Showing 61 - 80 results of 512 for search '((pinnae OR (spine OR skin)) OR (pinna OR (pin OR ((ssping OR suping) OR spingg))))', query time: 0.21s Refine Results
  1. 61

    Selective susceptibility of human skin antigen presenting cells to productive dengue virus infection by Cerny, Daniela, Haniffa, Muzlifah, Shin, Amanda, Bigliardi, Paul, Tan, Bien Keem, Lee, Bernett, Poidinger, Michael, Tan, Ern Yu, Ginhoux, Florent, Fink, Katja

    Published 2015
    “…Dengue virus (DENV) is transmitted by mosquitoes, thus host cells in the skin are the first point of contact with the virus. …”
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    Journal Article
  2. 62

    A 1.3-micrometre-thick elastic conductor for seamless on-skin and implantable sensors by Jiang, Zhi, Chen, Nuan, Yi, Zhigao, Zhong, Junwen, Zhang, Feilong, Ji, Shaobo, Liao, Rui, Wang, Yan, Li, Haicheng, Liu, Zhihua, Wang, Yang, Yokota, Tomoyuki, Liu, Xiaogang, Fukuda, Kenjiro, Chen, Xiaodong, Someya, Takao

    Published 2023
    “…On-skin and implantable electronics require elastic conductors that are only a few micrometres thick and soft enough to form a seamless contact with three-dimensional structures. …”
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    Journal Article
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  5. 65

    Uncovering vein patterns from color skin images for personal identification in forensic investigation by Tang, Chaoying

    Published 2013
    “…Using these images as evidence in legal cases (e.g. child sexual abuse, child pornography and masked gunmen) can be very challenging, because the faces of criminals or victims are not visible. Although large skin marks and tattoos have been used, they are ineffective in some legal cases, because the skin exposed in evidence images have neither unique tattoos nor enough skin marks for identification. …”
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    Thesis
  6. 66

    Development of pigmented human skin constructs via 3D drop-on-demand bioprinting by Ng, Wei Long

    Published 2018
    “…The 3D hierarchical porous collagen-fibroblast matrices serve as the dermal skin constructs for patterning of EMUs. Lastly, the feasibility of fabricating pigmented human skin constructs with uniform skin pigmentation (using 3 different skin cells from 3 different skin donors) is demonstrated. …”
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    Thesis
  7. 67
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  12. 72

    Wet-adhesive on-skin sensors based on metal–organic frameworks for wireless monitoring of metabolites in sweat by Yang, Xue, Yi, Junqi, Wang, Ting, Feng, Yanan, Wang, Jianwu, Yu, Jing, Zhang, Feilong, Jiang, Zhi, Lv, Zhisheng, Li, Haicheng, Huang, Tao, Si, Duanhui, Wang, Xiaoshi, Cao, Rong, Chen, Xiaodong

    Published 2023
    “…More importantly, the lightweight sensor can conformably self-adhere to sweaty skin and exhibits high water-vapor permeability. …”
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    Journal Article
  13. 73

    The effect of ultraviolet-light exposure on ornithine decarboxylase (ODC1) and pigmentation in human skin cells by Ong, Yee Hwee

    Published 2019
    “…A common photo-protective response is an upregulation of skin pigmentation. This results in the formation of melanin caps around the nucleus of skin cells, which protect against DNA damage. …”
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    Final Year Project (FYP)
  14. 74

    Visualizing vein patterns from color skin images based on image mapping for forensics analysis by Tang, Chaoying, Zhang, Hengyi, Craft, Noah, Kong, A. W.

    Published 2013
    “…We proposed a computational method based on skin optics to uncover vein patterns from color images. …”
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    Conference Paper
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  17. 77

    Classification of non-tumorous skin pigmentation disorders using voting based probabilistic linear discriminant analysis by Liang, Yunfeng, Sun, Lei, Ser, Wee, Lin, Feng, Thng, Steven Tien Guan, Chen, Qiping, Lin, Zhiping

    Published 2020
    “…Non-tumorous skin pigmentation disorders can have a huge negative emotional impact on patients. …”
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    Journal Article
  18. 78
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    Functional roles of transforming growth factor activated Kinase-1 (TAK1) in skin wound healing by Tan, Siew Hwey

    Published 2011
    “…Healing wound and maintaining new skin growth requires complex interactions of the epithelium and mesenchyme purportedly mediated by growth factors and cytokines. …”
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    Thesis
  20. 80

    Lights, camera, and action : vertebrate skin sets the stage for immune cell interaction with arthropod-vectored pathogens by Chong, Shu Zhen., Evrard, Maximilien., Ng, Lai Guan.

    Published 2014
    “…Such diseases are vectored by hematophagous arthropods that deposit pathogens into the vertebrate host’s skin during a blood meal. These pathogens spend a substantial amount of time in the skin that allows for interaction with cutaneous immune cells, suggesting a window of opportunity for development of vaccine strategies. …”
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    Journal Article