All Stories

  1. The False Positive Risk: A Proposal Concerning What to Do About p-Values
  2. Response to comment by Loiselle & Ramchandra (2015)
  3. An investigation of the false discovery rate and the misinterpretation of p-values
  4. Alternative Medicine: My Part in its Downfall
  5. Acupuncture Is Theatrical Placebo
  6. Krill Oil Claims: Fact or Fiction? An Analysis of the Literature
  7. Allosteric coupling in ligand-gated ion channels
  8. Response to Whitehead
  9. Scarcely credible treatments do not merit university attention
  10. In Praise of Randomisation: The Importance of Causality in Medicine and its Subversion by Philosophers of Science
  11. Acupuncture for ‘frequent attenders’ with medically unexplained symptoms
  12. College of Medicine is Prince's Foundation reincarnated
  13. Wilmshurst in context
  14. The K276E Startle Disease Mutation in the Glycine Receptor: Effects on Channel Gating
  15. Author's reply to the minister
  16. The Diet Delusion
  17. Secret remedies: 100 years on
  18. The highs and lows of policy based evidence
  19. Agonist and blocking actions of choline and tetramethylammonium on human muscle acetylcholine receptors
  20. Trust me, I'm a scientist
  21. MHRA label seems to be illegal
  22. The arrogance of trying to sum up abilities in a number
  23. Channel Blocking Properties Of Tetramethylammonium At The Human Muscle Acetylcholine Receptor
  24. Single Ion Channels
  25. CORRIGENDUM
  26. A very bad report on regulating complementary medicine
  27. David Colquhoun & Lucia Sivilotti
  28. On the nature of partial agonism in the nicotinic receptor superfamily
  29. Why the Schild method is better than Schild realised
  30. What to do about CAM?
  31. What have we learned from single ion channels?
  32. Should NICE evaluate complementary and alternative medicines?
  33. Science degrees without the science
  34. NEUROSCIENCE: Perceptions of a Receptor
  35. Treating Critically Ill Patients With Sugar Pills
  36. Playing the numbers game
  37. The quantitative analysis of drug–receptor interactions: a short history
  38. Agonist-activated ion channels
  39. From Shut to Open: What Can We Learn from Linear Free Energy Relationships?
  40. Maximum likelihood fitting of single channel NMDA activity with a mechanism composed of independent dimers of subunits
  41. Evidence-based medicine
  42. Commentary
  43. A human congenital myasthenia-causing mutation (ɛL78P) of the muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor with unusual single channel properties
  44. Abuse of Prisoners at Abu Ghraib
  45. How to Impose Microscopic Reversibility in Complex Reaction Mechanisms
  46. Challenging the tyranny of impact factors
  47. The quality of maximum likelihood estimates of ion channel rate constants
  48. The quality of maximum likelihood estimates of ion channel rate constants
  49. Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors
  50. Acetylcholine Receptor-Nicotinic
  51. Single‐channel analysis of an NMDA receptor possessing a mutation in the region of the glutamate binding site
  52. Letters to the editor
  53. Pharmacologic Analysis of Drug–Receptor Interaction (3rd edn)
  54. Binding, gating, affinity and efficacy: The interpretation of structure-activity relationships for agonists and of the effects of mutating receptors
  55. Single-channel activations and concentration jumps: comparison of recombinant NR1a/NR2A and NR1a/NR2D NMDA receptors
  56. From Muscle Endplate to Brain Synapses: A Short History of Synapses and Agonist-Activated Ion Channels
  57. The ion channel properties of a rat recombinant neuronal nicotinic receptor are dependent on the host cell type
  58. Properties of single ion channel currents elicted by a pulse of agonist concentration or voltage
  59. Worthless ranking
  60. The pharmacological actions of polymethylene bistrimethylammonium salts
  61. Joint Distributions of Apparent Open and Shut Times of Single-Ion Channels and Maximum Likelihood Fitting of Mechanisms
  62. Desensitization of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors: a problem of interpretation.
  63. A P2X purinoceptor expressed by a subset of sensory neurons
  64. Acetylcholine receptors: too many channels, too few functions
  65. Activation of NMDA receptors
  66. A Q-Matrix Cookbook
  67. Fitting and Statistical Analysis of Single-Channel Records
  68. The Principles of the Stochastic Interpretation of Ion-Channel Mechanisms
  69. Ion channels of excitable cells (Methods in neurosciences Vol. 19)
  70. The binding issue
  71. Asymptotic Distributions of Apparent Open Times and Shut Times in a Single Channel Record Allowing for the Omission of Brief Events
  72. ATP receptor-mediated synaptic currents in the central nervous system
  73. Unravelling the paradox
  74. Ion channels: this year's Nobel prize in physiology or medicine.
  75. Conductance and kinetic properties of single nicotinic acetylcholine receptor channels in rat sympathetic neurones.
  76. Trials of homoeopathy
  77. Activation of ion channels in the frog endplate by several analogues of acetylcholine.
  78. Neher and Sakmann win Nobel Prize for patch-clamp work
  79. The Distributions of the Apparent Open Times and Shut Times in a Single Channel Record when Brief Events Cannot Be Detected
  80. The actions of suxamethonium (succinyldicholine) as an agonist and channel blocker at the nicotinic receptor of frog muscle.
  81. Re-analysis of clinical trial of homoeopathic treatment in fibrositis
  82. Rectification of currents activated by nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in rat sympathetic ganglion neurones.
  83. Stochastic Properties of Ion Channel Openings and Bursts in a Membrane Patch that Contains Two Channels: Evidence Concerning the Number of Channels Present when a Record Containing Only Single Openings is Observed
  84. Validity of the operational model
  85. Ion channels (vol. 1)
  86. On the Kinetics of Large-Conductance Glutamate-Receptor Ion Channels in Rat Cerebellar Granule Neurons
  87. Single channel analysis costs time
  88. Activation of ion channels in the frog end-plate by high concentrations of acetylcholine.
  89. Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors of nerve and muscle: Functional aspects
  90. Single-Channel and Whole-Cell Currents Evoked by Acetylcholine in Dissociated Sympathetic Neurons of the Rat
  91. Ogden et al. reply
  92. A new type of ion-channel block
  93. Regulation of the acetylcholine receptor
  94. A Note on Correlations in Single Ion Channel Records
  95. Molecular pharmacology: Structure and function of acetyl-choline-receptor ion channels
  96. Practical statistics for experimental biologists
  97. Caution: agonists are complex
  98. Mechanism of action of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, Advanced Research Workshop, Island of Santorini, Greece. May 19–23, 1986
  99. On the Principles of Postsynaptic Action of Neuromuscular Blocking Agents
  100. States of the Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor: Enumeration, Characteristics and Structure
  101. Ion Channel Block by Acetylcholine, Carbachol and Suberyldicholine at the Frog Neuromuscular Junction
  102. Imprecision in presentation of binding studies
  103. Conductances of single ion channels opened by nicotinic agonists are indistinguishable
  104. Kinetics of acetylcholine activated ion channels in chick ciliary ganglion neurones grown in tissue culture
  105. The efficacy of agonists at the frog neuromuscular junction studied with single channel recording
  106. Introduction to Membrane Noise Louis J. DeFelice
  107. Medical pharmacology, principles and concepts
  108. Fitting and Statistical Analysis of Single-Channel Records
  109. Bursts of Openings in Transmitter-Activated Ion Channels
  110. The Principles of the Stochastic Interpretation of Ion-Channel Mechanisms
  111. On the Stochastic Properties of Bursts of Single Ion Channel Openings and of Clusters of Bursts
  112. Introductory statistics
  113. THE EFFECT OF TUBOCURARINE COMPETITION ON THE KINETICS OF AGONIST ACTION ON THE NICOTINIC RECEPTOR
  114. THE ACTION OF GANGLIONIC BLOCKING DRUGS ON THE SYNAPTIC RESPONSES OF RAT SUBMANDIBULAR GANGLION CELLS
  115. Inward current channels activated by intracellular Ca in cultured cardiac cells
  116. Fluctuations in the microsecond time range of the current through single acetylcholine receptor ion channels
  117. On the Stochastic Properties of Single Ion Channels
  118. Block of acetylcholine-activated ion channels by an uncharged local anaesthetic
  119. How fast do drugs work?
  120. Cooperative Equilibrium in Physical Biochemistry
  121. The actions of tubocurarine at the frog neuromuscular junction.
  122. The Link between Drug Binding and Response: Theories and Observations
  123. Relaxation and Fluctuations of Membrane Currents that Flow through Drug-Operated Channels
  124. An analysis of the action of a false transmitter at the neuromuscular junction.
  125. Mechanisms of Drug Action at the Voluntary Muscle Endplate
  126. The binding of tetrodotoxin and α-bungarotoxin to normal and denervated mammalian muscle
  127. Lectures on Biostatistics.
  128. The interaction at equilibrium between tetrodotoxin and mammalian non-myelinated nerve fibres
  129. Rapid histamine assays: a method and some theoretical considerations
  130. A Comparison of Estimators for a Two-Parameter Hyperbola
  131. Adsorption and diffusion of gamma-globulin during passive sensitization of chopped guinea-pig lung.
  132. BALANCED INCOMPLETE BLOCK DESIGNS IN BIOLOGICAL ASSAY ILLUSTRATED BY THE ASSAY OF GASTRIN USING A YOUDEN SQUARE