In a discovery that advances the understanding of how marijuana
works in the human body, an international group of scientists, including those from the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI), have for the first time created a three - dimensional atomic - level image of the molecular structure activated by tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the active chemical in marijuana.
«As marijuana continues to become more common in society, it is critical that we understand how
it works in the human body,» said Liu, who is professor and deputy director of the iHuman Institute of Shanghai Tech and is also affiliated with the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
But getting stem cells to
work in the human body is neither an easy nor necessarily benign process.
Not exact matches
In a realm of swirling, incomprehensible big biological data — which is, perhaps, another way of thinking about the human body — the opportunity to use computer learning to better anticipate which drugs will work well (and not so well) in any one person is one we shouldn't pass u
In a realm of swirling, incomprehensible big biological data — which is, perhaps, another way of thinking about the
human body — the opportunity to use computer learning to better anticipate which drugs will
work well (and not so well)
in any one person is one we shouldn't pass u
in any one person is one we shouldn't pass up.
We've figured out some drugs that usually
work, but as we learn more about the
human body and our genetic code — the things we have
in common but also the things that make us unique — we may come up with a new sort of medicine, tailored for each person.
One of the first tools the BioHub will
work on is a cell atlas to categorize all of the cells found
in the
human body.
When it comes to medical treatment, the brain and central nervous system remain the darkest, most forbidding frontiers
in the
human body — and yet our knowledge of how the brain and mind actually
work seems to be growing by leaps each year.
They saw
in such global commerce a worldly illustration of the unity of the
human race and how the mystical
body of Christ
works, each distinctive part contributing to the others.
But I would like to highlight one crucial aspect of Nat's
body of
work that obituary writers
in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Associated Press, and other mainstream media outlets (though not First Things) woefully downplayed: Nat stood steadfastly — sometimes at great professional and personal cost — for the sanctity and equality of
human life from conception to natural death.
If so, then Wesley could extend to
bodies his understanding of how God
works in the
human psyche and
in all living things — that is, inwardly and persuasively.
For most of
human history, people simply
worked until their
bodies gave out and then depended on their children to care for them
in the last years of life.
She is the Mystical
Body of Christ; at the same time a visible society instituted with hierarchical organs, and a spiritual community; the Church on earth, the pilgrim People of God here below, and the Church filled with heavenly blessings; the germ and the first fruits of the Kingdom of God, through which the
work and the sufferings of Redemption are continued throughout
human history, and which looks for its perfect accomplishment beyond time
in glory.
It is this
human refraction that makes the hard
work of critical study inescapable, so that every text is given a suspicious scrutiny whereby we may consider the ways
in which
bodied humanness has succeeded or not succeeded
in bearing truthful and faithful witness.
The Center for Medical Progress follows all applicable laws
in the course of its investigative journalism
work and as more details about Planned Parenthood's contracts for aborted baby parts come to light, it's clear that Planned Parenthood and their business partners like StemExpress are the ones who are guilty of trafficking
in human body parts.
This belief
in the ability of the
human body to be filled with the divine is one reason that we revere the mortal remains of saints, and find them to be miracle -
working (as with Elisha's bones, 2 Kings 13:21).
So the love which was
worked out
in human terms
in the life of the Man of Nazareth was a love which knew mortality
in its fullness, of
body and of soul.
And he gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the shepherds [c] and teachers, [d] 12 to equip the saints for the
work of ministry, for building up the
body of Christ, 13 until we all attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood, [e] to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ, 14 so that we may no longer be children, tossed to and fro by the waves and carried about by every wind of doctrine, by
human cunning, by craftiness
in deceitful schemes.
The notion of the people, i.e.Minjung, and of small - scale movements and initiatives which represent them, is from the Christian point of view partly a socio - ecclesial vision
in the sense of a theological appraisal of the church as social reality
in the larger
body politic, and partly eschatology
in the sense of a vision of the ends
worked out within, and ends which extend beyond,
human history.
11And he gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the shepherdsc and teachers, d 12to equip the saints for the
work of ministry, for building up the
body of Christ, 13until we all attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood, e to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ, 14so that we may no longer be children, tossed to and fro by the waves and carried about by every wind of doctrine, by
human cunning, by craftiness
in deceitful schemes.
Funny I never thought of Jesus as having a hercules style
body... Just average build... He did
work as a capenter and the carpenters I know have good muscle tone... by are not
body builder status, Hercules built to excess... They are just like a average farmer, strong and even
in muscle tone... Jesus's whole life was about being humble and coming from the low end of the society... he was born with the animals
in a very humble place... I do not see him as a super strong
human... but then being the son of God, he would have had super powers if he wanted them... he just did not need them...
Dissecting the
human body is not pleasant
work, and it teaches students right away that much of what physicians do
in a normal day is not altogether pleasant.
(para. 27) Pope John Paul II strikes a good balance
in his «Discourse to the
Working Group (concerning Brain Death)»
in December 1985 when he says that the value of
human life «springs from what is spiritual
in man... (the
body) receives from a spiritual principle - which inhabits it and makes it what it is - a supreme dignity.»
Paul again
in Ephesians: 11 And he gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the shepherdsc and teachers, 12 to equip the saints for the
work of ministry, for building up the
body of Christ, 13 until we all attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ, 14 so that we may no longer be children, tossed to and fro by the waves and carried about by every wind of doctrine, by
human cunning, by craftiness
in deceitful schemes.
The vivid imagination and the sharp observation of men and nature that marked his mind; his acquaintance with common speech and his joy
in the use of proverbs; indeed, his capacity to express
in creative speaking with a skill that only a poet and genius possesses the whole range of
human emotions from awe
in the presence of the numinous to the feelings of the
body — all are reflected
in his sermons (as also
in the commentaries, his
work of the lecture room), not consistently, of course, and not every time, yet most impressively
in the Church Postil Sermons, one of the products of his exile on Wartburg Castle, written
in order to furnish to the preachers of the Reformation examples of Biblical preaching.
In that speech (a full copy of which you can view by clicking here), I offered some suggestions on how each of us — whether we be parent, coach, official, athletic trainer, clinician, current or former professional athlete, sports safety equipment manufacturer, whether we were there representing a local youth sports program, the national governing
body of a sport, or a professional sports league, could
work together as a team to protect our country's most precious
human resource — our children — against catastrophic injury or death from sudden impact syndrome or the serious, life - altering consequences of multiple concussions.
We feel the foreskin is a
working tissue that does perform a job
in the
human body.
Sure, there will always be stories of women who've had a rough go
in the delivery room, but heed this advice from legendary midwife Ina May Gaskin: «It is important to keep
in mind that our
bodies must
work pretty well, or there wouldn't be so many
humans on the planet.»
And as the vice-director of
Human Rights
in Childbirth, I
work to establish women's fundamental right to make decisions about their
bodies and babies, a right that I've always been quick to say must reach beyond courtrooms and hospitals into our daily conversations and experiences.
In the United States, if you are a woman who
works for a company with fewer than 50 employees, it is completely up to your employer whether or not you get paid during maternity leave, and they don't even have to guarantee that your job is safe when you want to return — because pushing a
human out of your
body and then keeping said newborn
human alive for three months with your
body is not stressful enough.
Those who do not want to believe
in evolution do not have to, but it is inconsistent for religious persons to believe that any aspect of the
human body whatsoever is perfect, even if it was designed without any evolution at
work.
The worldwide trends therefore seem to be relatively straightforward: most
humans tend to wean at a similar stage
in their life history as other primates, which
works out to about three years old based on our relatively large
body size.
Baby Milk Action and all IBFAN groups support the IBFAN - GIFA office
in its
work with the various
human rights treaty bodies that meet in Geneva: the Committees on the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and the Human Rights Cou
human rights treaty
bodies that meet
in Geneva: the Committees on the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and the
Human Rights Cou
Human Rights Council.
Your
body is
in overdrive
working to grow and build a little
human inside!
The report finds makes a list of recommendations for business, industry, professional
bodies and government, namely: Construction businesses · Focus on better
human resource management · Introduce and / or expand mentoring schemes · Boost investment
in training · Develop talent from the trades as potential managers and professionals · Engage with the community and local education establishments Industry · Rally around social mobility as a collective theme · Promote better
human resource management and support the effort of businesses · Promote and develop the UK as an international hub of construction excellence · Support diversity and schemes that widen access to management and the professions · Emphasise and spread understanding of the built environment's impact on social mobility Professional
bodies and institutions · Drive the aspirations of Professions for Good for promoting social mobility and diversity · Support wider access to the professions and support those from less - privileged backgrounds · Promote and develop the UK as an international hub of construction excellence · Emphasise and spread understanding of the built environment's impact on social mobility · Provide greater routes for degree - level learning among those
working within construction Government · Produce with urgency a plan to boost the UK as an international hub of construction excellence, as a core part of the Industrial Strategy · Provide greater funding to support the travel costs of apprentices · Support wider access to the professions and support those from less - privileged backgrounds · Place greater weight
in project appraisal on the impact the built environment has on social mobility The report is being formally launched at an event
in the House of Commons later today.
We are also calling on the President of Ghana, H.E. Nana Akufo - Addo, who is also a known
Human Rights adherent, Former Presidents of Ghana, the Speaker of Parliament, Ghana Peace Council, Ghana Bar Association, International Bar Association, Amnesty International and other International
Human Rights
bodies to intervene
in this act of injustice perpetuated against Mr. Sosu, whose
works in this country are quite obvious.
«It would take another two years of training to get the equivalent of my first degree
in Syria,» says Chalati, who is
working on ways to use nanotechnology to deliver drugs into the
human body more efficiently and with fewer side effects.
The new drug - like compounds discovered by Vogel and her co-authors offer hope that using a computer - generated P - gp model, explained here http://bit.ly/1LVmR7a, developed to accurately mimic the physical, chemical and biological functions of the protein
in the
human body, will speed up the drug discovery process and
work in real life as well.
The biobank of MedUni Vienna and Vienna General Hospital is a central service facility dedicated to the storage of
human tissue, cell material and
body fluids for more
in - depth diagnosis, academic research projects and clinical tests, as well as
working - up samples by way of a medical service.
Her group spends its time setting fire to corpses
in a range of different circumstances, to
work out exactly how the
human body burns.
«To answer more fundamental questions
in diseases, I had to have more background
in medical science and had to have more insight into how the
human body works,» says Chen, who currently is a research fellow at Dana - Farber Cancer Institute — and has been admitted to the medical school at Case Western Reserve University
in Cleveland, Ohio.
We're looking for some creative minds to say how a part of the
human body works, or how a process occurs
in the
body,
in two minutes or less.
We're looking for some creative minds to explain how a part of the
human body works, or how a process occurs
in it,
in two minutes or less.
The
work reveals the existence of anatomical differences between the Neanderthals and our species, even
in the smallest ossicles of the
human body.
«Previous
work investigating communication of attention
in animals has focused on cues that
humans use:
body orientation, head orientation, and eye gaze; no one else had gone beyond that.
As researchers study glutamate, they're gaining insights into how the chemical
works in the
human brain and
body.
Jay Baker, owner of Fat Dog Shellfish Co., said Grizzle's latest research adds to a growing
body of
work that demonstrates the value of farmed oysters
in improving coastal water quality and mitigating
human impacts to sensitive estuarine waters.
«It's an incredibly clever natural solution to this problem of how to deal with a water barrier on a surface it will change the way we think about developing bio-inspired adhesives that are safe and already optimised to
work in conditions similar to those
in the
human body, as well as marine paints that stop barnacles from sticking.»
Gaps
in the research — despite more than $ 14 billion
in government and private investment — include a basic understanding of how nanomaterials are absorbed and metabolized by the
human body as well as how toxic they may be to people already
working with them.
«This study adds to an important
body of
work that has shown the ubiquity of a circadian clock across species, including
humans, and its role
in metabolic regulation
in cells, organs, and organisms,» said Dr. Michael Sesma, Program Director
in the Division of Genetics and Developmental Biology at the of the National Institutes of Health's National Institute of General Medical Sciences, which partially funded the research.
But
in the past decade, researchers have come to appreciate that the bacteria living
in and on our
bodies — collectively called the
human microbiome — play a role
in how our
bodies work, affecting everything from allergies to obesity.