ExLibris header image
SFX Logo
Title: Dominant and recessive deafness caused by mutations of a novel gene, TMC1, required for cochlear hair-cell function
Source:

Nature Genetics [1061-4036] Kurima, Kiyoto yr:2002


Collapse list of basic services Basic
Full text
Full text available via Nature
GO
Document delivery
Request document via Library/Bibliothek GO
Users interested in this article also expressed an interest in the following:
1. Vreugde, S. "Beethoven, a mouse model for dominant, progressive hearing loss DFNA36." Nature genetics 30.3 (2002): 257-8. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
2. M, V. "Developmental dyslexia and specific language impairment: Same or different?" Psychological bulletin 130.6 (2004): 858-886. Link to SFX for this item
3. Hudspeth, A. "How the ear's works work." Nature 341.6241: 397-404. Link to SFX for this item
4. Nolan, P M M. "A systematic, genome-wide, phenotype-driven mutagenesis programme for gene function studies in the mouse." Nature genetics 25.4 (2000): 440-3. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
5. Price, Kevin J. "The evolution of echolocation in swiftlets." Journal of avian biology 35.2 (2004): 135-143. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
6. Catts, P. "Are Specific Language Impairment and Dyslexia Distinct Disorders?" Journal of speech, language, and hearing research 48.6 (2005): 1378-1396. Link to SFX for this item
7. Vellutino, Frank R R. "Specific reading disability (dyslexia): what have we learned in the past four decades?" Journal of child psychology and psychiatry and allied disciplines 45.1 (2003): 2-40. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
8. Frith, U. "Paradoxes in the definition of dyslexia." Dyslexia 5.4 (1999): 192-214. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
9. Boets, B. "Auditory processing, speech perception and phonological ability in pre-school children at high-risk for dyslexia: A longitudinal study of the auditory temporal processing theory." Neuropsychologia 45.8 (2007): 1608-20. Link to SFX for this item
10. Bishop, Bruce F. "Relations Among Speech, Language, and Reading Disorders." Annual review of psychology 60.1 (2008): 283-306. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
11. Hudspeth, A J J. "How the ear's works work: mechanoelectrical transduction and amplification by hair cells." Comptes rendus. Biologies 328.2 (2005): 155-162. Link to SFX for this item
12. Nolan, P M M. "Implementation of a large-scale ENU mutagenesis program: towards increasing the mouse mutant resource." Mammalian genome 11.7 (2000): 500-506. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
13. Hudspeth, A J J. "How hearing happens." Neuron 19.5 (1997): 947-50. Link to SFX for this item
14. Zhao HB, T W W. "Gap junctions and cochlear homeostasis." The Journal of membrane biology 209.2-3 (2006): 177-86. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
15. Thomassen, Henri A. "Echoclick design in swiftlets: Single as well as double clicks." The Ibis 146.1 (2004): 173-174. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
16. Rej, R.;, R. "CSI: Beethoven." Clinical Chemistry 54.7 (2008): 1262-1263. Link to SFX for this item
17. de Angelis, M H H. "Genome-wide, large-scale production of mutant mice by ENU mutagenesis." Nature genetics 25.4 (2000): 444-447. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
18. Godinho, S. "The role of mutagenesis in defining genes in behaviour." European journal of human genetics 14.6 (2006): 651-659. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
19. FETTIPLACE, R. "The sensory and motor roles of auditory hair cells." Nature reviews. Neuroscience 7.1 (2006): 19-29. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
20. Ealy, G. "Of ear trumpets and a resonance plate: Early hearing aids and Beethoven's hearing perception." 19th-century music 17.3 (1994): 262-273. Link to SFX for this item
View More...
View Less...
Select All Clear All

Expand list of advanced services Advanced