Researchers identified VIP inhibitory neurons in Huntington’s disease and used optogenetics to restore motor neuron activity in mice.
It is natural for bodies to change over time. Yet, we often expect our bodies to stay the same, which can lead to insecurity and feeling unworthy in the face of a changing body.
Ask most healthcare operational leaders what their biggest technology challenge is, and the answer is rarely a missing application. More often, it’s the opposite: an excess of poorly connected ...
Discover how to replace traditional Excel chart objects with clean, customizable in-cell visualizations using a single ...
Adam Hayes, Ph.D., CFA, is a financial writer with 15+ years Wall Street experience as a derivatives trader. Besides his extensive derivative trading expertise, Adam is an expert in economics and ...
In Canada, every person has the right to equal treatment in the workplace without discrimination pursuant to the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and as reflected in the prohibited grounds of ...
For quite a long time, research on amino acid metabolism received only limited attention in the areas of plant physiology and biochemistry. Owing to the essential function of amino acids in protein ...
Abstract: This paper presents two trajectory-planning approaches for the point-to-point motion of planar two-degree-of-freedom (dof) cable-suspended parallel mechanisms. The proposed techniques can be ...
Suzanne is a content marketer, writer, and fact-checker. She holds a Bachelor of Science in Finance degree from Bridgewater State University and helps develop content strategies. Good 'til canceled ...
3 Department of Sociology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA 4 Ford School of Public Policy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA 5 Division of General Medicine, Department ...
Abstract: This paper studies the projected saddle-point dynamics associated to a convex-concave function, which we term saddle function. The dynamics consists of gradient descent of the saddle ...
DAVOS, Switzerland—Rising tensions with the U.S. are spurring new plans in Europe to do something that has long seemed impossible: break with American technology in favor of homegrown alternatives.