PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Madison Who's Who Bulletin Board is Now Available!

Madison Who's Who is more than a registry of accomplished individuals. Madison Who's Who provides a forum for executives and professionals to introduce themselves to one another.

2010-11-03
LONG ISLAND CITY, NY, November 03, 2010 (Press-News.org) Madison Who's Who has officially launched the bulletin board feature on their website, www.madisonwhoswho.com. This impressive new feature is another added benefit to the members of Madison Who's Who business networking directory.

The Madison Who's Who bulletin board feature is secure and easy to use with password entry and available exclusively to Madison Who's Who members only. It offers a powerful search facility along with multiple forums and categories. Madison Who's Who offers the best in business networking; this new feature is an extension of the Madison Who's Who drive to provide a superior online environment for their clients.

Madison Who's Who members will experience the ability to format their messages utilizing various fonts and sizing , original emoticons to portray emotions, as well as the ability to easily add polls to their posts. The Madison Who's Who bulletin board also offers features such as quoting, code display, image posting and automatic URL linking. Madison Who's Who members utilizing this feature will have the ability create a personal profile and receive email notification of replies to their posted topic.

The Madison Who's Who bulletin board is essential for members to effectively interact with each other and the ease of use of this feature is amazing. The ability for members to gather data via use of the polls and share data utilizing url linking, quoting and code display is yet another way Madison Who's Who goes above and beyond for their members.

About Madison Who's Who

Madison Who's Who is more than a registry of accomplished individuals. Madison Who's Who provides a forum for executives and professionals to introduce themselves to one another. http://www.Madisonwhoswho.net is also a searchable electronic registry of business leaders and professionals in virtually every industry and specialty. Madison Who's Who allows users to increase their exposure and establish solid long-lasting partnerships. Join Madison Who's Who and the thousands of networking partners who are cultivating business relationships as their strategy for success. "It's not what you know...It's who you know."

The electronic registry is a powerful business tool for quick and easy networking. Together, the two registries are interesting compilations of exceptional people with their abbreviated profiles and expanded biographies.

Other related Madison Who's Who:
http://www.mwwpublishing.com/featured.php
http://www.linkedin.com/companies/madison-who's-who

For more information please contact:
Diana Moschella
Madison Who's Who
30-01 Northern Blvd
Long Island City, NY 11101
718-932-8011


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Possible new drug targets for the genetic disorder Noonan syndrome

2010-11-02
Noonan syndrome is a relatively common genetic disorder characterized by short stature, unique facial features, and heart defects. About 10%-15% of affected individuals have mutations in their SOS1 gene. A team of researchers, led by Raju Kucherlapati, at Harvard Medical School, Boston, has now generated mice expressing a Sos1 mutation associated with Noonan syndrome and used them to identify potential therapeutic targets for the treatment of individuals with Noonan syndrome. Specifically, the team found that the Ras/MAPK signaling pathway as well as the Rac and Stat3 proteins ...

JCI online early table of contents: Nov. 1, 2010

2010-11-02
EDITOR'S PICK: New potential drug combination for most common form of non-Hodgkin lymphoma Diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common form of non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Although 60% of patients can be cured with a currently available combination therapy, this leaves a substantial number of patients without a cure. However, a team of researchers, led by Ari Melnick, at Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, has now identified a potential new combinatorial therapy for DLBCL. Specifically, the team found that combining an inhibitor of the protein BCL6 with either ...

Expanding croplands chipping away at world's carbon stocks

2010-11-02
Editor's note: Images to accompany this story are available at http://www.news.wisc.edu/newsphotos/carbon-cycle.html END ...

What happens after traumatic brain injury occurs?

2010-11-02
Reston, Va.— Results from a study published in the November issue of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine (JNM) show that powerful imaging techniques––positron emission tomography (PET) fused with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)––are helping researchers better understand the long-term functional and structural changes that take place after traumatic brain injury (TBI). "The results provide new insights into the progressive nature of the brain changes occurring following TBI, demonstrating that changes in brain structure and function after TBI are dynamic and continue to progress ...

AAN: Any athlete suspected of having concussion should be removed from play

2010-11-02
ST. PAUL, Minn. – The American Academy of Neurology (AAN) is calling for any athlete who is suspected of having a concussion to be removed from play until the athlete is evaluated by a physician with training in the evaluation and management of sports concussion. The request is one of five recommendations from a new position statement approved by the AAN's Board of Directors that targets policymakers with authority over determining the policy procedures for when an athlete suffers from concussion while participating in a sporting activity. "While the majority of ...

Utah researchers discover how brain is wired for attention

2010-11-02
SALT LAKE CITY—University of Utah (U of U) medical researchers have uncovered a wiring diagram that shows how the brain pays attention to visual, cognitive, sensory, and motor cues. The research provides a critical foundation for the study of abnormalities in attention that can be seen in many brain disorders such as autism, schizophrenia, and attention deficit disorder. The study appears Nov. 1, 2010, online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). "This study is the first of its kind to show how the brain switches attention from one feature to ...

Time for a rain dance?

2010-11-02
In many areas of the world, including California's Mojave Desert, rain is a precious and rare resource. To encourage rainfall, scientists use "cloud seeding," a weather modification process designed to increase precipitation amounts by dispersing chemicals into the clouds. But research now reveals that the common practice of cloud seeding with materials such as silver iodide and frozen carbon dioxide may not be as effective as it had been hoped. In the most comprehensive reassessment of the effects of cloud seeding over the past fifty years, new findings from Prof. Pinhas ...

New drug may provide more cost-effective stroke prevention than warfarin, Stanford/VA study shows

2010-11-02
STANFORD, Calif. — A newly approved drug may be a cost-effective way to prevent stroke in patients with an irregular heart rhythm — and may also offer patients better health outcomes than the commonly prescribed, but potentially risky, blood thinner warfarin. That's according to a new analysis from researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine and the Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System. "Dabigatran is the first new drug in 20 years to be approved for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation, and we wanted to see if it could be cost-effective even ...

Anti-obesity program for low-income kids shows promise, Stanford/Packard study finds

2010-11-02
STANFORD, Calif. — An approach that attempted to prevent childhood obesity in African-American girls produced beneficial changes in cholesterol, diabetes risk and depressive symptoms but had little effect on youths' weight, in a trial conducted by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital. Although researchers had hoped to see a change in body mass index across the entire study population from the program — culturally-tailored dance classes and screen time reduction for African-American girls in low-income neighborhoods ...

Depression returns in about half of treated teens

2010-11-02
Most depressed teens who receive treatment appear to recover, but the condition recurs in almost half of adolescent patients and even more often among females, according to a report posted online today that will appear in the March 2011 print issue of Archives of General Psychiatry, one of the JAMA/Archives journals. Major depressive disorder affects approximately 5.9 percent of teen females and 4.6 percent of teen males, according to background information in the article. "It is associated with functional impairment, risk of suicide and risk of adult depression," the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Don’t write off logged tropical forests – converting to oil palm plantations has even wider effects on ecosystems

Chimpanzees are genetically adapted to local habitats and infections such as malaria

Changes to building materials could store carbon dioxide for decades

EPA finalized rule on greenhouse gas emissions by power plants could reduce emissions with limited costs

Kangaroos kept a broad diet through late Pleistocene climate changes

Sex-specific neural circuits underlie shifting social preferences for male or female interaction among mice

The basis of voluntary movements: A groundbreaking study in ‘Science’ reveals the brain mechanisms controlling natural actions

Storing carbon in buildings could help address climate change

May the force not be with you: Cell migration doesn't only rely on generating force

NTU Singapore-led discovery poised to help detect dark matter and pave the way to unravel the universe’s secrets

Researchers use lab data to rewrite equation for deformation, flow of watery glacier ice

Did prehistoric kangaroos run out of food?

HKU Engineering Professor Kaibin Huang named Fellow of the US National Academy of Inventors

HKU Faculty of Arts Professor Charles Schencking elected as Corresponding Fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities

Rise in post-birth blood pressure in Asian, Black, and Hispanic women linked to microaggressions

Weight changes and heart failure risk after breast cancer development

Changes in patient care experience after private equity acquisition of US hospitals

COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy among Black women in the US

An earful of gill: USC Stem Cell study points to the evolutionary origin of the mammalian outer ear

A Sustainable Development Goal for space?

The Balbiani body: Cracking the secret of embryonic beginnings

Science behind genetic testing for identifying risk of opioid misuse remains unproven

Two-in-one root armor protects plants from environmental stressors and fights climate change

The extreme teeth of sabre-toothed predators were ‘optimal’ for biting into prey, new study reveals

Research spotlight: Factors contributing to treatment resistance in CAR T therapies for solid tumors

New findings could lead to better treatment for blood cancer

Expanded research on COPD and metabolic syndrome would advance patient-centered care

Mount Sinai-led team enhances automated method to detect common sleep disorder affecting millions

Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Dr. Helen Fisher, and Dr. Judith Allen donate historic archives to the Kinsey Institute

Bridging oceans: A US-Japan approach to flood risk and climate resilience

[Press-News.org] Madison Who's Who Bulletin Board is Now Available!
Madison Who's Who is more than a registry of accomplished individuals. Madison Who's Who provides a forum for executives and professionals to introduce themselves to one another.