... and control of the disease even when patients are getting a doctor's care, according to a study from the Stanford University School of Medicine. In a unique look at how blood pressure, or hypertension ...
... every new computer. The Pervasive Parallelism Lab (PPL) pools the efforts of many leading Stanford computer scientists and electrical engineers with support from Sun Microsystems, Advanced Micro ...
... burst forth in a fresh round of infection. What HIV hunters need is a good bird dog.
Now, Stanford chemist Paul Wender and his coworkers have found a way to synthesize better bird dogs, agents that ...
Years ago, Stanford communication and sociology researcher Clifford Nass wondered why some people treated their computers as humans, instead of machines, a question that led him down a path of ...
... tissues during many births, according to researchers at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford, the Stanford University School of Medicine and Santa Clara Valley Medical Center. The study is ...
... of once-productive agricultural land lie abandoned, according to a new report from researchers at Stanford University and the Carnegie Institution for Science. If this land was used to grow crops for ...
This is your brain on Facebook. Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine used concepts borrowed from the popular social networking site to analyze the brains of people with Alzheimer' ...
... research team that conducted the work included 14 scientists from seven different Stanford departments.
The study's results will be used to design future cancer treatments, the team said. At present ...
... . For the study, they analyzed clinical data from 665 IVF cycles performed at Stanford in 2005. They looked at 30 variables (on patient characteristics, clinical diagnoses, treatment protocol and ...
... the launch of the Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope (GLAST), researchers from Stanford University, the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center and elsewhere have shaken awake the scientific instruments ...
... force exerted by muscle is critically dependent on length.
To observe sarcomeres in action, researchers from Stanford's Bio-X program have devised a needle-thin probe, which is inserted through the ...
Using an unusual microscope with a tip the size of a needle, Stanford researchers are now able to look at tiny fibers of working muscles in live humans, with minimum discomfort to the patient—a ...
... to a surprising finding about a common protein involved in tumor suppression, report researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine. The results may lead to new treatments for bone marrow ...
... aren't ideal, either.
"The plant system has some advantages," said Levy, who is also a member of the Stanford Cancer Center and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.
The researchers chose ...
... rust after all. Specific genetic instructions drive aging in worms, report researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine. Their discovery contradicts the prevailing theory that aging is a ...