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Honorary degree for researcher who improved customer-supplier relations
10-25-2007 · University of BathProfessor David Ford, who has developed a worldwide system for improving the way companies interact with customers and suppliers, has been awarded an honorary Doctorate degree from Uppsala University
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Keywords: honorary, degree, researcher, improved, customer-supplier, relations, customer, supplier, relation
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- Picture this: FSU professor's research could lead to vastly improved medical imaging
02-13-2007 · EurekAlert!
Magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, has revolutionized health care, providing doctors with a highly accurate, noninvasive tool for diagnosing cancer, injuries and other maladies within the human body. Now, a Florida State University researcher in Tallahassee, Fla., has collaborated in a research project that could lead to ways of producing even sharper medical images.
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- Math model could aid study of collagen ailments
11-14-2006 · EurekAlert!
An MIT researcher's mathematical model explains for the first time the distinctive structure of collagen, a material key to healthy human bone, muscles and other tissues. The new model shows collagen's structure from the atomic to the tissue scale. An improved understanding of nature's most abundant protein could aid the search for cures to such ailments as osteoporosis and scurvy, all recognized as arising from diseased collagen.
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- Reliable cup of coffee
04-13-2007 · EurekAlert!
Dutch-sponsored researcher Laura Brandбn Briones has elevated software testing to a higher level. She improved both the tests and the method to determine the reliability of the tests. This means, for example, that washing machines and coffee machines can be tested far better before they are launched on the market.
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- Endobronchial valve significantly improves emphysema
10-22-2007 · EurekAlert!
Emphysema patients whose lungs are implanted with a pencil eraser-sized, one-way endobronchial valve experience significantly improved measures of lung function and report better quality of life, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine researcher Frank C. Sciurba, M.D., reported today at CHEST 2007, the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians. The 31-center, two-year study involved 321 patients in the US.
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- Improved diagnosis of cutaneous leishmaniasis thanks to new techniques
01-24-2008 · EurekAlert!
Dutch researcher Wendy van der Meide has developed and evaluated new techniques for a better diagnosis of cutaneous leishmaniasis and an improved monitoring of its treatment. Accurately establishing the number of parasites in a skin lesion before, during and after treatment is vital, so as to prevent serious physical consequences.
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- Unraveling the risk for schizophrenia -- Eye movement and attention focus of new study
02-21-2007 · EurekAlert!
A Binghamton University researcher has established a new framework to help determine whether individuals might be at risk for schizophrenia. In a study published in this month's Journal of Abnormal Psychology, Mark F. Lenzenweger, a professor of clinical science, neuroscience and cognitive psychology at Binghamton University, State University of New York (SUNY), is the first to have found that abnormalities in eye movements and attention can be used to divide people into two groups in relation to schizophrenia-related risk.
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- Unravelling the risk for schizophrenia -- Eye movement and attention focus of new study
02-21-2007 · EurekAlert!
A Binghamton University researcher has established a new framework to help determine whether individuals might be at risk for schizophrenia. In a study published in this month's Journal of Abnormal Psychology, Mark F. Lenzenweger, a professor of clinical science, neuroscience and cognitive psychology at Binghamton University, State University of New York (SUNY), is the first to have found that abnormalities in eye movements and attention can be used to divide people into two groups in relation to schizophrenia-related risk.
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- PhD researcher develops inexpensive, sustainable production method in just 2 years
12-06-2006 · EurekAlert!
Delft University of Technology PhD candidate Maaike Kroon has developed a sustainable and inexpensive production method for the chemical industry. This method combines reactions and separation processes, does not produce chemical waste and uses much less energy. After just two years of PhD research, she will receive her doctorate degree based on this research subject on December 11. Maaike Kroon (25) is regarded as an exceptionally talented young researcher.
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- MIT researcher: Learning about brains from computers, and vice versa
02-15-2008 · EurekAlert!
For many years, Tomaso Poggio's lab at MIT ran two parallel lines of research. Some projects were aimed at understanding how the brain works, using complex computational models. Others were aimed at improving the abilities of computers to perform tasks that our brains do with ease. But recently Poggio has found that the two tasks have begun to overlap to such a degree, that it's now time to combine the two lines of research.
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- Something new under the Sun
01-30-2007 · EurekAlert!
That plants grow better if grown in a greenhouse in the correct climate is nothing new. Dutch researcher Rachel van Ooteghem has designed a control system for an improved solar greenhouse that yields more. In the new greenhouse, good climate control with sustainable energy resulted not only in an increased crop yield but also a lower gas bill.
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