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Institution

Emory University

EducationAtlanta, Georgia, United States
About: Emory University is a education organization based out in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 51959 authors who have published 122469 publications receiving 6010698 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that chronic systemic exposure to the pesticide and mitochondrial toxin rotenone through jugular vein cannulation reproduced many features of Parkinson's disease in rats, including nigrostriatal dopaminergic degeneration and formation of alpha-synuclein-positive cytoplasmic inclusions in nigral neurons.

714 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Recognition of the central functions these proteins play in vital cellular processes has focused attention on RGS proteins as exciting new candidates for therapeutic intervention and drug development.
Abstract: Regulators of G protein signaling (RGS) and RGS-like proteins are a family (>30 members) of highly diverse, multifunctional signaling proteins that bind directly to activated G alpha subunits. Family members are defined by a shared RGS domain, which is responsible for G alpha binding and markedly stimulates the GTPase activity of G alpha subunits leading to their deactivation and termination of downstream signals. Although much has been learned in recent years about the biochemistry of RGS/G alpha interactions, considerably less is known about the broader cellular roles and regulation of RGS proteins. Recent findings indicate that cellular mechanisms such as covalent modification, alternative gene splicing, and protein processing can dictate the activity and subcellular localization of RGS proteins. Many family members also directly link G proteins to a growing list of signaling proteins with diverse cellular roles. New findings indicate that RGS proteins act not as dedicated inhibitors but, rather, as tightly regulated modulators and integrators of G protein signaling. In some cases, RGS proteins modulate the lifetime and kinetics of both slow-acting (e.g., Ca(2+) oscillations) and fast-acting (e.g., ion conductances, phototransduction) signaling responses. In other cases, RGS proteins integrate G proteins with signaling pathways linked to such diverse cellular responses as cell growth and differentiation, cell motility, and intracellular trafficking. These and other recent studies with animal model systems indicate that RGS proteins play important roles in both physiology and disease. Recognition of the central functions these proteins play in vital cellular processes has focused our attention on RGS proteins as exciting new candidates for therapeutic intervention and drug development.

714 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the relationship between expected equity returns and the level as well as the volatility of trading activity, a proxy for liquidity, and found that the second moment of liquidity should be positively related to asset returns, provided agents care about the risk associated with fluctuations in liquidity.

712 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Empirical findings from perception, action, working memory, conceptual processing, language and social cognition illustrate how this framework produces the extensive prediction that characterizes natural intelligence.
Abstract: Based on accumulating evidence, simulation appears to be a basic computational mechanism in the brain that supports a broad spectrum of processes from perception to social cognition. Further evidence suggests that simulation is typically situated, with the situated character of experience in the environment being reflected in the situated character of the representations that underlie simulation. A basic architecture is sketched of how the brain implements situated simulation. Within this framework, simulators implement the concepts that underlie knowledge, and situated conceptualizations capture patterns of multi-modal simulation associated with frequently experienced situations. A pattern completion inference mechanism uses current perception to activate situated conceptualizations that produce predictions via simulations on relevant modalities. Empirical findings from perception, action, working memory, conceptual processing, language and social cognition illustrate how this framework produces the extensive prediction that characterizes natural intelligence.

710 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Early-onset sepsis remains an uncommon but potentially lethal problem among very-low-birth-weight infants, and the change in pathogens over time from predominantly gram-positive to predominantly Gram-negative requires confirmation by ongoing surveillance.
Abstract: Background It is uncertain whether the rates and causes of early-onset sepsis (that occurring within 72 hours after birth) among very-low-birth-weight infants have changed in recent years, since antibiotics have begun to be used more widely during labor and delivery. Methods We studied 5447 very-low-birth-weight infants (those weighing between 401 and 1500 g) born at centers of the Neonatal Research Network of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development between 1998 and 2000 who had at least one blood culture in the first three days of life and compared them with 7606 very-low-birth-weight infants born at centers in the network between 1991 and 1993. Results Early-onset sepsis (as confirmed by positive blood cultures) was present in 84 infants in the more recent birth cohort (1.5 percent). As compared with the earlier birth cohort, there was a marked reduction in group B streptococcal sepsis (from 5.9 to 1.7 per 1000 live births of infants weighing 401 to 1500 g, P<0.001) and an increase ...

708 citations


Authors

Showing all 52622 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Younan Xia216943175757
Eric J. Topol1931373151025
Bernard Rosner1901162147661
Paul G. Richardson1831533155912
Peter W.F. Wilson181680139852
Dennis S. Charney179802122408
Joseph Biederman1791012117440
Kenneth C. Anderson1781138126072
David A. Weitz1781038114182
Lei Jiang1702244135205
William J. Sandborn1621317108564
Stephen J. Elledge162406112878
Ali H. Mokdad156634160599
Michael Tomasello15579793361
Don W. Cleveland15244484737
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023195
20221,124
20218,694
20208,001
20197,033
20186,326