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Mark A. Smith

    Signal transduction in Alzheimer's disease
    The Right Talk
    A Better Choice
    "To Prepare for Sherman's Coming": The Battle of Wise's Forks, March 1865
    Cover Me Movement Challenge: 10 Week Small Group Study Guide
    • 2024

      A Better Choice

      The Manager's Guide to Skills-First Hiring

      • 156 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      Focusing on a skills-first approach, this guide provides managers with innovative strategies to enhance hiring practices. It emphasizes the importance of identifying and prioritizing candidates' skills over traditional qualifications, aiming to create a more effective and diverse workforce. The book offers practical tools and insights to help managers streamline their hiring processes, reduce biases, and ultimately make better hiring decisions that align with organizational needs.

      A Better Choice
    • 2020
    • 2009

      The Right Talk

      How Conservatives Transformed the Great Society into the Economic Society

      • 278 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      The book delves into the transformation of the GOP, exploring how it evolved from a disadvantaged party to one that shapes key national policies. Mark Smith examines the political dynamics and strategies that enabled this shift, providing a unique perspective on America's rightward movement over recent decades. Through insightful analysis, he uncovers the underlying factors that contributed to this significant change in the political landscape.

      The Right Talk
    • 2002

      The important role of neuronal signaling in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's Disease Alzheimer's Disease is a multifactorial condition with phenotypic characteristics in all cases, even though they may vary in details. Although it is still intractable to treatment, in the past decade, considerable efforts have contributed to understanding its pathogenesis. The role of neuronal signaling in the pattern of Alzheimer's disease has attracted an intense interest in recent years for signaling molecules and signal transduction pathways are the central mediators that propagate signals from the membrane to the nucleus to coordinate appropriate cellular responses. Consequently, in the field of signaling that allows an exploration of upstream (causative) and downstream (consequential) events, knowledge of disease mechanisms has increased most significantly. A better understanding of downstream events will allow better treatment in the future and a consolidation of the current hypotheses to understand the entire disease process. The present issue, written by innovative experts in the field, features most recent findings from kinases to phosphatase and from neuronal to glial signaling.

      Signal transduction in Alzheimer's disease