Now showing items 1-6 of 6

    • An investigation of the electrical behaviours of metallic, semiconducting and core-shell nanowires 

      MANNING, HUGH (Trinity College Dublin. School of Chemistry. Discipline of Chemistry, 2018)
      From a device point of view, metallic nanowire networks provide a route to highly transparent, highly conductive, flexible, easy-to-fabricate and low-cost materials. The large-scale integration of these materials in ...
    • Microrna regulation of bovine monocyte inflammatory and metabolic networks in an in Vivo infection model 

      O'FARRELLY, CLIONA (2014)
      Bovine mastitis is an inflammation-driven disease of the bovine mammary gland that costs the global dairy industry several billion dollars per year. Because disease susceptibility is a multifactorial complex phenotype, an ...
    • The multidemsionality of ecological stability 

      YANG, QIANG (Trinity College Dublin. School of Natural Sciences. Discipline of Zoology, 2018)
      Ecological stability is a multifaceted concept, incorporating components such as variability, resistance, resilience, persistence, and robustness. Understanding and predicting the relationships among these many components ...
    • Palestinian women from Femina Sacra to agents of active resistance 

      LENTIN, RONIT (Elsevier, 2011)
      Jawaher Abu-Rahmah, who was killed by tear gas on New Year Day 2001, was among many Palestinian women, in the state of Israel and the occupied territory, who, despite being victims of what I theorise as the Israeli 'racial ...
    • Targeting nuclear factor-kappa B to overcome resistance to chemotherapy. 

      O'Byrne, Ken; Gately, Kathy; Barr, Martin; Baird, Anne-Marie (2013)
      Intrinsic or acquired resistance to chemotherapeutic agents is a common phenomenon and a major challenge in the treatment of cancer patients. Chemoresistance is defined by a complex network of factors including multi-drug ...
    • What Can Welfare Stigma Do? 

      Whelan, Joe; Bolton, Robert; Dukelow, Fiona (2022)
      In this ‘state of the art’ review, we draw on the Irish and UK context to ask ‘what can welfare stigma do?’ Our question provokes thinking about welfare stigma not as an inevitable ‘cost’ of the structure of welfare ...