Sentences with phrase «very exciting study»

«It's a very exciting study,» adds psychologist Sari van Anders of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
«It's a very exciting study, but it's a small study,» Cryan cautions.
«This is very exciting study,» says Randall Prather, a developmental biologist at the University of Missouri at Columbia.

Not exact matches

As an editor, I want the Bible Study component to be the very best it can be for Sunday School classes, and that's why I'm excited to help develop a new curriculum for LifeWay Christian Resources.
I am very excited to finally be able to make this valuable course available online, as a home - study course, so more parents and teachers can access these tools.
«It's very exciting,» says Romke Rouw, a cognitive psychologist who studies synesthesia at the University of Amsterdam but who wasn't involved in the study.
«It will be very exciting to see if the study can move to a clinical trial soon,» said Alex Agelidis, a graduate student at UIC and co-author on the paper.
«It was particularly exciting to observe that the repair of the skin epidermis involves the activation of very different stem cells that react the same way to the emergency situation of the wound and have the power to completely restore the damaged tissue», comments Mariaceleste Aragona, the first author of the study.
«This is a very exciting step towards understanding this object,» says Brian Metzger of Columbia University, who was not involved in the new study.
«I'm very excited about these studies,» she adds, «because women who have difficulty having orgasms can finally stop blaming themselves and thinking, What the hell is wrong with me?!»
Although we can not determine what the effects of AF267B will be in humans until clinical trials are complete, we are very excited by the results our study has yielded.»
«We're very excited about developing more selective compounds for pre-clinical studies
Matteo Boretto, the first author on this study, commented that «we were very excited to see that we could not only robustly grow and amplify endometrial tissue in a dish, but that the tiny structures were also able to reproduce normal responses of the endometrium to hormones: oestrogen makes the tissue thicken, progesterone then induces maturation including folding (see picture), and subsequent removal of both hormones mimics the cell shedding of the menstrual period.»
«We are very excited to publish this work because we are hoping that a clinical research group will be inspired to take our study findings further in patients,» says Wu.
«That is very exciting because a lot of interesting things happened with Earth's climate prior to 800,000 years ago that we currently can not study in the ice core record.»
«This is very exciting as the study of the adolescence period is vital in human development.»
«This is a very exciting finding, obtained by studying patients» cells, that has the potential to result in a new treatment for this chronic complication of longstanding Type 1 diabetes,» Dr. Folli said.
This very exciting new study has been performed in the Laboratory for Experimental Dermatology in Bonn, Germany, under the direction of Dr. Tuting.
«It's an exciting finding because those patients are the ones we have very few treatment options for,» says Jennifer Long, a voice doctor and scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles, head and neck surgery department, who wasn't involved in the study.
«This is an exciting study of a very rare bone disorder that not only identified the responsible mutation in half of the patients, but uncovered fundamental information about the role of a cancer - related gene in the metabolic pathways of normal bone,» said study co-senior author Joan Marini, Ph.D., M.D., of NICHD.
«We are very excited about what MBI can offer women with dense breasts,» says Amy Conners, M.D., chair of Mayo Clinic's Breast Imaging Division and a co-author of this study.
It's very exciting,» said Dr. Nita Maihle, MCG cancer biologist, associate center director for education at the university's Cancer Center and a study co-author.
Co-author Sebastiano Cantalupo is very excited about the new instrument and the opportunities it provides: «We have exploited the unique capabilities of MUSE in this study, which will pave the way for future surveys.
«I am very excited to see the potential for a powerful new wrench in our toolbox for geochemical fingerprinting of heroin and other opioids,» said Ali Pourmand, the principal investigator on the study from the UM Rosenstiel School, Department of Marine Geosciences.
This makes it a very exciting object to study, simply because it hovers between two extremes.
«This is very exciting,» says biologist John Phillips of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg, who was not involved in the new study.
«It's a very exciting paper,» says Malú Tansey, a neuroscientist who studies inflammation and neurodegenerative disease at Emory University in Atlanta.
«Any report of a new antibiotic is auspicious, but what most excites me is the tantalising prospect that this discovery is just the tip of the iceberg,» says Mark Woolhouse at the University of Edinburgh, adding that Lewis's team has found a way to look for antibiotics in the microbial «dark matter» that has so far been very difficult to study.
Samantha de Silva, the lead author of the study said: «There are many blind patients in our clinics and the ability to give them some sight back with a relatively simple genetic procedure is very exciting.
While most folks would not consider studying the genetics of sludge and ooze the most exciting of professions, Gray and his colleagues are tracing back the very origins of the first life to arise on our planet.
«Our findings to date are very exciting however, and further expand previous insights on the importance of the early gestation period gained from famine studies in other settings.»
Catherine Carr, a neuroscientist at the University of Maryland, College Park, agrees that the study is «very exciting» — particularly because the katydids have overcome the problem of impedance matching «on such a tiny scale.»
«Our finding that biodiversity is a tool that can be used to improve individual plant resilience during a flood is very exciting,» said Dr. Alexandra Wright, lead author of the New Phytologist study.
«We're very excited at the possibility that millions of people could, one day, regain movements lost during spinal cord injuries,» said Jerry Silver, Ph.D., professor of neurosciences, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, and a senior investigator of the study published in Nature.
The new studies are «very exciting,» says micropaleontologist Bridget Wade of the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom, who was not connected to the research.
But cannabinoids are a very exciting prospect in oncology, and studies such as ours serve to establish the best ways that they should be used to maximise a therapeutic effect.»
During the early years of my PhD studies, I was very fascinated by the exciting discoveries in the field of signal transduction, in particular how receptor tyrosine kinases are activated to transmit their signals and how protein complexes are formed through defined protein folds (domains) interacting with specific cellular targets.
If you do a lot of studies and a bunch of them are positive, then you get very, very excited something is going on.
«Now that we have the cellular and molecular information, the future promises to be very exciting when this knowledge can be used to understand how this system is formed during gestation and how the different neuron types go about controlling the body's functions,» says study leader Patrik Ernfors, professor of tissue biology
These are very exciting times,» says Thijs Ettema at the Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Uppsala University, who lead the scientific team that carried out the study.
«Of course, we now need to test TRPC5 inhibitors in clinical studies in patients, but the results are very exciting.
«This is a very exciting and interesting and, to be honest, important observation in the world of cancer susceptibility,» says Stephen Chanock, the chief of translational genomics at the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, who was not involved in the study.
Dr Peter Rugg - Gunn, group leader in the Babraham Institute's Epigenetics research programme and a senior co-author on the paper, explains: «One of the exciting aspects of this study is that we were able to capture naïve stem cells at a very early stage of their reprogramming — these early cells had switched on a subset of naïve - specific genes, but they had not yet fully matured.
«What makes this very exciting is that this type of interaction between the sun and a planet rarely happens for Earth but it's believed to be a frequent occurrence for other Earth - like extrasolar planets,» said Noé Lugaz, a research associate professor at UNH's Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space (EOS), and lead author of the sStudy of Earth, Oceans, and Space (EOS), and lead author of the studystudy.
«Metabolomics is an exciting new field, and this exploratory study is rich in very robust findings,» says Niewczas.
Ralf I. Kaiser, one of the study's lead authors and a chemistry professor at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, said, «When these hydrocarbons were first seen in space, people got very excited.
«The results of CheckMate 238 are very exciting,» said professor John Haanen, MD, PhD, of the Netherlands Cancer Institute in Amsterdam, commenting on the results of the study.
«The reason this study is so exciting is that previous methods of reconstructing ocean heat content have very large age uncertainties, [which] smooths out the more subtle features of the record,» said co-author Sarah Shackleton, a graduate student in the Severinghaus lab at Scripps.
«In this work, we focused on discriminating between different heteroatoms, but this GNR is a very exciting material in its own right,» says team member and lead author of this study Shigeki Kawai of the National Institute for Materials Science in Tsukuba in Japan.
«The discovery and confirmation of one distant and very massive protocluster is very exciting,» said Dr. Naveen Reddy, an astrophysicist at the University of California at Riverside and a coauthor of the study, «but it is important to find a large sample of these so we can understand the possibly varied formation history of the population as a whole.»
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