Sharda rogell biography of albert
Publications
A candidate reference measurement procedure for the quantification of α-synuclein in cerebrospinal fluid using an SI traceable primary calibrator and multiple reaction monitoring
Leran Zhang, Eva Illes-Toth, Adam Cryar, Giles Drinkwater, Lucia Di Vagno, Marie-Laure Pons, Julia Mateyka, Bryan McCullough, Eli Achtar, Cailean Clarkson, Laura Göschel, Peter Körtvélyessy, Chris Mussell, Christopher J Hopley, Agnes Flöel, Christophe Hirtz, Sylvain Lehmann , Milena Quaglia Analyst, 2024 Sep 23;149(19):4842-4850 Doi: 10.1039/d4an00634h PMID: 39041602
to the publicationDiagnosing recipient- vs. donor-derived posttransplant myelodysplastic neoplasm via targeted single-cell mutational profiling
Jana Ihlow, Livius Penter, Lam Giang Vuong, Philip Bischoff, Benedikt Obermayer, Alexandra Trinks, Olga Blau, Anke Behnke, Thomas Conrad, Markus Morkel, Catherine J Wu, Jörg Westermann, Lars Bullinger, Ann-Christin von Brünneck, Nils Blüthgen, David Horst, Samantha D Praktiknjo Med, 6, 1–9, 2025 Doi: 10.1016/j.medj.2024.11.001 PMID: 39644889
to the publicationA quantitative modeling framework to understand the physiology of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and interaction with cortisol replacement therapy
Davide Bindellini, Robin Michelet, Linda B S Aulin, Johanna Melin, Uta Neumann, Oliver Blankenstein, Wilhelm Huisinga, Martin J Whitaker, Richard Ross, Charlotte Kloft Journal of Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics, 2024 December; 51(6):809-824. Doi: 10.1007/s10928-024-09934-7 PMID: 38977635
to the publicationEndocarditis associated with contamination of cardiovascular bioprostheses with Mycobacterium chelonae: a collaborative microbiological study
Judith Kikhney, Inna Friesen, Solveigh Wiesener, Laura Kursawe, Christoph Loddenkemper, Josef Zündorf, Beate Häuser, Esther P Cónsul Tejero, Dinah V Schöning, Kurosh Sarbandi, Doris Hillemann, Martin Kuhns, Miriam S Stegemann, Frieder Pfäfflin, Frank-Rainer Klefisch, Volker Düsterhöft, Sebastian Halle Dharma Teachers of Spirit Rock Meditation Center ‹‹ previousnext ›› 123456789 ... 34353637 As co-abbot of Abhayagiri Monastery, I am deeply involved with forming a monastic community that can serve as a guiding spirit for Buddhist practice in the world. The traditional, renunciate form of the practice is the embodiment of simplicity, strength and resiliency for anyone who seeks classical training in the monastic life. It is also a hand extended to the lay community that says: come, experience the life of the forest, the chanting, the bowing, the serenity of meditation, the robes, the peacefulness of celibacy. Draw from our well and bring this spiritual nourishment back into your everyday life. The outward structure of traditional Buddhism supports a form of spiritual living that is grounded in honesty, non-violence, and living in truth-all the qualities of inner freedom that are precious to me. Buddhist practice turns the current of attention toward an inner life, irrigating the arid internal landscapes created by the external priorities of our Western world. Buddhist practice also reconstructs our relationship to time and space. Our fragmented world is suffering from a continually diminishing attention span as we become overwhelmed with so much to do, with so little time and so many options. The practice allows us to visit our interior landscape, slow down, pay attention to the qualities of time and spirit, to explore who Dharma Teachers of Spirit Rock Meditation Center ‹‹ previousnext ›› 1234 ... 789101112131415 She has chronicled the contribution of women to American Buddhism through her six Dharma books. Her new book, She Appears! Encounters with Kwan Yin Goddess of Compassion,offers stories and artwork presenting the Celestial Bodhisattva of Compassion Kwan Yin through Western eyes. She has trained in the Theravada Buddhist tradition for over 20 years. Other influences have been spiritual teachers from various cultures and traditions as well as the creative arts. She is a graduate of CDL and POE programs from Spirit Rock. Shahara has a Ph.D. and currently works as an Educator. Dear and Venerable Bhante Sujato, One more vote! It is very good that all these things are happening like this, for in the end, after the tree is shaken, as we say back in Brazil, you can truly see who is a monkey and who was just playing to climb the tree! From one side, it saddens me a lot to see that in the end, worry for the continuity of the money and material support from misinformed and superstitious lay disciples is what is behind this movement of the ‘Walters’. But from another perspective, I think it is very important that all this is happening, specially for the ultimate practical and direct outcome: fully ordained nuns will increase in number and exist under a more legitimate environment, and this is very positive for the expansion of Dhamma in many ways. Why I say this? I am from a country and a sub-continent where Theravada Buddhism is virtually inexistent. It is restrited to groups of lay disciples who study and struggle to practice under guidance of visiting monks, at a very high cost and so far very badly coordinated manner (actually you see groups competing instead of cooperating in their retreats schedules, crazy!). After more than 40 years trying to settle a resident Sangha without success, it was quite well proved that bhikkhus, specially those with little practical experience and spiritual attainements find in a Latin American society and environment too many obstacles to keeping their missions and energy in the spreading of Dhamma there. Among many factors, I would highlight the cultural problem regarding women and bhikkhus. The point is that in Brazil, most of the young women nowadays have never learned how to respect and behave in front of a catholic priest, and much less likely will know how to behave towards a monk! I have heard something similar happens in Europe, specially where, just like in Brazil you dont have a strong resident asian community which gives the example of etiquette and behavior towards monasti
Ajahn Amaro I think of myself primarily as a monk who occasionally teaches, who strives to convey the spirit and the letter of Buddhism through my lifestyle, through explanation, and through the imagery of storytelling in order to bring Buddhism to life for people who are seeking truth and freedom. Sandy Boucher Sandy Boucher has been practicing and teaching meditation in the Theravada tradition for thirty-five years. She leads retreats such as “Dharma and Writing”, “A Celebration of the Feminine Divine”, and “Meditation and the Spirit of Creativity” in the Northwest and the San Francisco Bay area. Sebene Selassie
Sebene Selassie is a meditation teacher and certified Integral Coach®. She has been studying Buddhism since majoring in Comparative Religious Studies as an undergrad at McGill University. For over 20 years she worked with children, youth, and families nationally and internationally for small and large not–for–profits. Her work has taken her everywhere from the Tenderloin in San Francisco to refugee camps in Guinea, West Africa. Sebene is a two–time breast cancer survivor. Shahara Godfrey
Shahara Godfrey is one of the teachers from the East Bay Meditation Center. Shaila Catherine Shaila Catherine is the founder of Bodhi Courses (bodhicourses.org) an online Dhamma classroom, and Insight Meditation South Bay, a meditation center in Mountain View, California (imsb.org). She has practiced meditation since 1980, with more than nine years of accumulat Sujato’s Blog