A
Anders Björklund
Researcher at Lund University
Publications - 771
Citations - 87172
Anders Björklund is an academic researcher from Lund University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transplantation & Dopamine. The author has an hindex of 165, co-authored 769 publications receiving 84268 citations. Previous affiliations of Anders Björklund include University of Washington & Institute for the Study of Labor.
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Cell transplantation and gene therapy in Parkinson disease
TL;DR: Using newly developed methods, Anders Björklund has mapped important parts of the central nervous system and neurotransmitters in the brain, and on the use of gene transfer procedures to generate alternative dopamine-producing of trophic factor-producing cells.
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The Role of Parental Income Over the Life Cycle: A Comparison of Sweden and the UK
TL;DR: For example, this paper found significant country differences in the association between parental income and these outcomes, and the associations are stronger in the UK than in Sweden, and they concluded that the country differences can account for a substantial part of the difference in income persistence.
Journal ArticleDOI
Grafts Derived from an α-Synuclein Triplication Patient Mediate Functional Recovery but Develop Disease-Associated Pathology in the 6-OHDA Model of Parkinson's Disease
Shelby Shrigley,Fredrik Nilsson,Bengt Mattsson,Alessandro Fiorenzano,Janitha Mudannayake,Andreas Bruzelius,Daniella Rylander Ottosson,Anders Björklund,Deirdre B. Hoban,Malin Parmar +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the viability and function of DA neuron grafts derived from a patient hiPSC line with an α-synuclein gene triplication (AST18), using a clinical grade human embryonic stem cell (hESC) line (RC17) as a reference control, were assessed in vivo.
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Parental Separation and Children's Educational Attainment: A Siblings Analysis on Swedish Register Data
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed whether the commonly found negative relationship between parental separation in childhood and educational outcomes is causal or mainly due to selection, using data on 100,000 Swedish full biological siblings, born in 1948-63, and performed cross-section and sibling-difference estimations.