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Feature on research by Stanford Bio-X affiliated faculty member Manu Prakash, Stanford Bio-X Bowes Fellow Deepak Krishnamurthy, and Paul Berg Interdisciplinary Biomedical Graduate Fellow and Stanford Bio-X SIGF Hongquan Li:
Insights from an innovative rotating microscope could provide a new window into the secrets of microscopic life in the ocean and their effects on crucial planetary processes, such as carbon fixation.
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Feature on work by Stanford Bio-X affiliated faculty member Jennifer Cochran and Stanford Interdisciplinary Graduate Fellow and Stanford Bio-X SIGF John Silberstein:
Scientists are deploying this state-of-the-art X-ray crystallography facility to study biological molecules related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Feature on research by Stanford Bio-X affiliated faculty members Michael Clarke, Stephen Quake, and Aaron Newman, and Stanford Bio-X Bowes Fellow Gunsagar Gulati:
Stanford stem cell biologists have found a way to block a signal that causes growth of breast cancer cells, opening potential for new treatments.
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Feature on research by Stanford Bio-X affiliated faculty members Jennifer Dionne and Mark Brongersma:
Researchers have fashioned ultrathin silicon nanoantennas that trap and redirect light, for applications in quantum computing, LIDAR and even the detection of viruses.
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Feature on research by Stanford Bio-X affiliated faculty member Martin Breidenbach:
The technology could save the lives of COVID-19 patients when more advanced ventilators are too expensive or not available.
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Feature on research by Stanford Bio-X affiliated faculty members Prithvi Mruthyunjaya and Darius Moshfeghi:
Stanford researchers studied whether there was any pattern linking patients' racial, ethnic or socioeconomic status with which treatment they received.
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Feature on work by Stanford Bio-X affiliated faculty members Steve Collins, Scott Delp, and Leo Guibas:
An AI-based robotics system can predict and prevent falls in high-risk populations.
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Feature on research by Stanford Bio-X affiliated faculty members Ron Davis and Carlos Milla:
Researchers have developed a sensor system on a smartwatch that uses sweat to determine the level of acetaminophen in the body.
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Feature on research by Stanford Bio-X affiliated faculty members Bali Pulendran, Purvesh Khatri and Holden Maecker:
A Stanford study shows that in severely ill COVID-19 patients, “first-responder” immune cells, which should react immediately to signs of viruses or bacteria in the body, instead respond sluggishly.
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