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Neil R. Smalheiser

Researcher at University of Illinois at Chicago

Publications -  183
Citations -  9534

Neil R. Smalheiser is an academic researcher from University of Illinois at Chicago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neurite & MEDLINE. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 179 publications receiving 8933 citations. Previous affiliations of Neil R. Smalheiser include Oregon Health & Science University & University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.

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A decrease of reelin expression as a putative vulnerability factor in schizophrenia

TL;DR: In all of the brain areas studied, RELN and its mRNA were significantly reduced in patients with schizophrenia; this decrease was similar in patients affected by undifferentiated or paranoid schizophrenia and is interpreted within a neurodevelopmental/vulnerability "two-hit" model for the etiology of schizophrenia.
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An interactive system for finding complementary literatures: a stimulus to scientific discovery

TL;DR: Interactive software and database search strategies that facilitate the discovery of previously unknown cross specialty information of scientific interest are described and evaluated.
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Mammalian microRNAs derived from genomic repeats

TL;DR: It is shown that a subset of conventional mammalian microRNAs is derived from LINE-2 transposable elements and other genome repeats, which are distinct from the rasiRNAs, which appear to be processed from long double-stranded RNA precursors.
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Plasma Exosomal miRNAs in Persons with and without Alzheimer Disease: Altered Expression and Prospects for Biomarkers

TL;DR: The findings warrant replication and follow-up with a larger cohort of patients and controls who have been carefully characterized in terms of cognitive and imaging data, other biomarkers and risk factors, and who are sampled repeatedly over time.
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Author name disambiguation in MEDLINE

TL;DR: This work test the hypothesis that the Author-ity model will suffice to disambiguate author names for the vast majority of articles in MEDLINE, a database that has each name on each article assigned to one of 6.7 million inferred author-individual clusters.