks that require different cognitive abilities, such as maintaining focus,» said Paul Whitney, a WSU professor of psychology and lead author of the study, which appeared in the journal Scientific Reports.
«This is such a critical brain area and we hadn't expected to find such strong differences between men and women's brains,» said Paul Macey, the study's lead author.
«We use biological nanoparticles — a plant virus — to deliver a pesticide,» said Paul Chariou, a PhD student in biomedical engineering at Case Western Reserve and author of a study on the process published in the journal ACS Nano.
«In recent years, there has been an enormous increase in the number of studies examining mind wandering,» explains researcher Paul Seli, a post-doctoral fellow in the department of psychology at Harvard University and lead author on the study.
Other study authors are Yanwen Jiang, Chuanxin Huang, Francine Garrett - Bakelman, Christopher E. Mason, Leandro Cerchietti, Eugenia G. Giannopoulou, Paul Zumbo, and Matthias Kormaksson, from Weill Cornell; Micah D. Gearhart and Vivian J. Bardwell from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; Kevin Kirouac and Gilbert G. Prive from the Ontario Cancer Institute, Toronto; Srividya Bhaskara and Scott W. Hiebert from Vanderbilt University, Nashville; Jose M. Polo from Monash University, Victoria, Australia; and Alexander D. MacKerell, Jr. and Fengtian Xue from the University of Maryland, Baltimore.
«This is non-equilibrium chemistry, moving molecules far away from their minimum energy state, which is essential to life,» said Paul R. McGonigal, an author of the study.
The study's authors, John Long and Paul Stoy in MSU's Department of Land Resources and Environmental Sciences, observed the shift in tornado activity for all categories of tornadoes that occurred in the region from 1954 to 2009.
An interdisciplinary team with researchers from fields of psychology, biological statistics and computational biology, medicine, and physics included the study's co-first authors, Paul Shamble, a former graduate student in Hoy's lab who specializes in spiders and is a distinguished science fellow at Harvard University, and Gil Menda, a postdoctoral researcher in Hoy's lab.
But the study's lead author, environmental engineer Paul Westerhoff, says it could prove worthwhile for cities looking for ways to gain value from something that can be a costly disposal problem.
Other authors on the study are Alexander R. Stine, San Francisco State University; William R. Boos, University of California - Berkeley; and Michael Sigl, Paul Scherrer Institute.
Prof. Jean Paul Metzger from the University of Sao Paulo, another lead author of the study, said: «Our study shows a clear threshold of biodiversity losses with deforestation; below this threshold, not only many species disappear, but the functions they perform in the ecosystem will also decline, many of which are highly beneficial to humans.
Professor Paul Heath, senior author of the paper, said: «Our study highlighted the difficulties in diagnosing this condition as well as variations in treatment across the UK.
«That's more than a hundred-fold increase,» says Paul Bierman, a geologist at the University of Vermont who co-led the new study with his former graduate student and lead author Luke Reusser, and geologist Dylan Rood at Imperial College, London.
Lead author Paul - Yannick Bitome - Essono, from the National Center for Scientific and Technological Research, France, explains: «We thought the tsetse fly might be a good candidate in our study, as both sexes feed on blood, they are large and easily trapped, present in large numbers in Central Africa, and are opportunistic feeders with no strong preference for a particular host animal, so would feed on a large range of wildlife.»
Prior research by the study's lead author, Paul B. Fisher, M.Ph., Ph.D., discovered the AEG - 1 gene and found it to be overexpressed in the vast majority of cancers.
So it may seem odd that the book's first - time author, 49 - year - old physicist Paul McEuen, is a leader in the field of nanoscience, the study of structures smaller than a micron, or a millionth of a meter.
«Resistance to antimalarial medication threatens the health of more than half of the world's population,» notes corresponding Paul Roepe, PhD, a Georgetown chemistry professor who authored the study with colleagues at the University of Notre Dame and the University of Kentucky.
«We've had this idea that discrimination is associated with heavier drinking and drinking - related problems, but we didn't have a clear understanding of the evidence underneath that,» says Paul Gilbert, assistant professor of the Department of Community and Behavioral Health at the UI College of Public Health and lead author of the study.
«Additional studies should certainly be considered, but we hope that medical professionals will consider the positive potential of honey as a treatment given the lack of proven efficacy, expense and potential for adverse effects associated with the use of DM,» said lead study author Ian Paul, a pediatrician and associate professor of pediatrics.
«Our study is small, retrospective and all of the patients were located at a single medical center, but it demonstrates that it's possible to use molecular diagnostics to identify subgroups of patients more likely to respond to a given treatment,» said co-first author John Paul Shen, MD, senior clinical fellow and postdoctoral fellow.
Dr Paul Bentley from the Department of Medicine, lead author of the study, said: «For each patient that doctors see, they have to weigh up whether the benefits of a treatment will outweigh the risks of side effects.
The study's authors are Dr. Scott Weaver, assistant professor of epidemiology and biostatistics; Amelia Jazwa, research coordinator; Dr. Lucy Popova, assistant professor of health promotion & behavior; Dr. Richard Rothenberg, Regents» Professor of epidemiology & biostatistics, and Dean Michael Eriksen, all of the School of Public Health at Georgia State; and Dr. Paul Slovic of Decision Research and the University of Oregon.
«We found that microbes associated with native species provide resistance to invasion, and microbes associated with invaders break down this resistance and may poison native plants,» says study first author and UNSW scientist Associate Professor Paul Gribben.
This study adds to the discussion about the role of this immunosurveillance in the risk of developing the common cancers among those with compromised immune systems,» adds first author Paul Mayor, MD, Fellow in the Department of Gynecologic Oncology at RPCI.
«If we could understand better how these proteins with these additional «integrated» domains were formed during recent evolution, then there is a good chance that we could engineer genes with specific domains to provide resistance to new types of pathogen attack,» says Paul Bailey, lead author of the study who performed the phylogenetic analysis.
Brunet, who is also an associate director of Stanford's Paul F. Glenn Center for the Biology of Aging, is the senior author of the study, which will be published online April 5 in Nature.
«People don't consciously ponder the ways in which crime is like a virus or beast,» says one of the study's authors, Paul Thibodeau, who is now a psychology professor at Oberlin College.
«Historically, there have always been bacterial strain mix - ups in the course of doing research,» says Paul Keim, executive director of The Pathogen and Microbiome Institute at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff and senior author on the current study.
«Our study shows that the ability of malaria parasites to engage red blood cells is driven by an ancient mechanism for cellular attachment,» said lead author Aditya Paul, a postdoctoral researcher at the Harvard Chan School.
«We showed that treatment with sulforaphane could normalize the levels of this lncRNA,» said Laura Beaver, a research associate in the Linus Pauling Institute and College of Public Health and Human Sciences, and lead author on the study.
Paul Bremer, a graduate student working in Janda's laboratory and the study's first author, said they hit upon a triazole compound provided by Sharpless's laboratory that appeared to forcefully inhibit the toxin light chain in an enzymatic assay.
«You can not just jump and assume that any vegetarian diet is going to have a low impact on the environment,» said Paul Fischbeck, professor of social and decision sciences and engineering and public policy and one of the authors of the study.
Among those who have Graves» disease, more than half develop eye complications, according to the study's lead author, J. Paul Banga, PhD, of King's College London School of Medicine in the United Kingdom.
«In some regions, it is possible for average snowfall to decrease, but the snowfall extremes actually intensify,» study lead author Paul O'Gorman, an atmospheric scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), said in a news release.
«The results go a long way to explaining the process that links a variety of neurodegenerative diseases, including ALS, frontotemporal dementia and related diseases of the brain, muscle and bone known as multisystem proteinopathies,» said the study's co-corresponding author, J. Paul Taylor, M.D., Ph.D., a member of the St. Jude Department of Developmental Neurobiology.
The complete list of authors is: Shigehisa Takakuwa (ASIAA), Masao Saito (NAOJ / SOKENDAI (The Graduate University for Advanced Studies)-RRB-, Kazuya Saigo (NAOJ), Tomoaki Matsumoto (Hosei Univ.), Jeremy Lim (Univ. of Hong - Kong), Tomoyuki Hanawa (Chiba Univ.), and Paul T. P. Ho (ASIAA).
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