• Picture of Prof. Roald Nezlin

    Prof. Roald Nezlin

    Immunoglobulin properties and functions. Immune complexes. Non-immunt complexes of immunolobulins
    Collaboration with:  No
    Detection of Immune complexes with antigens.
  • Picture of Prof. Ronny Neumann

    Prof. Ronny Neumann

    Carbon Dioxide Reduction and Valorization
    Reduction of Molecular Nitrogen to Ammonia
    Activation of Molecular Oxygen
    Water as Oxygen Donor
    "Inorganic Enzymes" by Supramolecular Chemistry

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  • Picture of Prof. Michal Neeman

    Prof. Michal Neeman

    MRI of angiogenesis
    Collaboration with:  Prof Nava Dekel, Weizmann Prof Lucio Frydman, Weizmann Prof Joel Garbow, Washington Univ. St Louis Prof Silvio Aime, Univ Torino Prof Simcha Yagel and Dr Ofer Behavior, Hadassah Medical Center Prof Michal Kovo, Meir Medical Center Prof Tal Raz, HUJ
    COVID-19 in pregnancy
    Placenta structure and function
    Vascular remodelling in reproduction and development
    Protocols, Reporter genes and Probes for molecular imaging

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  • Dr. Filipe Andre Natalio

    Material Farming: Where plant meet material sciences
    Collaboration with:  Dr. Michaela Eder and Prof. Peter Fratzl (Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, Golm, Germany)
    We are interested in combining plant and material sciences to harness plants as biofactories to produce complex biological materials with tailored properties, with particular focus on cotton. Cotton is the global leading natural fiber involving 250 million around the world from farmer to retailer. Combining chemical synthesis of cotton fibers building blocks and a comprehensive understanding of the underlying biochemical and physiological mechanisms, we can produce cotton fibers with tailored properties such as increased hydrophobicity (think about your rain jacket). We coined this approach as Material Farming. This approach is an opportunity to implement sustainable alternative(s) to produce functional fibers overcoming the chemical fiber post-processing known to generate large amounts of chemical waste hazardous to the enviroment and humans. Finally, our approach will allow us to harness higher organisms' complexity, such as cotton plants, which can change how we currently think about the design of complex biological materials, plant sciences, and their physiology and biochemistry with a profound impact on the future of cotton-related industries.
    Scientific Archaeology - Artificial Inteligencemeets Archaeology
    Collaboration with:  Prof. Michael Chazan (University of Toronto) Dr. Liora Kolska Horowtiz (Hebrew University)
    We explore hidden signatures from the archaeological artifacts using artificial intelligence (AI) to infer human behavior. Our research explores cultural evolution and transmission in the Levant, the origin of domestication of cattle in the Fertile Crescent, and the relations between hominins and fire use. We combine the dozens of thousand unearthed and available archaeological remains (pottery, statues, stone tools, etc.) with AI to infer new relations between cultures - the known of the unknowns - while pinpointing the origin of revolutionary technologies their dispersion and implications to the cultural transmission continuum. We investigate the domestication of cattle, and their use for cultures was originated in the Fertile Crescent. What if older organic artifacts (plow) perished and the use of animals for plowing started earlier? We use AI combined with ancient cattle bones to find morphological changes induced by plowing and inform whether this behavior started earlier, implying a new conceptual understanding of a revolutionary technology that changed our way of living until today. Pyrotechnology is one of the most revolutionary advances in human evolution initiated about 2 million years ago. This technology allowed, for example, the cooking of food, changing our biochemistry (e.g., more energetic intake) and physiology (e.g., larger brain size). We develop new AI-based methodologies applied to flint stone tools (the most durable artifacts) that act as a thermometer to infer hominin relations with fire deep in time.
  • Picture of Prof. Moni Naor

    Prof. Moni Naor

    Data Structures
    Distributed Computing
    Cryptography and Complexity

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  • Picture of Prof. Boaz Nadler

    Prof. Boaz Nadler

    Mathematical Statistics, Statistical Machine Learning, Statistical Signal and Image Processing, Applied Mathematics

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  • Picture of Prof. Ron Naaman

    Prof. Ron Naaman

    Spin selectivity in electrons transmission through chiral molecules
    Collaboration with:  Yossi Paltiel, Hebrew University David H. Waldeck, University of Pittsburghm USA Claudio Fontanessi, Modena University, Italy E. W. Meijer, Eindhoven, Netherland Michael Therien, Duke University, USA Moh El Naggar, USC, USA Jonas Fransson, Uppsala, Sweden
    electron transfer in bio-molecules
    spin selective electron transfer
    spin dependent electrochemistry
    spintronics with chiral molecules
    enantio-selective interaction
    Spin effect in water splitting

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  • Picture of Prof. David Mukamel

    Prof. David Mukamel

    Systems with long-range interactions
    Collaboration with:  S. Ruffo A. Campa
    Collective phenomena in systems far from thermal equilibrium.
    Collaboration with:  S. Majumdar G. Schehr M. Barma A. Kundu
    Coarsening processes and slow dynamics.
    Systems with long range interactions

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  • Picture of Dr. David Mross

    Dr. David Mross

    Fractional quantum Hall effect
    Non-Abelian states at filling factor 5/2
    Composite Fermi liquids and particle-hole symmetry
    Edge-states and disorder effects
    Quantum magnetism
    Quantum spin liquids in frustrated magnets
    Unconventional quantum phase transitions
    Dualities
    Applications of dualities in condensed matter physics
    Derivation of new dualities through coupled-wire constructions

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  • Picture of Prof. Edna Mozes

    Prof. Edna Mozes

    Specific immunomodulation of the auto immune diseases: Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and Sjogren Syndrome by a synthetic, tolerogenic peptide.
    Elucidation of the mechanisms by which a tolerogenic peptide ameliorates autoimmune disease manifestations in animal model and in patients with SLE and Sjogren Syndrome.
    The role of various cell types and cytokines in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases.
    The status and role of T regulatory cells in autoimmune diseases.
    Development of a tolerogenic peptide as a novel specific drug for the treatment of SLE and Sjogren Syndrome.

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