Helixgate

Helixgate

Uncategorized

Whitepaper: CDMOs at a Crossroads

Published

on

In this whitepaper, BioSpace reviews the major trends impacting the CDMO sector and the evolving relationship between sponsors and providers. We examine the key qualities pharma and biotech should consider in CDMO selection, and how the macroeconomic and macrodevelopment factors affecting the space play a role in this selection.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Uncategorized

Soleno sold at a discount to Neurocrine due to dwindling European prospects

Soleno sold at a discount to Neurocrine due to dwindling European prospects

Published

on

The bleak European approval potential for Soleno Therapeutics’ genetic obesity drug essentially forced the US drugmaker to sell itself for less than it was once worth.

In a rare case, Soleno sold at a price …​ ​Read More

Continue Reading

Uncategorized

Serif, Flagship’s latest biotech, aims to make a new kind of genetic medicine

The startup is developing “modified DNA” therapies it claims can combine the strengths of multiple approaches, from messenger RNA to gene therapy. 

Read More

Published

on

The startup is developing “modified DNA” therapies it claims can combine the strengths of multiple approaches, from messenger RNA to gene therapy. 

Read More

Continue Reading

Uncategorized

Opinion: What happens when a chief executive loses executive functions?

Circa 1970, the renowned Russian neuropsychologist Alexander Luria together with Karl Pribram from Stanford University and other neuroscientists of that era introduced the term “executive functions” into the scientific lexicon to denote complex behaviors such as attention and awareness. They identified the frontal lobe — the front of the brain — as the “executive of the brain” responsible for these behaviors based on their experiments with primates and patients with specific brain injuries.

Over time, the concept evolved to include mental processes needed to focus, concentrate, and pay attention when challenged by multiple simultaneous sources of information to weigh options and make informed decisions as opposed to impulsive ones.

Read the rest…

Read More

Published

on

Circa 1970, the renowned Russian neuropsychologist Alexander Luria together with Karl Pribram from Stanford University and other neuroscientists of that era introduced the term “executive functions” into the scientific lexicon to denote complex behaviors such as attention and awareness. They identified the frontal lobe — the front of the brain — as the “executive of the brain” responsible for these behaviors based on their experiments with primates and patients with specific brain injuries.

Over time, the concept evolved to include mental processes needed to focus, concentrate, and pay attention when challenged by multiple simultaneous sources of information to weigh options and make informed decisions as opposed to impulsive ones.

Read the rest…

Read More

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending