A new
study published today describes how a complex genomic rearrangement causes a fascinating phenotype in chickens.
Not exact matches
Female geoscientists are less likely to be
described as excelling beyond other students than their male counterparts are, according to a
study of recommendation letters for highly selective postdoctoral fellowships
published today in Nature Geoscience.
The
study,
published online
today in The Astrophysical Journal Letters,
describes how the researchers used the powerful MOSFIRE instrument on the W. M. Keck Observatory's 10 - meter telescope in Hawaii to peer into a time when the universe was still very young and see what the galaxy looked like only 670 million years after the big bang.
Today, in a
study published in eLife Science Magazine, Moran and his team
describe their spectacular findings.
The
study,
published today in open - access journal in Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience, also
describes a way to easily measure levels of this marker in human urine samples.
In a
study published today in the British Medical Journal, an international team led by Imperial College London and KU Leuven, Belgium
describe a new test, called ADNEX, which can discriminate between benign and malignant tumors, and identify different types of malignant tumor, with a high level of accuracy.
A University of Colorado Cancer Center
study published today in the journal Nature Genetics
describes a newly - discovered, heritable genetic cause of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), namely mutation of the gene ETV6.
In a
study published in the inaugural issue of the journal Applied Materials
Today, a new rapid, online only publication, the team of researchers
describe how they make these films which are based on the heavy metals lanthanum and europium.
In a
study published today, they
describe a new catalyst that can achieve carbon dioxide to multicarbon conversion using record - low inputs of energy.
The
study,
published online
today in the Journal of Climate,
describes what future rain will look like in a typical year, but doesn't comment on how often drought might loom over southern California.
Meanwhile, in a separate
study published online
today in Science, an overlapping team at Genentech led by biologist Frederic de Sauvage
describes the mechanism by which the man's brain tumor developed resistance.
In this new
study,
published online
today (9 December, 2015) in the European Respiratory Journal, researchers
describe how they established an international online platform to systematically collect data on cases of PCD diagnoses, symptoms displayed by patients, treatment and progression of the disease.
The researchers, led by UW — Madison pathology Professor David O'Connor,
published a
study today (June 28, 2016) in the journal Nature Communications
describing their work establishing rhesus macaque monkeys at the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center as a model for
studying the way Zika virus infections may progress in people.
BUFFALO, N.Y., Feb. 15, 2017 / PRNewswire / —
Today, a research team from Everon Biosciences, Inc. and Roswell Park Cancer Institute has
published a new
study in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS)
describing a new biomarker of senescent cells and a specific monoclonal antibody that could potentially be used to develop -LSB-...]
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.
In the
study published today, Kmiec and his colleagues — lead author Brett Sansbury and co-author Amanda Wagner —
describe developing a «cell - free» CRISPR tool that can modify genes contained in something called a DNA plasmid.
The More Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Teachers Initiative (MATSITI) report,
published today, is
described as an «unprecedented benchmark
study».
The scientists contend in a response
published today in the paper that the single
study, not yet peer reviewed, was laced with uncertainties downplayed both by the scientists
describing it and the resulting news story.
Two recent
studies of methane emissions from frozen sea - bed sediments, including one
published in Science and
described in The Times
today, found substantial bubbling flows of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, were reaching the atmosphere.