Not exact matches
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
«Our results demonstrate that if we find the right molecular context, more appropriate therapies can be chosen that improve outcomes,» says
John Carpten, Ph.D., TGen deputy director of basic science and director of TGen's Integrated Cancer Genomics Division, and the
study's
senior author.
«We tried to be sensitive to the patients» experience and burden,» says
John L. P. (Seamus) Thompson, PhD, the
study's
senior author, professor of Biostatistics at the Mailman School, who worked with a former student, Johnston Grier, MPH» 16, and the other
authors to design the 25 - item
study questionnaire.
Reasoning that boosting the clock may be beneficial, Zheng «Jake» Chen, Ph.D., the
study's
senior author and assistant professor of biochemistry and molecular biology at
John P. and Kathrine G. McGovern Medical School at UTHealth, launched a search for a clock amplitude - enhancing small molecule.
«Many
studies deserve praise for being the first of their kind, but if we actually began relying on the claims made by big data surveillance in public health, we would come to some peculiar conclusions,» said
John W. Ayers, San Diego State University Graduate School of Public Health research professor and
senior author of the
study.
«Although ATC is rare — accounting for only 1 - 2 percent of thyroid cancers, it is responsible for up to 50 percent of thyroid cancer deaths,» says
John Copland, Ph.D., a cancer biologist and the
study's
senior author.
«There are clearly molecular differences between African - American and Caucasian multiple myeloma cases, and it will be critical to pursue these observations to better improve clinical management of the disease for all patients,» said
John D. Carpten,
senior author of the
study and chair of the Department of Translational Genomics at the Keck School of Medicine.
The method, published in the 1 March issue of Science Translational Medicine, could help make organ banks a viable option for transplant surgeons, said
John Bischof of the University of Minnesota, the
senior author on the
study.
«Thirty four percent of people who are trying to quit smoking use pharmaceutical aids and yet most are not successful,» said
senior study author John P. Pierce, PhD, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Family Medicine and Public Health at UC San Diego School of Medicine and Moores Cancer Center.
«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.
«What we did in this paper is engineer our sensor to be about 15 times better than a previous version, and then compared it against a blood biomarker in a mouse model of ovarian cancer to show that we could beat it,» says Sangeeta Bhatia, the
John and Dorothy Wilson Professor of Health Sciences and Technology and Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, a member of MIT's Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research and Institute for Medical Engineering and Science, and the
senior author of the
study.
«Our
study took a unified approach to understanding egg shape by asking three questions: how to quantify egg shape and provide a basis for comparison of shapes across species, what are the biophysical mechanisms that determine egg shape, and what are the implications of egg shape in an evolutionary and ecological setting,» said
senior author, L. Mahadevan, the Lola England de Valpine Professor of Applied Mathematics at the
John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, and of Physics at Harvard.»
«MS is the only large - scale method to
study whole proteomes,» says
John Yates III, PhD, a professor in TSRI's Department of Chemical Physiology and the
study's
senior author.
The
study's other
senior author, Dr
John O'Neill of the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, said: «Although the clinical relevance of magnesium in various tissues is beginning to garner more attention, how magnesium regulates our body's internal clock and metabolism has simply not been considered before.
Recently, researchers led by
John Hallenbeck, M.D., an NINDS
senior investigator and co-
senior author of the
study, found that a cellular process called SUMOylation goes into overdrive in a certain species of ground squirrel during hibernation.
«Our
study has great biological and medical significance, particularly in light of the huge disease burden of malaria,» said
senior author Manoj Duraisingh,
John LaPorte Given Professor of Immunology and Infectious Diseases.
«Now, we have a mechanism to explain how sequences that comprise one - third of our genome have moved,» says
John Moran, Ph.D.,
senior author of the new paper and a longtime U-M and HHMI researcher
studying jumping genes.
«I think what it's telling us is that humans had an impact on the Arctic much earlier than had been thought,» said
John Fyfe, a
senior scientist at Environment and Climate Change Canada in Victoria, British Columbia and one of the
authors of the
study, which appeared today in Geophysical Research Letters.