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Recent Scholarly Articles

Duckweed Genome Sequencing Has Global Implications
At the urging of Rutgers scientists, the Department of Energy's national laboratories will sequence the genome of duckweed, a plant with tremendous potential for cleaning up pollution, combating global warming and feeding the world.
Princeton Researchers Map the Math in Music
Researchers including Dmitri Tymoczko at Princeton University have devised a new way of analyzing and categorizing music that takes advantage of the deep, complex mathematics they see enmeshed in its very fabric.
Early Clinical Trial Results Back New Drug for Melanoma
Rutgers University and The Cancer Institute of New Jersey collaborated in a clinical trial that found that riluzole, an FDA approved drug used to treat Lou Gehrig’s disease, slows the growth of the most aggressive form of malignant skin cancer.
Celebrex-Lipitor Combo May Halt Prostate Cancer
Rutgers researchers have shown that administering a combination of the widely used drugs Celebrex and Lipitor stops the transition of early prostate cancer to its more aggressive and potentially fatal stage.
Rutgers Research: Impairments in Language Development Can Begin in Infants as Young as Three Months
New studies conducted at Rutgers-Newark are revealing new and exciting clues about how infant brains begin to acquire language and pave the way for correcting language difficulties even before the child learns to talk.
Protein Data Bank at Rutgers & UCSD Archives 50,000th Molecule Structure
The Protein Data Bank based at Rutgers University and the University of California-San Diego is an online library that allows researchers and students to study, store and share molecular information on a global scale.
Rutgers Research Reveals How Food Poisoning and Bioterrorism Toxins Could Be Tamed
New insights into how the plant toxin ricin kills cells could help scientists develop drugs to counteract poisonings.
Rutgers Center Sparks 'Liquid Bandage,' A New Frontline Wound Treatment
The Center for Military Biomaterials Research, part of the New Jersey Center for Biomaterials at Rutgers University, has enabled the development of a breakthrough spray-on dressing that marks a major advance in the management and care of combat casualty and civilian wounds.
Rutgers, Penn State Astronomy Teams Discover Ancestors of Milky Way-Type Galaxies
The researchers say that discovering these ancient objects, some of the first galaxies ever to form, is akin to finding a key fossil in the path of human evolution.
Princeton Scientists Discover New Route for Heredity
A group of scientists in Princeton's Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology has uncovered a new biological mechanism that could provide a clearer window into a cell's inner workings.
Rutgers Neuroscience May Hold Key To Hearing Loss Remedy
The findings of a team of Rutgers University scientists could lead to a new generation of cochlear implants.
Princeton Scientists Break Cholera's Lines of Communication
A team of Princeton scientists has discovered a key mechanism in how bacteria communicate with each other, a pivotal breakthrough that could lead to treatments for cholera and other bacterial diseases.
Rutgers Biomaterial Debuts in Clinical Trials of New Stent
The revolutionary material allows the creation of coronary stents that are strong enough to support diseased blood vessels during the healing process, but subsequently dissolve, leaving the patient free of permanent implants.
UMDNJ Research Examines Diabetes, Vision Loss in African Americans
African Americans with type 1 diabetes have a greater chance of vision loss according to a physician at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey-New Jersey Medical School who conducted a six-year study. Dr. Monique S. Roy of the Institute of Ophthalmology and Visual Science was the lead investigator, teaming up Joan Skurnick, PhD at UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School, Department of Preventive Medicine & Community Health, to determine the incidence of visual loss and associated risk factors in African Americans with type 1 diabetes mellitus.
Soda Warning? New Study Supports Link Between Diabetes, High-Fructose Corn Syrup
A Rutgers food scientist and his colleagues have found new evidence that soft drinks sweetened with high-fructose corn syrup may contribute to the development of diabetes, particularly in children.
Rutgers Scientists Preserve and Protect Foods Naturally
Rutgers chemists and food scientists use natural antimicrobial agents derived from sources such as cloves, oregano, thyme and paprika to prevent food contamination and spoilage.
UMDNJ Researcher's Work on Nitroglycerin Tolerance Published
A researcher at The University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey-New Jersey Medical School may have unlocked the secret to why patients with some types of cardiovascular diseases become resistant to the blood vessel-relaxing effect of nitric oxide.
Locked in Glaciers, Ancient Microbes May Return to Life
According to researchers at Rutgers and Boston University, the DNA of ancient microorganisms, long frozen in glaciers, may return to life as the glaciers melt.
Rutgers Scientists Discover Brain Cell Development Process Implicated in Mental Retardation
The discovery of this biological process in brain cell development may lead to the development of therapies that can reduce certain forms of retardation.
Cell Publishes UMDNJ Research on Lifespan, Stress
If a pill was available to help you live longer, prevent heart disease, prevent osteoporosis, and allow you to eat more and still weigh less, would you take it? A mammalian study on lifespan and stress resistance was conducted by researchers at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ)-New Jersey Medical School (NJMS), who were recently awarded a $10 million grant from the National Institute on Aging. The findings of the study will be published in the July 27th edition of Cell, an internationally acclaimed scientific journal.
UMDNJ Research Finds Sleep Apnea Link with Pregnancy-Induced Diabetes, High Blood Pressure
A study presented at the American Thoracic Society 2007 International Conference by a UMDNJ researcher found that when the women’s weight was taken into account, sleep apnea was associated with a doubling of the incidence of gestational diabetes and a fourfold increase in the risk of pregnancy-induced hypertension.
UMDNJ Research on Lead Poisoning, Vitamin D Deficiency Published
Outcomes of a study conducted by researchers at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey demonstrate that the season of the year, age and race are factors that affect blood lead levels and vitamin D deficiency in children who live in urban areas. Findings from this study are published in a recent edition of Environmental Health Perspectives. In the article, 'Elevated Blood Lead Concentrations and Vitamin D Deficiency in Winter and Summer in Young Urban Children,' researchers at the UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School found that young African-American children were more likely to be deficient in vitamin D and have higher blood lead levels when compared with their Hispanic counterparts.
UMDNJ Scientists Discover Possible Source of Alzheimer’s Disease and Pathway to Treatment
Researchers at the UMDNJ-School of Osteopathic Medicine have announced the results of innovative research that has pinpointed a major source of the amyloid beta peptides that deposit in the brains of individuals affected by Alzheimer’ s disease and are considered to be a hallmark of the disease.
Rutgers Engineers Develop Process to Recycle Unused Paint
Engineers at Rutgers have developed a process to recycle waste latex paint -- the largest component of household hazardous waste -- by blending it with common plastics.
UMDNJ Study Links Day of Admission, Mortality Rate for Heart Attack Patients
Researchers at University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School report that patients with myocardial infarction (heart attack) who were admitted to a hospital on a weekend experienced higher mortality rates than patients who were admitted for the same diagnosis on a weekday.
UMDNJ Study Finds Repair of Neonatal Brain Injury from Adult Stem Cells
Neuroscientists at UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School have discovered that the neonatal brain possesses a previously unknown capacity to replace damaged neurons in multiple brain regions.
UMDNJ's Cancer Institute Investigates Potential Prostate Cancer Vaccine
Researchers at The Cancer Institute of New Jersey are currently investigating a new way to help prevent prostate cancer from reoccurring through the development of a vaccine for the disease.
UMDNJ, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Study Finds More Obese Teens Undergoing Bariatric Surgery
At a time when there are growing concerns about a national epidemic of obesity among teenagers, a new study focusing on morbidly obese teens who have last resort bariatric surgery has found that the procedure poses no greater risks for them than for adult patients, and that, in fact, they have a zero death rate and a faster rate of recovery than older patients.
UMDNJ Study Finds Chinese Herb Reduces Hypertension
More than 70 million Americans over age 20 have hypertension, a chronic disease which is indicated by an elevated arterial blood pressure that measures higher than 120/80 mmHg. If left untreated, hypertension can result in heart attack, stroke, or kidney disease. While medications are often prescribed to control hypertension, researchers at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey believe a Chinese herb can effectively reduce hypertension. The outcomes of the complementary and alternative medicine study, which was conducted at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, is available online and will be published in the May edition of the American Journal of Physiology - Heart and Circulatory Physiology.
Uric Acid Holds Potential For Spinal Cord Injury Treatment
Rutgers researchers find that uric acid, commonly associated with the painful joint disease known as gout, can also play a crucial role in the treatment of spinal cord injury and other central nervous system disorders
Rutgers-based Team Says Icelandic Volcano Caused Historic Famine in Egypt
Using a computer model developed by NASA, a group of Rutgers-based researchers have established a link between high-latitude volcanic eruptions and the water supply in North Africa.
Rutgers Oceanographer Says Phosphorus Joins Nitrogen as a Culprit in Gulf of Mexico's 'Dead Zone'
The heavy use of fertilizers containing nitrogen and phosphorus in the agriculture of the Mississippi Valley has thrown the system out of balance, creating a growing “dead zone” off the Louisiana coast where there is too little dissolved oxygen to sustain most life.
Rutgers Researchers Find Increased Clouds and Humidity Hasten Shrinkage of Arctic Icecap
Their analysis of 26 years of satellite data show that a thicker blanket of clouds and water vapor is covering the Arctic in spring and summer, trapping heat and moisture and speeding up the melting of the Arctic icecap.
Dr. Jerry Luftman Releases Results of 2006 CIO Survey
Although information technology budgets and resources continue to grow, important organizational problems in the function remain and may even be worsening, according to a major new survey of chief information officers.
Princeton study shows rapid loss of Spanish language among Mexican immigrants in the United States
A new study co-written by Douglas Massey, the Henry G. Bryant Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School, refutes claims that Latin American immigrants to the United States are jeopardizing the country's English-speaking identity.
Princeton Researchers reveal 'extremely serious' vulnerabilities in e-voting machines
A group of Princeton computer scientists said they created demonstration vote-stealing software that can be installed within a minute on a common electronic voting machine.

UMDNJ Research Published on Low Birthweight/Asthma in Urban Settings
The outcomes from a study about the association between low birthweight and asthma in urban environments are published in the September 2006 issue of American Journal of Public Health.


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Last updated: July 9, 2008