Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Corinna Brander Passes Certified Stroke Registered Nurse (CSRN ...

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Ms. Brander is one of the first Bon Secours nurses to achieve this national certification.

Norfolk, Va. ? (July 26, 2013) ? Bon Secours Virginia is proud to announce that Corinna Ann Brander, Stroke Certified Registered Nurse (SCRN), has successfully passed the Certified Stroke Registered Nurse (CSRN)?Examination. Passing the exam, administered by The American Board of Neuroscience Nursing (ABNN), validates Ms. Brander?s knowledge of neuroscience nursing and reflects a professional achievement in her specialty field of nursing.

Ms. Brander, Neuroscience Coordinator at Bon Secours Health System, provides clinical expertise and high quality stroke services for Bon Secours DePaul Medical Center and Bon Secours Virginia Neurosciences. She is one of the first Bon Secours nurses to achieve this national certification for exemplary stroke care.

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Source: http://www.thehealthjournals.com/2013/07/corinna-brander-passes-certified-stroke-registered-nurse-csrn-exam/

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VIDEO: Jet engines, military vehicles found on ship bound for North Korea

Jet_engines__military_vehicles_found_on_ship_bound_for_North_Korea.jpg

Panamanian authorities have uncovered at least 12 jet engines and 5 military vehicles hidden in a North Korean cargo vessel. Tom Dinham reports.

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The Minority Report is a news and information website devoted to politics and culture in the United States. Since the prevailing wisdom seems to be that the United States Government should be involved in everything, everywhere, The Minority Report covers a wide range of topics from a conservative perspective. In short, The Minority Report is primarily for news and discussion about Politics, Congress, Conservatism and all other things we deem important. We also spend a lot of time on the impact that the statesmen stumbling about those illustrious chambers have on the rest of us.

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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Two new high-res tablets from Samsung rumored

Android Samsung

Octa-core 12.2-incher and Snapdragon 800-powered 10-incher rumored, both with 2560x1600 displays

Since the launch of the Nexus 10 last year, Samsung has focused mostly on mid-range products in the Android tablet space — the recently-launched Galaxy Tab 3 line, for instance. But later in the year the company might push ahead with more high-end Android tablets, if new, leaked hardware details from the usually-reliable @evleaks are to be believed.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/RWc7KkdC1I4/story01.htm

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Consumers Energy hiring to build, replace pipelines

JACKSON, Mich. -

Consumers Energy says it is expanding its workforce to build and replace gas pipelines and plans jobs fairs this weekend in Flint and Battle Creek.

The unit of Jackson-based CMS Energy Corp. says Monday it's seeking applicants to fill 144 positions, and it initially filled 150 jobs to carry out pipeline work in Michigan this year.

The jobs are part of a planned $60 million investment in gas pipeline work this year. In 2014, that investment is expected to be $116 million.

Consumers Energy plans the job fairs in Flint and Battle Creek on Saturday.

Job fairs will be held at:
Michigan Works

711 N. Saginaw Street Suite 300, Flint, MI? 48503

Michigan Works

135 W. Hamblin Ave, Battle Creek MI, 49017?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/clickondetroit/local/~3/9G27vVCoxNs/index.html

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Monday, July 29, 2013

Contribution of Humanists & Atheists to British society ? House of ...

parliamentOn 25th July for 2.5 hours the House of Lords debated, in 20,000 words, how humanists and atheists had made contributions to British society.?Of the 19 Lords who spoke, several made speeches ?challenging religious faith? ? the Atheism UK strapline.

maxtonAt 3.04pm Lord Maxton, an ?anti-clerical atheist?, said he did?not believe that churches and religion have been good for the world. Churches used to hang people in this country because they did not go to church and for many years bishops in the Lords voted to retain capital punishment.

Today, Lord Maxton said that there are still religious riots in Belfast. Glasgow is divided between two different Christian churches. Democracy throughout the Islamic world is not developing properly because of religion.

Although he didn?t make a direct correlation, Lord Maxton thought that society seems to have improved as religion declined; Sweden, Denmark and Canada have the?lowest number of people who believe in religion and these countries have the lowest crime rates, lowest levels of infant mortality, the best education systems and the best social security systems whilst in the USA, the states with the lowest crime rates and the best systems of education are those which are least religious.

morganAt 3.11pm Lord Morgan, said that the church had a virtual monopoly of civil and social power in the early 19th century in Britain.?It give way on issue after issue, such as admission to universities and religious rites.?It retreated in its views?on science, coming to accept evolution, and on social issues such as property rights and industrial relations. Recently, it has retreated in its views on moral attitudes to gay marriage.

At 3.18pm?Baroness Flather said she was an atheist but not a humanist. Without?religion we would not have had 9/11, 7/7 or a young soldier beheaded in London. Without religion we would not have had the Crusades and the problems between Christians and Muslims. We would not have had the conflict in blatherNorthern Ireland, the Spanish Inquisition or witch hunts. ?There are so many things about religion historically that are amazingly awful? said Baroness Flather.

?How has religion treated women through the centuries, and how is it still treating women??. We have honour killings, women being beaten and mutilation. The Catholic church in Africa says that it is a sin to have family planning or abortion. ?No religion has supported women through the ages?.?Mother Teresa stocked up for her sainthood campaigning constantly against family planning said Baroness Blather.

?

I will post more Lords ?challenging religious faith? later.

Sources:?

1) House of Lords video from 2.12pm to 4.40pm:?Contributions of Atheists and Humanists to Society (from 14.12 hours).

2) Hansard transcription:?Hansard: Contributions of Humanists & Atheists to British Society (from 2.12pm to 4.40pm).

3) I blogged the debate for HASSNERS with atheist contributions (in red):?HASSNERS reviews the debate in the House of Lords on the contributions to society of atheists and humanists.

Source: http://www.atheismuk.com/2013/07/28/news/contribution-of-humanists-atheists-to-british-society-house-of-lords-debate/

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NBC to air Hillary Clinton miniseries

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) ? A Hillary Rodham Clinton miniseries timed to precede the 2016 presidential election is part of NBC's effort to create "event" programming that will draw viewers to the shrinking world of broadcast network TV, NBC's programming chief said Saturday.

"We need to be in the event business. I think you're going to hear that from every broadcast network," said Bob Greenblatt, NBC Entertainment chairman.

The four-hour miniseries "Hillary," starring Diane Lane as the former first lady and secretary of state, is one such bid for distinctive programming, he said.

The goal is to woo viewers who are increasingly drawn away by cable TV's eye-catching, critically acclaimed fare like "Mad Men" and "Breaking Bad" and other media choices.

Broadcasting's audience is shrinking by 4 percent to 7 percent annually, Greenblatt told a meeting of the Television Critics Association.

"Anything that can shake up the landscape and say, 'we have something special'" would be considered part of the varied group of event projects, he said.

At NBC, that ranges from the new fall game show "Million Second Quiz" to big-ticket scripted fare including "Hillary" and other projects announced Saturday: "Rosemary's Baby" a four-hour version of the Ira Levin novel that was adapted as a 1968 movie; an adaptation of "Stephen King's Tommyknockers," and "Plymouth," about the Pilgrim's journey and settlement in America.

A six-hour miniseries about Cleopatra is in development, Greenblatt said.

Although Clinton hasn't announced her intention to seek the Democratic nomination for president, Greenblatt spoke as if her candidacy is expected. "Hillary" could air before Clinton announces her decision, but the timing has yet to be determined, Greenblatt said.

He didn't address how such a miniseries, which will track Clinton's life and career from 1998 to the present, might affect the presidential contest.

The part of former President Bill Clinton has yet to be cast. Lane's credits include the feature films "Unfaithful" and "Under the Tuscan Sun" and the TV movie "Cinema Verite."

Other networks seeking to stem audience erosion are jumping on the event bandwagon, especially in light of the success of another King adaptation, CBS' summer series "Under the Dome." Announced plans include a Fox's remake of the "Shogun" miniseries based on James Clavell's novel.

Greenblatt argued that NBC, which finished the last September-to-May season in fourth place in total viewers, is in better shape when the entire year is taken into account, especially among advertiser-favored young adult viewers.

He credited the popular talent contests "The Voice" and "America's Got Talent," as well as dramas "Grimm" and "Hannibal."

NBC has high hopes for the fall sitcom that brings Michael J. Fox back to TV but is prepared for a big tune-in for the debut episode that might not be sustainable, Greenblatt said.

___

Online:

http://www.nbc.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nbc-air-hillary-clinton-miniseries-180832405.html

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Ryback Responds To Goldberg Chants At WWE Show (Video), Ex-WWE Referee Joins Twitter

- Former WWE official Wes Adams is now on Twitter at WesAdams1980. Adams verified his account on his Facebook page: "Well I finally did it.....I got a Twitter so I can start tweetering tweets and twits and what not. I still don't understand what to do with the hash tags but if you want to start following me @WesAdams1980 that would be cool!"

- Since Ryback's debut in WWE last year, the powerhouse wrestler has been frequently subject to "Goldberg!" chants due his perceived similarities to the former grappling standout. At Saturday's WWE live event in Sydney, Australia, Ryback responded to fans' chants of the memorable wrestler prior to his encounter with John Cena. Video of the incident is available here.

According to the individual who posted the video, Cena taunted Ryback following this by saying, "You should be happy they're calling you Goldberg and not wanker."

- On Friday, The Bella Twins met fans at the NBC Experience Store in New York City. The official WWE website has posted photos from the event.

Watch Goldberg jackhammer Big Show ->

Source: http://www.lordsofpain.net/news/wwe/Ryback_Responds_To_Goldberg_Chants_At_WWE_Show_Video_Ex-WWE_Referee_Joins_Twitter.html

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Breakthrough in detecting DNA mutations could help treat tuberculosis, cancer

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Researchers have developed a new method that can look at a specific segment of DNA and pinpoint a single mutation, which could help diagnose and treat diseases such as cancer and tuberculosis.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/genes/~3/vdI2RsLBX-o/130728133857.htm

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With low-cost Apple iPhone 5C in the works, Apple iPhone 4 still sells well globally

A picture showing a number of plastic packaging containers with the name iPhone 5C printed on the side has everyone thinking that they have found the actual name of the low-cost version of the iPhone. For some time now, the device was dubbed the Apple iPhone Lite. Whatever the model is called, it is expected to be sent into emerging markets as an attempt to pry business away from entry-level handsets like the Nokia Lumia 520. But it is not like Apple doesn't have a model now that competes in that niche. The Apple iPhone 4, first launched in 2010, is currently considered the entry-level model of Apple's smartphone line and according to the Wall Street Journal, is still selling quite well.

According to analysts, the Apple iPhone 4 played a huge part in the larger than expected 31.2 million iPhones that were sold during Apple's fiscal third quarter. Wall Street had been looking for Apple to report sales of 26.5 million units. Apple did acknowledge that the Apple iPhone 5 was its best seller, which you would expect. But the Cupertino based tech titan did agree with Wall Street that iPhone 4 sales played a big role in the reported sales figures. Apple CEO Tim Cook said in a conference call following Apple's earnings announcement last week, that the company wants the iPhone 4 to act like a magnet to attract first time smartphone users. "We want to attract as many of these buyers as we can," said the executive.

Apple has started to push out the Apple iPhone 4 to countries like India. Between April and June, Apple shipped out 205,000 units of its iconic smartphone to the country which was up nearly 300% from last year and 41% sequentially. According to Cook, "India was up over 400%." Apple also started a promotion in India that allows users of another smartphone to trade it in to Apple and get as much as a 7000 Rupee ($117 USD) discount on the purchase of an Apple iPhone 4.

In the U.S., the Apple iPhone 4 is free with a signed two-year contract. But the new Apple iPhone 5C, if indeed that is what the low-priced phone will be called, should replace that model with the Apple iPhone 5 becoming the new mid-range offering. The Apple iPhone 5S or Apple iPhone 6 will be the new premium smartphone produced by the manufacturer.

source: WSJ

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/phonearena/ySoL/~3/ZNU3wPOlGuo/With-low-cost-Apple-iPhone-5C-in-the-works-Apple-iPhone-4-still-sells-well-globally_id45797

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Omnicom, Publicis to combine into biggest ad firm

Maurice Levy, left, Chief Executive of French advertising group Publicis, and John Wren, head of Omnicom Group pose during a joint news conference in Paris, France, Sunday, July 28, 2013. Publicis and Omnicom have announced merger plans to create the world's biggest advertising group . (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

Maurice Levy, left, Chief Executive of French advertising group Publicis, and John Wren, head of Omnicom Group pose during a joint news conference in Paris, France, Sunday, July 28, 2013. Publicis and Omnicom have announced merger plans to create the world's biggest advertising group . (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

Maurice Levy, left, Chief Executive of French advertising group Publicis, and John Wren, head of Omnicom Group exchange a pencil during a joint signature prior to a news conference in Paris, France, Sunday, July 28, 2013. Publicis and Omnicom have announced merger plans to create the world's biggest advertising group . (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

Maurice Levy, left, Chief Executive of French advertising group Publicis, and John Wren, head of Omnicom Group pose during a joint news conference in Paris, France, Sunday, July 28, 2013. Publicis and Omnicom have announced merger plans to create the world's biggest advertising group. (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

Maurice Levy, left, Chief Executive of French advertising group Publicis, and John Wren, head of Omnicom Group pose during a joint news conference in Paris, France, Sunday, July 28, 2013. Publicis and Omnicom have announced merger plans to create the world's biggest advertising group . (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

Maurice Levy, left, Chief Executive of French advertising group Publicis , and John Wren, head of Omnicom Group pose during a joint news conference in Paris, France, Sunday, July 28, 2013. Publicis and Omnicom have announced merger plans to create the world's biggest advertising group . (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

(AP) ? Omnicom Group Inc. and Publicis Groupe SA say they are combining in a "merger of equals" that will create the world's largest advertising firm, one worth more than $35 billion.

The combined company will be called Publicis Omnicom Group and be jointly led by Omnicom CEO John Wren and Publicis CEO Maurice Levy as co-chief executives. The move is designed to bolster the companies' focus on growing Asian and Latin American markets such as China and Brazil, where they each have ramped up operations to counter lackluster growth in weak European markets.

But although a combined firm will allow for more pricing power in general, the decrease in competition could present regulatory hurdles in the U.S. and Europe. Client conflicts also could be an issue, as rivals such as Coca-Cola Co., PepsiCo, McDonald's, Yum Brands' Taco Bell, Johnson & Johnson and Procter & Gamble now find themselves under the same umbrella.

Rich Tullo, an analyst at Albert Fried & Co. in New York, predicted pushback from regulators in both the U.S. and France. The U.S. could be wary of one company controlling such a large portion of the market, he said, while in France, authorities might not take warmly to any Americanization of a company that is a bright spot in the bruised French economy.

Tullo also questioned whether the combined company could live up to promises like the $500 million in cost savings touted with the announcement, given Europe's shaky financial condition. "That sounds like financial alchemy, if you ask me," he said.

Omnicom Group Inc., based in New York, owns BBDO Worldwide, DDB Worldwide Communications Group and TBWA Worldwide, among other agencies. Paris-based Publicis Groupe SA runs its namesake agency as well as Leo Burnett Worldwide, Saatchi & Saatchi and DigitasLBi. Their merger creates a company with combined annual revenue of about $23 billion, leapfrogging them over current London-based industry leader WPP PLC.

For the first year, Omnicom Chairman Bruce Crawford will serve as non-executive chairman of the new company. He will be succeeded by Elisabeth Badinter, the current Publicis Groupe chairwoman, and daughter of its founder, for the second year.

Levy is slated to take the non-executive chairman's seat after 30 months, leaving Wren to continue as sole CEO from that point.

Omnicom, which also owns public relations firms such as Fleishman-Hillard, Porter Novelli and Ketchum, reported 2012 profit of nearly $1 billion on revenue of $14.22 billion. Earlier this month, the Madison Avenue giant posted second-quarter earnings that topped analysts' average forecast, though revenue growth of 2 percent fell just short of expectations.

Founded in 1986, Omnicom generates just over half of its revenue from U.S. clients, and about one-quarter from European and British markets combined. The company's stock has risen 31 percent in the last 12 months, recently peaking at $67.43 on the New York Stock Exchange.

Omnicom will benefit from Publicis' strategic shift in the last few years toward digital operations, as the French company beefed up its digital marketing profile with the acquisitions of Digitas, Razorfish, Rosetta, Big Fuel and LBi. Publicis, which had revenue of $8.78 billion in 2012, had targeted generating 75 percent of its revenue in digital and fast-growing countries by 2018, according to a recent investor presentation.

The move gives Publicis, which has faced questions about who will succeed 71-year-old Levy, access to Omnicom's well-regarded senior leadership, said James Dix, an analyst at Wedbush Securities.

Analysts said the deal also represents even more consolidation in an industry that is already dominated by just a few players, a fact that might not sit well with U.S. regulators.

If the Omnicom-Publicis combination goes through, the combined company would account for nearly 40 percent of the U.S. ad industry, twice as much as the nearest competitor, WPP, according to Brian Wieser, an analyst at Pivotal Research Group in New York.

Wieser said Sunday the deal came as a surprise to many in the industry. Omnicom, he said, has "always been viewed as too large to get any larger."

The combined company will have more than 130,000 employees.

One concern is whether Omnicom and Publicis can strike a harmonious balance of power ? something that can be difficult in mergers of similar-sized companies.

"It's not clear yet who really is in the driver's seat," Wieser said. "That will emerge over time."

The fact that the two firms are based in different countries could also become an issue, Dix said. "You have these fiefdoms that keep people from playing together. One company is based in Paris, one is in New York. Where is the power center?" he said in an interview Saturday.

Dix expects that top executives are comfortable with the structure of the deal, but the adjustment may be more difficult for the next level of executives who run the firms' units.

"Now they have to fit together into a broader organization," Dix said. "If you lose clients or have defections of senior executives then you have something that looked good on paper but didn't quite play out."

The combination has been approved by the boards of both companies, but remains subject to regulatory approval in both the U.S. and Europe, and to a vote by shareholders of both companies. The deal is structured so that the shareholders of Publicis Groupe and Omnicom, after special dividends, will each hold approximately 50 percent of the company.

Publicis Groupe shareholders will receive one new share of Publicis Omnicom Group for each Publicis Groupe share they own, together with a special dividend of 1 euro per share. Omnicom shareholders will receive 0.813 new shares of Publicis Omnicom Group for each Omnicom share they own, plus a special dividend of $2 per share. The new company intends to be listed in Paris and on the New York Stock Exchange.

The combination could have a domino effect on the industry, spurring marriages between other ad giants who might fear they can't compete otherwise, said Michael Corty, an analyst at Chicago-based Morningstar. "Within the ad agency industry, this is potentially an earthquake deal."

___

Business News reporters Christina Rexrode and Jon Fahey contributed from New York.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-07-28-Omnicom-Publicis/id-7e6d345501654fe9aa72588c48f85604

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Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Hearing loss from loud blasts may be treatable

July 1, 2013 ? Long-term hearing loss from loud explosions, such as blasts from roadside bombs, may not be as irreversible as previously thought, according to a new study by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine.

Using a mouse model, the study found that loud blasts actually cause hair-cell and nerve-cell damage, rather than structural damage, to the cochlea, which is the auditory portion of the inner ear. This could be good news for the millions of soldiers and civilians who, after surviving these often devastating bombs, suffer long-term hearing damage.

"It means we could potentially try to reduce this damage," said John Oghalai, MD, associate professor of otolaryngology and senior author of the study, published July 1 in PLOS ONE. If the cochlea, an extremely delicate structure, had been shredded and ripped apart by a large blast, as earlier studies have asserted, the damage would be irreversible. (Researchers presume that the damage seen in these previous studies may have been due to the use of older, less sophisticated imaging techniques.)

"The most common issue we see veterans for is hearing loss," said Oghalai, a scientist and clinician who treats patients at Stanford Hospital & Clinics and directs the hearing center at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital.

The increasingly common use of improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, around the world provided the impetus for the new study, which was primarily funded by the U.S. Department of Defense. Among veterans with service-connected disabilities, tinnitus -- a constant ringing in the ears -- is the most prevalent condition. Hearing loss is the second-most-prevalent condition. But the results of the study would prove true for anyone who is exposed to loud blasts from other sources, such as jet engines, air bags or gunfire.

More than 60 percent of wounded-in-action service members have eardrum injuries, tinnitus or hearing loss, or some combination of these, the study says. Twenty-eight percent of all military personnel experience some degree of hearing loss post-deployment. The most devastating effect of blast injury to the ear is permanent hearing loss due to trauma to the cochlea. But exactly how this damage is caused has not been well understood.

The ears are extremely fragile instruments. Sound waves enter the ear, causing the eardrums to vibrate. These vibrations get sent to the cochlea in the inner ear, where fluid carries them to rows of hair cells, which in turn stimulate auditory nerve fibers. These impulses are then sent to the brain via the auditory nerve, where they get interpreted as sounds.

Permanent hearing loss from loud noise begins at about 85 decibels, typical of a hair dryer or a food blender. IEDs have noise levels approaching 170 decibels.

Damage to the eardrum is known to be common after large blasts, but this is easily detected during a clinical exam and usually can heal itself -- or is surgically repairable -- and is thus not typically the cause of long-term hearing loss.

In order to determine exactly what is causing the permanent hearing loss, Stanford researchers created a mouse model to study the effects of noise blasts on the ear.

After exposing anesthetized mice to loud blasts, researchers examined the inner workings of the mouse ear from the eardrum to the cochlea. The ears were examined from day one through three months. A micro-CT scanner was used to image the workings of the ear after dissection.

"When we looked inside the cochlea, we saw the hair-cell loss and auditory-nerve-cell loss," Oghalai said.

"With one loud blast, you lose a huge number of these cells. What's nice is that the hair cells and nerve cells are not immediately gone. The theory now is that if the ear could be treated with certain medications right after the blast, that might limit the damage."

Previous studies on larger animals had found that the cochlea was torn apart and shredded after exposure to a loud blast. Stanford scientists did not find this in the mouse model and speculate that the use of older research techniques may have caused the damage.

"We found that the blast trauma is similar to what we see from more lower noise exposure over time," said Oghalai. "We lose the sensory hair cells that convert sound vibrations into electrical signals, and also the auditory nerve cells."

Much of the resulting hearing loss after such blast damage to the ear is actually caused by the body's immune response to the injured cells, Oghalai said. The creation of scar tissue to help heal the injury is a particular problem in the ear because the organ needs to vibrate to allow the hearing mechanism to work. Scar tissue damages that ability.

"There is going to be a window where we could stop whatever the body's inflammatory response would be right after the blast," Oghalai said. "We might be able to stop the damage. This will determine future research."

In addition to the Department of Defense, the study was funded by the National Institutes of Health (grants K08DC006671 and P30DC010363) and Chosun University in South Korea.

The first author of the study, Sung-Il Cho, MD, assistant professor at Chosun University, was working at Stanford during the study. Other Stanford authors were graduate students Simon Gao, Jongmin Baek and David Jacobs; senior research scientist Anping Xia, MD, PhD; research technician Rosalie Wang; research associate Felipe Salles, PhD; computer programmer Patrick Raphael; and research coordinator Homer Abaya.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/Vz9QFbqbnIQ/130701172108.htm

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