From innovative adult changing stations to seamless architectural 3D visualization, Building Design+Construction editors have collected 16 of the top products launched during ...
A tiny, aquatic, single-celled organism can contract to one-quarter of its body length in less than 5 milliseconds—hundreds ...
Many cells change shape using actomyosin, but some protists contract using calcium-activated protein networks called myonemes. We combine quantitative imaging, electron microscopy, multiscale modeling ...
SREBP1 (sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1) is activated during the pathogenesis of heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) hearts, which directly transactivates sodium-hydrogen ...
Many advances in integrative modeling of the ventricular myocyte have resulted from quantitative modeling of these components which underlie CICR and ECC in cardiac myocytes. In this review, we will ...
In his classic science-fiction story “The New Accelerator,” published in 1901, H. G. Wells describes a drug that speeds up a person’s metabolism by a factor of 1,000. For the two protagonists who ...
Fears of a recession are back on investors’ minds. But predicting the onset of an economic downturn, let alone the length and severity of one, is difficult even for the experts. As a rule of thumb, ...
In 1959, physicists James Terrell and Roger Penrose (Nobel laureate in 2020) independently concluded that fast-moving objects should appear rotated. However, this effect has never been demonstrated.
Imagine a microscopic locomotive moving back and forth along a track, propelling itself without any external force. At the molecular level, this concept forms the foundation of molecular ...
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