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Paul Morris
Researcher at University of Sheffield
Publications - 283
Citations - 12193
Paul Morris is an academic researcher from University of Sheffield. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fractional flow reserve & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 252 publications receiving 10739 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul Morris include Johns Hopkins University & Center for Complex Systems and Brain Sciences.
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Altered expression of polyamine transporters reveals a role for spermidine in the timing of flowering and other developmental response pathways
Sheaza Ahmed,Menaka Ariyaratne,Jigar Patel,Alexander E Howard,Andrea Kalinoski,Vipaporn Phuntumart,Paul Morris +6 more
TL;DR: These experiments provide the first genetic evidence of polyamines transport in the timing of flowering, and indicate the importance of polyamine transporters in the regulation of flowering and senescence pathways.
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The stability of facial attractiveness: is it what you’ve got or what you do with it?
TL;DR: This paper found that transient factors such as gaze direction and facial expression affect facial attractiveness, suggesting that attractiveness is not stable and should be attributed to biological quality and therefore should be stable, however, transient factors like gaze direction, facial expression, and gaze direction are not stable indicators of physical attractiveness.
Planning Applications for Three Mars Missions with Ensemble
Arash Aghevli,Andrew Bachmann,John L. Bresina,Kevin Greene,Bob Kanefsky,James Kurien,Michael McCurdy,Paul Morris,Guy Pyrzak,Christian Ratterman,Alonso H. Vera,Steven Wragg +11 more
TL;DR: Ensemble as discussed by the authors is a multi-mission toolkit for building activity planning and sequencing systems that is being deployed on extended operations for the Mars Exploration Rover (MER) mission, the 2007 Phoenix Mars Lander and the 2009 Mars Science Laboratory rover mission.
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Angiography-Derived Fractional Flow Reserve: More or Less Physiology?
TL;DR: Angiography‐derived FFR has the potential to extend the benefits of physiological coronary lesion assessment to considerably more patients, given the size of the interventional cardiology market and clinical and commercial motivation to deliver these tools as quickly as possible.
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Simultaneous kissing stents to treat unprotected left main stem coronary artery bifurcation disease; stent expansion, vessel injury, hemodynamics, tissue healing, restenosis, and repeat revascularization
TL;DR: To perform detailed analysis of stent expansion, vessel wall stress, hemodynamics, re‐endothelialization, restenosis, and repeat PCI in the simultaneous kissing stents (SKS) technique of bifurcation left main stem (LMS) stenting.