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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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Does the representation of time depend on the cerebellum?Effect of cerebellar stroke

TL;DR: The results did not support a role for the cerebellum in timekeeping operations, but deficits in timing movements may be related to a disruption in acquiring sensory and cognitive information relevant to the task, coupled with an additional impairment in the motor-output system.
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Microbial Eukaryotes in the Human Microbiome: Ecology, Evolution, and Future Directions

TL;DR: The eukaryotic component of the human gut microbiome remains relatively unexplored with high throughput sequencing technology, but turning these tools toward microbial Eukaryotes in the gut will likely yield myriad insights into disease states as well as the ecological and evolutionary principles that govern the gut microbiota as mentioned in this paper.
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Dissociable neural correlates for familiarity and recollection during the encoding and retrieval of pictures

TL;DR: This paper used event-related brain potentials (ERPs) to monitor neural correlates of familiarity and recollection at both encoding and retrieval, and found that familiarity was associated with an enhanced positivity at frontopolar scalp sites from 150 to 450 ms.
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lockjaw encodes a zebrafish tfap2a required for early neural crest development.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that low is required for early steps in neural crest development and suggested that tfap2a is essential for the survival of a subset of neural crest derivatives, and Mosaic analysis demonstrated that neural crest defects in low are cell autonomous and secondarily cause disruptions in surrounding mesoderm.