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There have been more than 900 Tiny Desk Concerts since 2008, and until the pandemic, most of them were filmed in NPR’s headquarters, which artists visit to wedge a set in between workers’ cubicles. The most popular of all time, by video views? Anderson .Paak and the Free Nationals’ August 2016 set, with 68 million views. (Surprisingly, it wasn’t BTS, who have still notched an impressive 34 million plus.) But as popular as they are with music fans, the shows are also popular with staffers. For our June 2021 feature on the network’s 50th anniversary, we asked NPR employees which gigs left the biggest impression. We couldn’t fit all of their choices into our print-magazine feature here are the choices of the dozens who answered.
Researchers from Trinity College Dublin have discovered that some skeletal defects associated with a lack of movement in the womb during early development may still be ameliorated after such periods of immobility if movement resumes.
Breakthrough study discovers possible treatment of skeletal defects after immobility in womb ANI | Updated: Apr 24, 2021 22:36 IST
Dublin [Ireland], April 24 (ANI): Researchers from Trinity College Dublin have discovered that some skeletaldefects associated with a lack of movement in the womb during early development may still be ameliorated after such periods of immobility if movement resumes.
The researchers discovery was made using chicken embryos, which develop similarly to their human equivalents and which can be easily viewed as development takes place raising hopes that the finding may also apply to humans and thus have important implications for therapeutic interventions.
The research has just been published in the leading international journal, Disease Models and Mechanisms.
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VIDEO: Chick movement in the egg. It is normal and important that developing young move in the egg (or womb, in the case of humans). view more
Credit: Professor Paula Murphy, Trinity College Dublin.
Researchers from Trinity College Dublin have discovered that some skeletal defects associated with a lack of movement in the womb during early development may still be ameliorated after such periods of immobility if movement resumes.
The researchers discovery was made using chicken embryos, which develop similarly to their human equivalents and which can be easily viewed as development takes place - raising hopes that the finding may also apply to humans and thus have important implications for therapeutic interventions.