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Robert E. Kearney

Researcher at McGill University

Publications -  274
Citations -  8602

Robert E. Kearney is an academic researcher from McGill University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Reflex & Joint stiffness. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 268 publications receiving 8160 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert E. Kearney include Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital & Boston University.

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Quantitative Proteomics Analysis of the Secretory Pathway

TL;DR: The data support a role for COPI vesicles in recycling and cisternal maturation, showing that Golgi-resident proteins are present at a higher concentration than secretory cargo.
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System identification of human joint dynamics.

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of experimental studies of the dynamics of joint mechanics is presented, with an emphasis on the behavior of single joints in alert humans, and the interpretation of these results in terms of the underlying physiological mechanisms is considered, with the relative contributions of passive properties of tissue, the mechanical behavior of muscle, and stretch reflexes.
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Identification of intrinsic and reflex contributions to human ankle stiffness dynamics

TL;DR: It is concluded that reflex stiffness can be large enough to be important functionally, but that its effects will depend strongly upon the particular conditions.
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Dynamics of human ankle stiffness: Variation with mean ankle torque

TL;DR: The left foot of five human subjects was rotated in a fixed stochastic pattern about a constant ankle angle and the forces opposing these perturbations were measured to calculate the dynamic stiffness transfer functions relating ankle angular position to ankle torque.
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A HUPO test sample study reveals common problems in mass spectrometry–based proteomics

Alexander W. Bell, +101 more
- 01 Jun 2009 - 
TL;DR: Central analysis determined missed identifications, environmental contamination, database matching and curation of protein identifications as sources of problems in liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry–based proteomics.