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Hiroki R. Ueda

Researcher at University of Tokyo

Publications -  247
Citations -  21711

Hiroki R. Ueda is an academic researcher from University of Tokyo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Circadian clock & Circadian rhythm. The author has an hindex of 59, co-authored 211 publications receiving 18300 citations. Previous affiliations of Hiroki R. Ueda include Intec, Inc. & Osaka University.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

Perturbation analyses of intermolecular interactions.

TL;DR: The DIPA provides the practical method to identify conformational states and their corresponding important intermolecular interactions with distance information and it is concluded that the DipA is a more practical method compared with the IPA.
Journal ArticleDOI

Buried Moire supercells through SrTiO$_3$ nanolayer relaxation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify a highly ordered Moire lattice at an inherently disordered SrTiO$_3$ (STO) - LSAT interface using high-resolution reciprocal space mapping via synchrotron based X-Ray diffraction.
Book ChapterDOI

Discovering A-to-I RNA Editing Through Chemical Methodology "ICE-seq"

TL;DR: The Inosine Chemical Erasing method is developed to accurately and biochemically identify inosines in RNA strands utilizing inosine cyanoethylation and reverse transcription-PCR and applied to next-generation sequencing technology, called ICE-seq, to conduct an unbiased genome-wide screening of A-to-I editing sites in the transcriptome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic and molecular analysis of wild-derived arrhythmic mice.

TL;DR: This strategy using wild-derived variant mice may provide a novel opportunity to evaluate circadian and its related disorders in human that arise from the interaction between multiple variant genes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structurally assisted melting of excitonic correlations in 1T-TiSe2

TL;DR: In this paper, the structural destabilization of few atoms causes melting of the macroscopic ordered charge-density wave in 1T-TiSe2 using ultrafast pump-probe non-resonant and resonant X-ray diffraction, and the atomic structure at excitation energies more than one order of magnitude below the suggested excitonic binding energy.