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Kathleen M. Gough

Researcher at University of Manitoba

Publications -  86
Citations -  2400

Kathleen M. Gough is an academic researcher from University of Manitoba. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ab initio & Raman spectroscopy. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 84 publications receiving 2163 citations. Previous affiliations of Kathleen M. Gough include University of Jena & McMaster University.

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Properties of atoms in molecules: additivity and transferability of group polarizabilities

TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown that the theory of atoms in molecules recovers and explains the experimentally observed additivity and transferability of the group polarizabilities in the hydrocarbons, just as has been previously done for the heats of formation, electric moments and molar volumes.
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Isolated C–H stretching vibrations of n‐alkanes: Assignments and relation to structure

TL;DR: In this article, the conformational/configurational dependence of the frequencies of the deuterium-isolated C-H stretching modes of the gas-phase alkanes C1, C2, n−C3, n‐C4(t and g), n•C5(tt and gt), cyclo−C6, iso−C4, and neo−C5 are reported.
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The creatine kinase/creatine connection to Alzheimer's disease: CK-inactivation, APP-CK complexes and focal creatine deposits.

TL;DR: Whether Cr, if given at an early time point of the disease, may prevent or delay the course of AD-related neurodegeneration is considered, and the potential value of supplementation with Cr, a potent neuroprotective substance is considered.
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Theoretical analysis of molecular polarizabilities and polarizability derivatives in hydrocarbons

TL;DR: In this paper, molecular polarizabilities and polarizability derivatives associated with CH and CC bond stretching have been calculated for CH4, C2H2, C4H8 (trans and gauche), C5H12 (alltrans) and C6H12.
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Spectropathology for the next generation: Quo vadis?

TL;DR: Although the potential of vibrational spectroscopy for biomedical applications has been well demonstrated, translation into clinical practice has been relatively slow and considerable effort is still required to gain acceptance of the techniques among the medical community, standardise protocols, extend to a clinically relevant scale, and ultimately assess the health economics underlying clinical deployment.