cochranlab.net
Cochran Lab - Stanford University
http://www.cochranlab.net/news
Engineered protein therapeutic stops the spread of cancer. In a paper in Nature Chemical Biology, an experimental therapy stopped the metastasis of breast and ovarian cancers in lab mice, pointing toward a safe and effective alternative to chemotherapy. LUNGevity Foundation Research Award. Alejandro Sweet-Cordero and Jennifer Cochran were awarded a LUNGevity Targeted Therapeutics Grant for their project entitled: Protein engineering to target tumor-stroma interactions in non-small cell lung cancer. Jenni...
cochranlab.net
Cochran Lab - Stanford University
http://www.cochranlab.net/people/awards.shtml
Students and postdocs in the Cochran Lab have received many awards and fellowships:. 2016 Stanford Medical Scholars Fellowship Program. 2015 NIH Cell and Molecular Biology Training Grant. 2016 Bio-X Graduate Fellowship. 2015 Best Poster Award, Bio-X Interdisciplinary Initiatives Symposium. 2014 NIH Cardiovascular Imaging Training Grant. 2016 Best Poster Award, CHI’s Peptalk Meeting. 2015 Stanford Graduate Fellowship. 2016 National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship. 2014 Bio-X Graduate Fellowship.
globalwarming-arclein.blogspot.com
Terra Forming Terra: Telomere Extension turns back Aging Clock in Cultured Human Cells
http://globalwarming-arclein.blogspot.com/2015/07/telomere-extension-turns-back-aging.html
TERRAFORMING TERRA We discuss and comment on the role agriculture will play in the containment of the CO2 problem and address protocols for terraforming the planet Earth. A model farm template is imagined as the central methodology. A broad range of timely science news and other topics of interest are commented on. Saturday, July 25, 2015. Telomere Extension turns back Aging Clock in Cultured Human Cells. This is remarkable. It allows one to potentially treat. One reason that i have tried to take good ca...
profiles.stanford.edu
Sanjiv Sam Gambhir, MD, PhD's Profile | Stanford Profiles
https://profiles.stanford.edu/sanjiv-gambhir
Sanjiv Sam Gambhir, MD, PhD. Virginia and D.K. Ludwig Professor for Clinical Investigation in Cancer Research and Professor, by courtesy, of Bioengineering and of Materials Science and Engineering. Radiology - Nuclear Medicine. Professor, Radiology - Nuclear Medicine. Professor (By courtesy), Bioengineering. Professor (By courtesy), Materials Science and Engineering. Member, Stanford Cancer Institute. Faculty Fellow, Stanford ChEM-H. Professor, Department of Radiology and Bio-X Program (2003 - Present).
winslowlab.stanford.edu
Winslow Lab at Stanford University
http://winslowlab.stanford.edu/links.html
Stanford University School of Medicine. Stanford Comprehensive Cancer Center. Cancer Biology Graduate Program. Stanford University Biosciences PhD Programs. The V Foundation for Cancer Research. The American Lung Association. Pancreatic Cancer Action Network/AACR. The Elsa U. Pardee Foundation. The Hope Funds for Cancer Research. Uniting Against Lung Cancer.
news.stanford.edu
Optogenetics earns Stanford professor Karl Deisseroth Keio Prize in Medicine
http://news.stanford.edu/features/2014/optogenetics
Optogenetics earns Stanford professor Karl Deisseroth the Keio prize in medicine. An idea that started as a long shot using light to control the activity of the brain has earned Karl Deisseroth the Keio prize in medicine. The technique, called optogenetics, is now widely used at Stanford and worldwide to understand the brain's wiring and to unravel behavior. Many researchers expect it will lead to medical discoveries. Luckily, it worked, and has just earned Deisseroth, now the D. H. Chen Professo...A pro...
cogsc.iut.ac.ir
Stanford scientists uncover how a fluctuating brain network may make us better thinkers | IUT Cognitive and Computational Neuroscience Group
http://www.cogsc.iut.ac.ir/content/stanford-scientists-uncover-how-fluctuating-brain-network-may-make-us-better-thinkers
Skip to main content. IUT Cognitive and Computational Neuroscience Group. Stanford scientists uncover how a fluctuating brain network may make us better thinkers. September 30, 2016. Fluctuations of network structure of the brain during rest (top panel). Fluctuations grouped by high similarity show two distinct states: one in which the brain was segregated and another in which the brain was integrated. (Image credit: Mac Shine). A professor of psychology We’ve been able to say, ‘Here’s this underlying st...
compbio.stanford.edu
Computational Biology Group - Stanford Computer Science Dept
http://compbio.stanford.edu/cs-courses.html
Courses in Computational Biology. A Computational Tour of the Human Genome. Introduction to computational biology through an informatic exploration of the human genome. Topics include: genome sequencing; functional landscape of the human genome (genes, gene regulation, repeats, RNA genes, epigenetics); genome evolution (comparative genomics, ultraconservation, co-option). Additional topics may include population genetics, personalized genomics, and ancient DNA. Course includes primers on mole...Applicati...
compbio.stanford.edu
Computational Biology Group - Stanford Computer Science Dept
http://compbio.stanford.edu/index.html
Apply for the Computer Science Ph.D. program. Deadline: Winter 2014. Because of the colleagues, opportunities, facilities, and the true interdisciplinary and entrepreneurial spirit on campus (as well as unmatched weather and Bay Area setting). US News ranks Stanford University as the #1 Best Graduate School in both computer science, biological sciences, and in genetics, genomics and bioinformatics. Stanford Computer Science Department. Related Graduate Programs and Departments.