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High Incidence Of Nasopharyngeal Cancer: Similarity For 60% Of Mitochondrial Dna Signatures Between The Bidayuhs Of Borneo And The Bai-Yue Of Southern China, Joseph Tien Seng Wee, Tam C. Ha, Susan Loong, Chao-Nan Qian
High Incidence Of Nasopharyngeal Cancer: Similarity For 60% Of Mitochondrial Dna Signatures Between The Bidayuhs Of Borneo And The Bai-Yue Of Southern China, Joseph Tien Seng Wee, Tam C. Ha, Susan Loong, Chao-Nan Qian
Faculty of Social Sciences - Papers (Archive)
Populations in Southern China (Bai-yue) and Borneo (Bidayuh) with high incidence of nasopharyngeal cancer(NPC) share similar mitochondrial DNA signatures, supporting the hypothesis that these two populations may share the same genetic predisposition for NPC, which may have first appeared in a common ancestral reference population before the sea levels rose after the last ice age.
The Acute Impact Of High Anthocyanin Cherry Juice On Cognition And Blood Pressure In Young People, Older People And Dementia Patients, K Caldwell, K E. Charlton, S Roodenrys
The Acute Impact Of High Anthocyanin Cherry Juice On Cognition And Blood Pressure In Young People, Older People And Dementia Patients, K Caldwell, K E. Charlton, S Roodenrys
Faculty of Social Sciences - Papers (Archive)
Abstract presented at the Annual Scientific Meeting of the Nutrition Society of Australia, 27-30 November 2012, Wollongong, Australia
The Human Foveal Confluence And High Resolution Fmri, Mark M. Schira
The Human Foveal Confluence And High Resolution Fmri, Mark M. Schira
Faculty of Social Sciences - Papers (Archive)
Abstract presented at the Vision Sciences Society meeting, 11-16 May 2012, Naples FL.
We Can’T Compete On Cheap And Nasty; Let’S Be A Country That Makes High-Quality, Lasting Things, Christopher Gibson
We Can’T Compete On Cheap And Nasty; Let’S Be A Country That Makes High-Quality, Lasting Things, Christopher Gibson
Faculty of Social Sciences - Papers (Archive)
WHAT IS AUSTRALIA FOR? Australia is no longer small, remote or isolated. It’s time to ask What Is Australia For?, and to acknowledge the wealth of resources we have beyond mining. Over the next two weeks The Conversation, in conjunction with Griffith REVIEW, is publishing a series of provocations. Our authors are asking the big questions to encourage a robust national discussion about a new Australian identity that reflects our national, regional and global roles.