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Olivier Friard

Researcher at University of Turin

Publications -  39
Citations -  2330

Olivier Friard is an academic researcher from University of Turin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Animal ecology & Biology. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 34 publications receiving 1489 citations.

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BORIS: a free, versatile open-source event-logging software for video/audio coding and live observations

TL;DR: BORIS is a free, open‐source and multiplatform standalone program that allows a user‐specific coding environment to be set for a computer‐based review of previously recorded videos or live observations and provides an at‐a‐glance summary of the main behavioural features.
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CircuitsDB: a database of mixed microRNA/transcription factor feed-forward regulatory circuits in human and mouse

TL;DR: A dynamic web-accessible database, CircuitsDB, supporting a genome-wide transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulatory network integration, for the human and mouse genomes is described, based on a bioinformatic sequence-analysis approach.
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Genome-wide activity of unliganded estrogen receptor-α in breast cancer cells.

TL;DR: The data suggest that ERα has a fundamental role in the homeostasis of luminal epithelial cells also when estrogen is ablated physiologically or pharmacologically, and that unliganded ERα participates, together with other factors, in the maintenance of the luminal-specific cistrome in breast cancer cells.
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Effects of Oestrogen on MicroRNA Expression in Hormone-Responsive Breast Cancer Cells

TL;DR: MiRNome analysis in tumour tissues from breast cancer patients confirmed a strong association between expression of these small RNAs and clinical outcome of the disease, although this appears to involve only marginally the oestrogen-regulated miRNAs identified in this study.
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The Indris Have Got Rhythm! Timing and Pitch Variation of a Primate Song Examined between Sexes and Age Classes

TL;DR: Singing in indris has a high behavioral flexibility and varies according to social and individual factors, which indicates that the flexible spectral structure of the phrases given during the song may underlie perceptual abilities that are relatively unknown in other non-human primates, such as the ability to recognize particular pitch patterns.