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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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Journal ArticleDOI

Kinetic analysis of 'rapid onset' neurite formation in NG108-15 cells reveals a dual role for substratum-bound laminin.

TL;DR: Undifferentiated neural hybrid NG108-15 cells plated on laminin-coated, polylysine-treated plastic Petri dishes in minimal serum-free media formed long neurites within 1-4 h post-plating, strikingly similar to those of neuronal growth cones.
Proceedings Article

Undiscovered public knowledge: a ten-year update

TL;DR: This work has identified seven examples of complementary noninteractive structures in the biomedical literature that led to a novel, plausible, and testable hypothesis that was subsequently corroborated by medical researchers through clinical or laboratory investigation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Olfactory discrimination training up-regulates and reorganizes expression of microRNAs in adult mouse hippocampus

TL;DR: In vivo results indicate that significant, dynamic and co-ordinated changes in miRNA expression accompany early stages of learning.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regulation of mammalian microRNA processing and function by cellular signaling and subcellular localization

TL;DR: This mini-review will discuss how microRNA biogenesis and function can be regulated by various nuclear and cytoplasmic processing events, including emerging evidence that microRNA pathway components can be selectively regulated by control of their subcellular localization and by modifications that occur during dynamic cellular signaling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Collaborative development of the Arrowsmith two node search interface designed for laboratory investigators

TL;DR: This paper describes how an inter-institutional consortium of neuroscientists used the UIC Arrowsmith web interface in their daily work and guided the development, refinement and expansion of the system into a suite of tools intended for use by the wider scientific community.