Publications by authors named "D P WALLACH"

Rice is a major source of greenhouse gas (GHG) and nitrogen pollution. While best management practices have been developed to enhance the sustainability of rice production under current climates, their adaptability and efficacy under future climate scenarios remain uncertain. Here we evaluated 49 best management practices across global grid cells of rice-producing areas in terms of increasing rice production, reducing GHG emissions and minimizing nitrogen pollution under future climate conditions.

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The SH2-containing inositol phosphatase (SHIP) has become an actively researched therapeutic target for a number of disorders, including Alzheimer's Disease, Graft-vs-Host disease, obesity and cancer. Analogs of the aminosteroid SHIP inhibitor 3a-aminocholestane (3AC) have been synthesized and tested. Analogs with improved water solubility have been identified.

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In 1822, France's Ministry of the Interior, concerned about dropping vaccination rates among the population, commissioned the French artist Constant Joseph Desbordes (1761-1828) to create an artwork that would educate the public about the benefits of the smallpox vaccine. The Painting that resulted is entitled: "La Vaccine" ("The Cowpox Inoculation") and a copy of it is entitled "La Vaccine au Chateau de Liancourt" ("Performing the Vaccination against Smallpox in the Chateau of Liancourt"). The highlight of the painting is its central figure, one of France's most distinguished physicians, Jean-Louis Alibert (1768-1837) performing, in dramatic fashion, the arm to arm method of smallpox vaccination that was common at that time.

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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists need to understand how climate change affects farming, so they use models to make predictions.*
  • There are a lot of uncertainties in these predictions, and it's important to figure out where they come from.*
  • The researchers found that most of the uncertainty comes from how the crop models work, and they have ideas to make these predictions more reliable.*
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Acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis, or Sweet syndrome, has been described in 1964 and is now considered as a prototypical condition of the group of the neutrophilic dermatoses. Since this time, many clinical conditions have been included in this group and a clinical-pathological classification in 3 subgroups has been proposed. Neutrophilic infiltrates can localize in all internal organs.

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