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Rob Knight

Researcher at University of California, San Diego

Publications -  1188
Citations -  322479

Rob Knight is an academic researcher from University of California, San Diego. The author has contributed to research in topics: Microbiome & Biology. The author has an hindex of 201, co-authored 1061 publications receiving 253207 citations. Previous affiliations of Rob Knight include Anschutz Medical Campus & University of Sydney.

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Search deficits in neglect patients are dependent on size of the visual scene.

TL;DR: In the present study, visual display area was varied independently of the number of items displayed within the area, which suggests that neglect is more severe when attention has to be moved over a larger distance.
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Publisher Correction: The gut-liver axis and the intersection with the microbiome.

TL;DR: In the original version of Table 1 published online, upward arrows to indicate increased translocation of PAMPs were missing from the row entitled ‘Translocation’ for both the column on alcoholic liver disease and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.
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An analysis of atrophy in the medial mammillary nucleus following hippocampal and fornix lesions in humans and nonhuman primates.

TL;DR: It is estimated that the loss in cell number and shrinkage of remaining cells contribute negligibly to the 45% reduction in MMN volume, and the loss of neuropil appears to be the major contributor to the change inMMN volume.
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Prefrontal cortical involvement in visual working memory.

TL;DR: Frontal patients may require activation of limbic cortex, indexed by N400, for maintenance of both rapid and sustained working memory, and prefrontal lesions impair the frontal component of an anterior-posterior working memory network activated during rapid and sustaining visual memory processing.
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Temporal, Environmental, and Biological Drivers of the Mucosal Microbiome in a Wild Marine Fish, Scomber japonicus.

TL;DR: The longitudinal fish microbiome study evaluates the extent to which the environment and host biology drives mucosal microbial ecology and establishes a baseline for long-term surveys linking environment stressors to mucosal health of wild marine fish.