Open AccessJournal Article
[Two-photon laser scanning fluorescence microscopy].
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This article is published in Tanpakushitsu kakusan koso. Protein nucleic acid enzyme.The article was published on 2007-10-01 and is currently open access. It has received 1480 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Scanning confocal electron microscopy & Microscopy.read more
Citations
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Multiphoton microscopy for non-invasive optical biopsy of human skin. multiphoton microscopy – instrument optic non-invaziv de evaluare a pielii
Mihaela Balu,Bruce J. Tromberg +1 more
TL;DR: This review summarizes the most recent applications of in vivo MPM imaging in dermatology and discusses the challenges of implementing this technology into clinical practice.
Journal ArticleDOI
Optical imaging of the rat brain suggests a previously missing link between top-down and bottom-up nervous system function.
TL;DR: It is suggested that operating at the mesoscale level of brain organization, neuronal assemblies may provide a functional link between “bottom-up” cellular mechanisms and “top-down” cognitive ones within anatomically defined regions.
Microscopic Studies of Neurovascular Coupling During Epilepsy in the Mouse Brain
TL;DR: In this paper, a mesure minimalement invasive du PO2 dans les tissus corticaux, conjointement avec le diametre des arterioles adjacentes a ete mesure in-vivo en simultane sur des souris durant les evenements epileptiques dans le cortex sensori-moteur de la souris.
DissertationDOI
Innovations of wide-field optical-sectioning fluorescence microscopy: toward high-speed volumetric bio-imaging with simplicity
TL;DR: In this article, a wide-field optical-sectioning technique was proposed for high-speed, volumetric fluorescence imaging of living biological systems, which can achieve diffraction-limited optical sectioning, low out-of-focus excitation and high-frame-rate imaging in living biological system.
Dissertation
Development of single-molecule methods for RNA splicing
TL;DR: Investigation of single-molecule methods for RNA splicing showed that there was a distinctive reduction in the number of bound proteins in complex A, dependent on the availability of ATP, and could not find any evidence that sequences known to mediate stimulation by SRSF1 affect its binding.