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Kenji Hara

Researcher at Kyushu University

Publications -  171
Citations -  1536

Kenji Hara is an academic researcher from Kyushu University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Histogram equalization & Color histogram. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 163 publications receiving 1436 citations. Previous affiliations of Kenji Hara include Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries & Nagoya University.

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Reciprocal responses to dietary diacylglycerol of hepatic enzymes of fatty acid synthesis and oxidation in the rat.

TL;DR: Reductions in the activities of enzymes of fatty acid synthesis and increases in palmitoyl-CoA oxidation rates by both mitochondrial and peroxisomal pathways were also apparent when diacylglycerol replaced triacyl glycerol in diets to supply more than 65·8 g fatty acid/kg.
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Light source position and reflectance estimation from a single view without the distant illumination assumption

TL;DR: Two types of methods to estimate the surface reflectance property of an object, as well as the position of a light source from a single view without the distant illumination assumption are proposed, thus relaxing the conditions in the previous methods.
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Alteration by diacylglycerols of the transport and fatty acid composition of lymph chylomicrons in rats

TL;DR: The rates for triacylglycerol transport at 2–3 h and for cholesterol transport by chylomicrons at 3–4 h of the experimental period in rats infused with the diacyl glycerol emulsion were significantly lower than the corresponding values in the rats infusion with the Triacyl Glycerol Emulsion.
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Dietary diacylglycerol-dependent reduction in serum triacylglycerol concentration in rats

TL;DR: It was confirmed that dietary diacylglycerol compared with triacyl glycerol exerts a potent serum Triacyl Glycerol-lowering effect in the rat.
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Stem cells from human exfoliated deciduous teeth (SHED) enhance wound healing and the possibility of novel cell therapy

TL;DR: The results show that SHED hMSCs have similar effects of wound-healing promotion as hFibro and controls, which implies thatSHED might offer a unique stem cell resource and the possibility of novel cell therapies for wound healing in the future.