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David A. Jones
Researcher at University of Birmingham
Publications - 133
Citations - 9481
David A. Jones is an academic researcher from University of Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Isometric exercise & Skeletal muscle. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 132 publications receiving 8846 citations. Previous affiliations of David A. Jones include Manchester Metropolitan University & University of Edinburgh.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The influence of nitric oxide on in vivo human skeletal muscle properties.
TL;DR: The present results show that GTN treatment increased maximum voluntary strength but decreased twitch tension, indicating that these are two separate actions of NO on human muscle working in vivo.
Journal ArticleDOI
Variation in the colour of the keel petals in Lotus corniculatus L.
David A. Jones,T J Crawford +1 more
TL;DR: There appears to be no association between cyanogenesis in the leaves and keel colour, either on a per plant or on a population basis.
Journal ArticleDOI
Exercise, Heat Stress and the Interleukin-6 Response: Support for Temperature-Mediated Neuroendocrine Regulatory Mechanisms
Journal Article
Effects of oxidation on the power of chemically skinned rat soleus fibres
TL;DR: Fitting data to the Huxley cross-bridge model suggested that oxidation decreased both the rate constant for cross- bridge attachment, and detachment of negatively strained cross-bridges (g₂), similar to the effect of reduced activation.
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Commentaries on Viewpoint: can muscle size fully account for strength differences between children and adults?
Walter Herzog,Alessandro Sartorio,Hiroaki Kanehisa,Raffy Dotan,Louise E. Wood,Anne Tonson,Keith Tolfrey,Thomas D. O'Brien,Daniel Lambertz,Claudio L. Lafortuna,Tetsuo Fukunaga,Bareket Falk,Yann Le Fur,Patrick J. Cozzone,David Bendahan,Christopher I. Morse,Neil D. Reeves,Vasilios Baltzopoulos,David A. Jones,Constantinos N. Maganaris,Jean-Francois Grosset,Chantal Pérot +21 more
TL;DR: Since the contractile machinery in children is the same as that in adults, there is no reason to believe that the answer to the question posed in the title has received conflicting answers.