Fellows

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Kinds of Fellows

  • clinical fellow
  • distinguish fellow
  • research fellow
  • senior fellow

  • Terms modified by Fellows

  • fellow citizen
  • fellow eye
  • fellow student

  • Selected Abstracts


    1999 DISTINGUISHED FELLOW OF THE AMERICAN COUNCIL ON CONSUMER INTERESTS

    JOURNAL OF CONSUMER AFFAIRS, Issue 1 2000
    Mohamed Abdel-Ghany
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    FELLOW OF THE AMERICAN FINANCE ASSOCIATION FOR 2010

    THE JOURNAL OF FINANCE, Issue 5 2010
    Article first published online: 21 SEP 2010
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    FELLOW OF THE AMERICAN FINANCE ASSOCIATION FOR 2009

    THE JOURNAL OF FINANCE, Issue 5 2009
    Richard H. Thaler
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    FELLOWS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF NURSE PRACTITIONERS

    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF NURSE PRACTITIONERS, Issue 10 2000
    Article first published online: 24 MAY 200
    First page of article [source]


    A Hand-Carried Personal Ultrasound Device for Rapid Evaluation of Left Ventricular Function: Use After Limited Echo Training

    ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY, Issue 4 2003
    Kristina Lemola
    A hand-carried personal ultrasound device (HCPUD) may be used for rapid cardiac screening by physicians with limited echo training. Our objective was to determine the accuracy of rapid HCPUD evaluation of left ventricular (LV) size and function when used by a Cardiology Fellow. Forty-five patients underwent an HCPUD exam using a 2.4-kg device with a 2- to 4-MHz curved transducer and color power Doppler (SonoSite). The results were compared with sonographer-performed and echocardiographer-interpreted exams using conventional equipment. The HCPUD exam lasted 6 ± 2 minutes. There was 100% agreement between HCPUD and conventional echo on qualitative assessment of LV systolic function. Comparing the HCPUD and conventional linear measurements of left ventricular end-diastolic dimension (LVEDD) and of interventricular septal (IVS) thickness: LVEDD is HCPUD = 0.94 conventional ,0.2,r = 0.82, P < 0.0001; IVS is HCPUD= 0.59conventional+0.6, r = 0.69, P < 0.0001. Thus, an HCPUD can effectively be used after limited training to rapidly screen for qualitative abnormalities of LV systolic function. Quantitative measurements of smaller structures with the HCPUD are more challenging. (ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY, Volume 20, May 2003) [source]


    Economic Society of Australia's Distinguished Fellow for 2009 Acceptance Speech,

    ECONOMIC PAPERS: A JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMICS AND POLICY, Issue 3 2009
    Ross Garnaut
    [source]


    Max Glatt is elected Distinguished Fellow by the Society for the Study of Addiction

    ADDICTION, Issue 12 2000
    Griffith Edwards
    First page of article [source]


    Corporate social responsibility: A third way?

    GLOBAL BUSINESS AND ORGANIZATIONAL EXCELLENCE, Issue 6 2007
    An interview with Sir Geoffrey Owen
    Sir Geoffrey Owen has been a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Management of the London School of Economics since 1996. From 1991 to 1996 he was Director of Business Policy in the Center for Economic Performance at the London School of Economics. He has held various senior positions in the industry sector and spent many years as Industry Correspondent as well as Deputy Editor for the Financial Times. In this interview, he answers 11 questions discussing the context in which corporate social responsibility is becoming a business concern. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


    Structure and biology of complement protein C3, a connecting link between innate and acquired immunity

    IMMUNOLOGICAL REVIEWS, Issue 1 2001
    Arvind Sahu
    Summary: Complement protein C3 is a central molecule in the complement system whose activation is essential for all the important functions performed by this system. After four decades of research it is now well established that C3 functions like a double-edged sword: on the one hand it promotes phagocytosis, supports local inflammatory responses against pathogens, and instructs the adaptive immune response to select the appropriate antigens for a humoral response; on the other hand its unregulated activation leads to host cell damage. In addition, its interactions with the proteins of foreign pathogens may provide a mechanism by which these microorganisms evade complement attack. Therefore, a clear knowledge of the molecule and its interactions at the molecular level not only may allow the rational design of molecular adjuvants but may also lead to the development of complement inhibitors and new therapeutic agents against infectious diseases. A.S. is a Wellcome Trust Overseas Senior Research Fellow in Biomedical Science in India. This research was supported by National Institutes of Health grants AI 30040, GM 56698, HL28220, and AI 48487. [source]


    Elemental signals regulating eosinophil accumulation in the lung

    IMMUNOLOGICAL REVIEWS, Issue 1 2001
    Paul S. Foster
    Summary: In this review we identify the elemental signals that regulate eosinophil accumulation in the allergic lung. We show that there are two interwoven mechanisms for the accumulation of eosinophils in pulmonary tissues and that these mechanisms are linked to the development of airways hyperreactivity (AHR). Interleukin-(IL)-5 plays a critical role in the expansion of eosinophil pools in both the bone marrow and blood in response to allergen provocation of the airways. Secondly, IL-4 and IL-13 operate within the allergic lung to control the transmigration of eosinophils across the vascular bed into pulmonary tissues. This process exclusively promotes tissue accumulation of eosinophils. IL-13 and IL-4 probably act by activating eosinophil-specific adhesion pathways and by regulating the production of IL-5 and eotaxin in the lung compartment. IL-5 and eotaxin co-operate locally in pulmonary tissues to selectively and synergistically promote eosinophilia. Thus, IL-5 acts systemically to induce eosinophilia and within tissues to promote local chemotactic signals. Regulation of IL-5 and eotaxin levels within the lung by IL-4 and IL-13 allows Th2 cells to elegantly co-ordinate tissue and peripheral eosinophilia. Whilst the inhibition of either the IL-4/IL-13 or IL-5/ eotaxin pathways resulted in the abolition of tissue eosinophils and AHR, only depletion of IL-5 and eotaxin concurrently results in marked attenuation of pulmonary inflammation. These data highlight the importance of targeting both IL-5 and CCR3 signalling systems for the resolution of inflammation and AHR associated with asthma. S.M. is a Postdoctoral Fellow funded by a grant from the Human Frontiers Foundation to P.S.F. and M.E.R. J.M. is supported by the German Research Association (grant MA 2241/1-1) and S.P.H by a NH&MRC CJ Martin Postdoctoral Fellowship. [source]


    2008 Distinguished ACCI Fellow: Julia Marlowe

    JOURNAL OF CONSUMER AFFAIRS, Issue 1 2008
    Article first published online: 22 FEB 200
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    2006 Distinguished ACCI Fellow: Jeanne M. Hogarth

    JOURNAL OF CONSUMER AFFAIRS, Issue 2 2006
    Article first published online: 30 AUG 200
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Citation for Fellow, Professor Suporn Koetsawang

    JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNAECOLOGY RESEARCH (ELECTRONIC), Issue 5 2000
    Article first published online: 24 MAY 2010
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    An Interview with Diego Gambetta

    OXONOMICS, Issue 2 2009
    Article first published online: 18 DEC 200
    Diego Gambetta is Professor of Sociology and official fellow at Nuffield College, University of Oxford. Born in Turin, Italy, he received his PhD in Social and Political Sciences from the University of Cambridge, U.K. in 1983. Since 1992 he has been in Oxford in various positions. He has been visiting professor at the University of Chicago, Columbia University, Science Po and the College de France in Paris. His main scholarly interests are trust, signalling theory and its applications, organised crime, and violent extremists. In 2000 he was made a Fellow of the British Academy. He is the author of numerous books including The Sicilian Mafia (Gambetta, 1993), Making Sense of Suicide Missions (Gambetta, 2005) and, most recently, The Codes of the Underworld (Gambetta, 2009). [source]


    Memoirs of a Peace Historian

    PEACE & CHANGE, Issue 1 2005
    Irwin Abrams
    This article will tell the personal story of how I came to write about the peace movement and then something about my work on this subject during my year in Europe 1936,37 as a Harvard Sheldon Traveling Fellow. Due to time and space restrictions, I will concentrate mainly on my time in Geneva at the International Peace Bureau and the Library of the League of Nations. In the journal I started on January 18, 1936, I wrote, "I do not know how long I can keep this up, but if I am able to, how much pleasure I shall have when I, as a bearded and bent octogenarian, can read over this record." I did keep it up through those years, and though I am not bearded and not too bent, but still an octogenarian for another month, I have indeed been reading with much enjoyment my pages about how this rather naive twenty-two-year-old encountered Europe for the first time. [source]


    Parkinson's Disease Society 6th Spring Conference for Researchers

    PROGRESS IN NEUROLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY, Issue 6 2009
    Lynn Bedford
    The Parkinson's Disease Society's 6th Spring Conference for Researchers was held in London in May, entitled ,Parkinson's Disease:The Pieces of the Puzzle'. Here, Dr Lynn Bedford, Parkinson's Disease Society Senior Research Fellow, reports on some of the highlights of the conference, including the latest genetic research, the importance of pre-motor symptoms and the therapeutic potential of the peptide exendin-4, found in the saliva of a poisonous lizard. Copyright © 2009 Wiley Interface Ltd [source]


    Fellow of the American Finance Association for 2008

    THE JOURNAL OF FINANCE, Issue 5 2008
    John C. Cox
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    John Edward Dyson 1941,2010

    ASTRONOMY & GEOPHYSICS, Issue 4 2010
    T W Hartquist
    Fellow of the RAS, astrophysical theorist who worked on winds, jets and bubbles, and Yorkshireman. [source]


    Sir Ian Axford FRS 1933,2010

    ASTRONOMY & GEOPHYSICS, Issue 3 2010
    Vytenis M Vasyliu
    Fellow, Honorary Fellow and Chapman Medallist of the RAS, internationally renowned space and astrophysical plasma physicist. [source]


    Geoffrey Ronald (Geoff) Burbidge 1925,2010

    ASTRONOMY & GEOPHYSICS, Issue 2 2010
    Virginia Trimble
    Gold Medallist and Fellow of the RAS, builder of elements, quantifier of quasars and gadfly of the cosmos. [source]


    RAS Fellow visits the White House

    ASTRONOMY & GEOPHYSICS, Issue 2 2010
    Article first published online: 22 MAR 2010
    An IYA2009 star party took a Fellow of the RAS to the White House in Washington DC in October last year. [source]


    Henry (Hal) Ivison Shipley Thirlaway 1917,2009

    ASTRONOMY & GEOPHYSICS, Issue 1 2010
    Alan Douglas
    Fellow and Gold Medallist of the Society, pioneering seismologist, and leader of the UK's nuclear test verification team. [source]


    Philip James (Jim) Message 1931,2008

    ASTRONOMY & GEOPHYSICS, Issue 2 2009
    David Harper
    Fellow of the RAS, member of RAS Council, teacher, celestial mechanician and valued mentor. [source]


    Lady Bertha Swirles, 1903,1999

    ASTRONOMY & GEOPHYSICS, Issue 3 2000
    J A Hudson
    Fellow of the RAS, nuclear physicist, mathematician, musician and teacher. Click HERE to view the article. [source]


    James Stanley Hey, 1909,2000

    ASTRONOMY & GEOPHYSICS, Issue 3 2000
    Nigel Henbest
    Fellow and Eddington Medallist of the RAS, Fellow of the Royal Society, MBE,pioneer in radar and radio astromy. Click HERE to view the article. [source]


    2007 AARES Distinguished Fellow

    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL & RESOURCE ECONOMICS, Issue 3 2007
    Carolyn Tanner
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    2006 AARES Distinguished Fellow

    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL & RESOURCE ECONOMICS, Issue 3 2006
    Alan Randall
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    2006 AARES Distinguished Fellow

    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL & RESOURCE ECONOMICS, Issue 3 2006
    Ronald Duncan
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    2004 AARES Distinguished Fellow

    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL & RESOURCE ECONOMICS, Issue 3 2004
    Article first published online: 20 SEP 200
    First page of article [source]


    Call for Nominations for 2006 Honorary Fellow of the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation

    BIOTROPICA, Issue 3 2005
    Article first published online: 10 AUG 200
    [source]