Movement Current Events | Movement News | 2
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Movement of chromosome in nucleus visualized The cell is understood to be highly organized, with specialized areas for different functions and molecular motors shuttling components around. view more (2006-04-18)
Tracking the spread of cancer cells - Photon02 Not much is known about how clustered cancer cells move, but it is important to understand how individual cancer cells break off from a cluster and spread throughout the human body. A research collaboration between the University of Wales College of Medicine and Kingston University * has lead to the development of a computational imaging technique... view more... (2002-08-28)
Physicists Find that Size Matters When Initiating an Object's Movement Through Grains A team of Penn State physicists has discovered that the size of grains, such as sand grains, under which an object is buried is important in determining the force required to begin raising the object. view more (2008-09-29)
Genes that make bacteria make up their minds Bacteria are single cell organisms with no nervous system or brain. So how do individual bacterial cells living as part of a complex community called a biofilm "decide" between different physiological processes (such as movement or producing the "glue" that forms the biofilm)? view more (2009-03-30)
Mental and physical exercise improves genetic mental impairment Australian scientists have shown that mental and physical exercise can improve coordination and movement problems in Rett syndrome, a devastating genetic brain development disorder that primarily affects females. view more (2008-06-23)
Neurologists with expertise in brain stimulation therapy help Parkinson's patients Patients with Parkinson's disease who are undergoing a treatment known as deep brain stimulation may benefit from the direct involvement of a neurologist with expertise both in movement disorders and in deep brain stimulation. view more (2006-07-11)
New study suggests the brain predicts what eyes in motion will see When the eyes move, objects in the line of sight suddenly jump to a different place on the retina, but the mind perceives the scene as stable and continuous. view more (2009-08-26)
A twist in the tail - Leeds researchers show how sperm wriggle. In a discovery with far-reaching potential for advances in infertility treatment, scientists at the University of Leeds have identified what makes sperm wriggle and swim. The answer lies in a protein called dynein. The scientists have taken the first photographs of individual molecules of dynein, also found in lungs, the nervous system and... view more... (2003-02-11)
Researchers track Lyme disease spirochetes Microbiologists at the University of Calgary have demonstrated the first direct visualization of the dissemination of Borrelia burgdorferi, the bacterium that causes Lyme disease. view more (2008-06-20)
Embryonic Stem Cells Thrive When Shaken Embryos spend much of their time in the womb bobbing along with a mother's movement, and, surprisingly enough, new research from the Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University suggests that embryonic stem cells may develop much better under similarly shaky conditions. view more (2007-09-11)
A Chilling Solution: Measuring Below-ground Carbon Without Destroying Trees USDA Forest Service (FS) researchers have provided the first proof of concept for a method that allows scientists to study below-ground carbon allocation in trees without destroying them. view more (2006-12-06)
New system for the analysis of facial movement in three dimensions Navarre University Hospital has launched a novel system for capturing facial movement that enables such movement to be monitored and quantified in a precise manner. view more (2005-03-08)
Where the brain stores word meanings EMBARGOED UNTIL WEDNESDAY 18 NOVEMBER 1998 19:00 HRS GMT view more (1998-11-18)
Orangutans unique in movement through tree tops Movement through a complex meshwork of small branches at the heights of tropical forests presents a unique challenge to animals wanting to forage for food safely. view more (2009-07-28)
Decision-making — Demonstration of a link between cognition and execution For the first time, a team of researchers in the Movement, Adaptation, Cognition Laboratory (CNRS/University Victor Ségalen, Bordeaux) has revealed the existence of an interaction at the cellular level between cognitive information and motor information. view more (2007-02-09)
International Conference on Earth Science Research These include the fields of sedimentology - the study of sediments; biogeography - pattern and distribution of living organisms; geomorphology - land forms and processes, and tectonics - the structure and movement of the Earth's crust. view more (1999-08-16)
Animal athletics: the benefits of being short Could your dog win an Olympic race? Scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz, USA, have been comparing limb shape with athletic performance in a range of animals to determine who makes the best athlete. At the Society for Experimental Biology meeting on Tuesday 3 April, Dr Terrie Williams of the University of California will present... view more... (2001-04-03)
Researchers Make More Accurate Observation of Earth System Possible Researchers at the Faculty of Aerospace Engineering of TU Delft have succeeded in modelling the rotational behaviour of two satellites with unprecedented accuracy. This makes it possible to model the orbit of the satellites much more accurately and this means that changes on earth observed by the satellite are also more accurate, for example,... view more... (2004-09-22)
Rutgers Research: Discoveries Shed New Light on How the Brain Processes What the Eye Sees Researchers at the Center for Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience (CMBN) at Rutgers University in Newark have identified the need to develop a new framework for understanding "perceptual stability" and how we see the world with their discovery that visual input obtained during eye movements is being processed by the brain but blocked... view more... (2009-06-03)
TU Delft conducts experiment with more than 120 pedestrians On 16 May researchers at TU Delft will conduct an experiment with more than 120 participants. They are studying the movement patterns of pedestrian streams. Insight into the movement of streams of pedestrians is important, for example, in the design of stations or other places where many people are gathered and move around by foot. During the... view more... (2002-05-16)
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