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Erlinda R. Ulloa

Researcher at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

Publications -  17
Citations -  687

Erlinda R. Ulloa is an academic researcher from Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Staphylococcus aureus & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 13 publications receiving 519 citations. Previous affiliations of Erlinda R. Ulloa include Boston Children's Hospital & University of California, San Diego.

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Recognition of point-light biological motion: Mu rhythms and mirror neuron activity

TL;DR: The results revealed that point-light biological animations produced mu suppression relative to baseline, while scrambled versions of these animations did not, which supports the hypothesis that the mirror neuron system is involved in inferring human actions by recovering object information from sparse input.
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Long-term follow-up of IPEX syndrome patients after different therapeutic strategies: An international multicenter retrospective study

Federica Barzaghi, +83 more
TL;DR: Patients receiving chronic IS were hampered by disease recurrence or complications, impacting long‐term disease‐free survival, and when performed in patients with a low OI score, HSCT resulted in disease resolution with better quality of life, independent of age, donor source, or conditioning regimen.
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The neural substrate of gesture recognition.

TL;DR: Results show that a similar neural substrate, albeit, with a distinct engagement underlies the cognitive processing of transitive and intransitive gestures recognition, and suggest that selective disruptions in these circuits may lead to distinct clinical deficits.
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Association of Enterovirus D68 with Acute Flaccid Myelitis, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA, 2009-2018.

TL;DR: The need to improve surveillance programs for nonpolio enterovirus to identify possible AFM triggers and predict disease prevalence to better prepare for future outbreaks is reinforced.
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Photo-Disassembly of Membrane Microdomains Revives Conventional Antibiotics against MRSA.

TL;DR: The synergistic therapy, without phototoxicity to the host, is effective in combating MRSA both in vitro and in vivo in a mice skin infection model and paves a novel platform to revive conventional antibiotics to combat drug‐resistant S. aureus infections as well as to screen new lead compounds.