Masculine boys, feminine girls more likely to engage in cancer risk behaviors, study finds — ScienceDaily
source : http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/04/140416090308.htm
source : http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/04/140416090308.htm
source : http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/04/140416090308.htm
The study was published online November 30, 2013 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. …
The study appears June 23, 2013 in an advance online edition of Nature Materials. "We were trying to understand the basic relationship between collective cellular motions and collective cellular forces, as might occur during cancer cell invasion, for example. But in doing so we stumbled onto a phenomenon that was totally unexpected," said senior author Jeffrey Fredberg, professor of bioengineering and physiology in the HSPH Department of Environmental Health and co-senior investigator of HSPH’s Molecular and Integrative Cellular Dynamics lab. Biologists, engineers, and physicists from HSPH and IBEC worked together to shed light on collective cellular motion because it plays a key role in functions such as wound healing, organ development, and tumor growth. …