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D-Index & Metrics

Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
43
Citations
5735
World Ranking
19428
National Ranking
7925

Overview

David I. Meyer is affiliated with the University of California, Los Angeles in the United States. Their research primarily spans the fields of Medicine and Computer Science, with notable contributions to subfields such as Physiology, Artificial Intelligence, Music, Signal Processing, and Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging.

Their work extensively covers topics including Voice and Speech Disorders, Speech Recognition and Synthesis, Music and Audio Processing, Long-Term Effects of COVID-19, Infection Control and Ventilation, COVID-19 and healthcare impacts, and Music Therapy and Health.

Frequent publication venues for David I. Meyer include:

  • Journal of Voice
  • Journal of Singing
  • Proceedings on CD-ROM - International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. Scientific Meeting and Exhibition/Proceedings of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, Scientific Meeting and Exhibition
  • Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open
  • Bioengineering

They have collaborated repeatedly with coauthors such as:

  • Sajan Goud Lingala
  • John Nix
  • Subin Erattakulangara
  • Karthika Kelat
  • Brad H. Story

Recent papers authored or coauthored by David I. Meyer reflect a focus on voice, speech, and effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. These include:

  • "Safer Singing During the SARS-CoV-2 Pandemic: What We Know and What We Don't" (2020), published in Journal of Voice
  • "COVID-19 After Effects: Concerns for Singers" (2020), published in Journal of Voice
  • "Integration of aeromedicine in the response to the COVID-19 pandemic" (2020), published in Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open
  • "Automatic Multiple Articulator Segmentation in Dynamic Speech MRI Using a Protocol Adaptive Stacked Transfer Learning U-NET Model" (2023), published in Bioengineering
  • "Acoustical Theory of Vowel Modification Strategies in Belting" (2023), published in Journal of Voice

Best Publications

  • Secretory protein translocation across membranes—the role of the ‘docking protein’

    David I. Meyer;Elke Krause;Bernhard Dobberstein

  • Secretion in yeast: reconstitution of the translocation and glycosylation of α-factor and invertase in a homologous cell-free system

    Jonathan A. Rothblatt;David I. Meyer

  • Membrane biogenesis during B cell differentiation: most endoplasmic reticulum proteins are expressed coordinately.

    David L. Wiest;Janis K. Burkhardt;Susan Hester;Michael Hortsch

  • Secretion in yeast: translocation and glycosylation of prepro-α-factor in vitro can occur via an ATP-dependent post-translational mechanism

    Jonathan A. Rothblatt;David I. Meyer

  • Centractin is an actin homologue associated with the centrosome

    Sean W. Clark;David I. Meyer

  • Identification of a ribosome receptor in the rough endoplasmic reticulum.

    Adam J. Savitz;David I. Meyer

  • Identification and characterization of a membrane component essential for the translocation of nascent proteins across the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum.

    David I. Meyer;Bernhard Dobberstein

  • A membrane component essential for vectorial translocation of nascent proteins across the endoplasmic reticulum: requirements for its extraction and reassociation with the membrane.

    D I Meyer;B Dobberstein

  • Characterization of a 50-kDa polypeptide in cytoplasmic dynein preparations reveals a complex with p150GLUED and a novel actin.

    Bryce Mark Paschal;Erika L. F. Holzbaur;K. Kevin Pfister;Sean W. Clark

  • Characterization of secretory protein translocation: ribosome-membrane interaction in endoplasmic reticulum.

    Michael Hortsch;Daniela Avossa;David I. Meyer

  • ACT3: a putative centractin homologue in S. cerevisiae is required for proper orientation of the mitotic spindle.

    S W Clark;D I Meyer

  • Human ribophorins I and II: the primary structure and membrane topology of two highly conserved rough endoplasmic reticulum-specific glycoproteins.

    C Crimaudo;M Hortsch;H Gausepohl;D I Meyer

  • 1986: A year of new insights into how proteins cross membranes

    Richard Zimmermann;David I. Meyer

  • Functional characterization of the 180-kD ribosome receptor in vivo.

    Erich E. Wanker;Yin Sun;Adam J. Savitz;David I. Meyer

  • Membrane insertion of alpha- and beta-subunits of Na+,K+-ATPase.

    K Geering;D I Meyer;M P Paccolat;J P Kraehenbühl

  • 180-kD ribosome receptor is essential for both ribosome binding and protein translocation.

    Adam J. Savitz;David I. Meyer

  • Secretion in yeast: structural features influencing the post-translational translocation of prepro-alpha-factor in vitro.

    J A Rothblatt;J R Webb;G Ammerer;D I Meyer

  • In vivo and in vitro analysis of ptl1, a yeast ts mutant with a membrane-associated defect in protein translocation.

    J. Toyn;A. R. Hibbs;P. Sanz;J. Crowe

  • Interaction of the p62 subunit of dynactin with Arp1 and the cortical actin cytoskeleton

    Jorge A. Garces;Imran B. Clark;David I. Meyer;Richard B. Vallee

  • Sac1p mediates the adenosine triphosphate transport into yeast endoplasmic reticulum that is required for protein translocation.

    Peter Mayinger;Vytas A. Bankaitis;David I. Meyer

Frequent Co-Authors

Bernhard Dobberstein
Bernhard Dobberstein Heidelberg University
Paul Webster
Paul Webster House Clinic
Max M. Burger
Max M. Burger Friedrich Miescher Institute
Richard B. Vallee
Richard B. Vallee Columbia University
Tao Xu
Tao Xu Chinese Academy of Sciences
Wing Hung Wong
Wing Hung Wong Stanford University
Bernard C. Rossier
Bernard C. Rossier University of Lausanne
Käthi Geering
Käthi Geering University of Lausanne
Peter J. M. Rottier
Peter J. M. Rottier Utrecht University
Mathias Uhlén
Mathias Uhlén Royal Institute of Technology

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Best Scientists Citing David I. Meyer