Sentences with phrase «als find»

When it comes to helping folks who've been diagnosed with ALS find life insurance coverage that they can qualify for, we'll need to look at what are called Guaranteed Acceptance Life Insurance policies (AKA Guaranteed Issue).
Joel Campbell, Alex Oxlade Chamberlain, Theo Walcott, and Chambers al found themselve very short of minutes.
A 2007 study by Blumenthal et al found that exercise is as effective as an anti-depressant in some cases in alleviating depression.
Reduced cortical thickness: Hong and colleagues found reduced cortical (the outermost part of the brain) thickness in internet - addicted teen boys (Hong 2013), and Yuan et al found reduced cortical thickness in the frontal lobe of online gaming addicts (late adolescent males and females) correlated with impairment of a cognitive task (Yuan 2013).
A recent paper by Hausfather et al found that NOAA's new SST version ERRSTv4 matched sea surface temperatures from buoys (and satellites) quite well from 1997 until present, whereas HadSST3 had an apparent residual cooling bias in the same period.
al find that the spread in 2xCO2 climate sensitivity among CMIP GCM's is largely due to differences in low cloud behavior, and that's primarily an albedo effect.
Recently Corbett - Detig et al found evidence that linked selection strongly constrains levels of polymorphism in species with large census sizes.
Fulghesu et al found that obese patients with PCOS did not respond to doses under 3 grams / day.
Woo et al found that melatonin acts as a modulatorof ovarian function.
In fact, this study by Gillen et al found that just 10 minutes of interval sprints burned as much fat as a person that did regular steady - state cardio for 50 minutes.
Douglas et al find that they can't make a huge haunted house scary at all, reducing the set to a kitchen, a bathroom, a basement, and a bedroom while having the Lutzes pay frequent visits to the boathouse and the roof.
Meanwhile, Booker, et al found over a $ 2,000 increase in annual earnings from attending a charter school in Florida even though those charter schools produced little improvement in achievement scores.
Charaput et al found that 30 year mortgage rates are better at explaining changes in annuity prices than are risk - free Treasury bonds.
In fact, in one of their experiments, Simonsohn et al found that personal experience was weighted twice as heavily as vicarious experience!
al found that the annual SD of CAD - USD fluctuation was 4.2 (not 15 as assumed in your post) and it is not correct to assume that currency fluctuations are independent of stock market returns.
Cuñat et al find that passing a proposal leads to significant positive abnormal returns:
In a 1989 study, Bari et al found autoimmunity to collagen in 72.4 % of dogs with rheumatoid arthritis, 88 % of dogs with infective arthritis and 52 % of dogs with osteoarthritis.
According to the American Veterinary Medical Association, a study by Lord et al found that lost dogs with microchips were more than twice as likely to be returned to their owners as dogs who did not have microchips, and lost cats with microchips were more than 20 times more likely to be returned to their owners, when compared with cats who did not have microchips.
Loughin et al found that 47 % of their feline patients that were treated nonsurgically had excellent outcome.2 They stated that «lameness may not be a good indicator of the need for surgical correction and it seems prudent to recommend a period of nonsurgical management (rest and analgesics) prior to surgical intervention, particularly in cats in which signs of lameness have been present for < 2 months.»
As the American Veterinary Medical Association has noted, a study by Lord et al found that lost dogs with microchips were over twice as likely to be returned to their owners, when compared to dogs who did not have microchips.
In their study, van Kuijk et al found that dogs with pre-existing joint disease were 5 times more likely to develop peri-articular histiocytic sarcoma than dogs that did not have pre-existing joint disease.
Still others, like the Bobbie of the title, simply performed their trans lives in ways that Mr. Als found inspiring and transfixing.
Bryden et al find that that western boundary current (what is properly called «the Gulf Stream») has not changed in magnitude over several decades.
What did Bryden et al find?
Even the admirable Revkin doesn't get it quite right: On horizontal surfaces, observations and modeling show a role for melting in both the baseline ablation and the sensitivity of ablation to precipitation and temperature; melting is the dominant ablation mechanism on vertical ice cliffs; and though Kaser et al find «no evidence» about rising temperatures, it is only because the in situ studies don't cover a long enough period to detect trends.
In the Amazon, Liu et al found that the change resulted from a * decrease in photosynthesis * (as revealed by changes in chlorophyll fluorescence).
Regarding paleoclimate findings supporting «global warming is happening and we are the cause», see Tom Curtis» comment here regarding Marcott et al 2013; in which Tom notes that Marcott et al found:
Abreu et al found a 208 year signal in the isotope record between grand minima and there is a natural solar low point that is not grand minima related that happens between grand minima, that might get close to a 60 year signal in the solar record.
A recent paper by Hausfather et al found that NOAA's new SST version ERRSTv4 matched sea surface temperatures from buoys (and satellites) quite well from 1997 until present, whereas HadSST3 had an apparent residual cooling bias in the same period.
Article states: «The end result is that where Santer et al found the error bars could overlap, McKitrick found that the models overestimated temperatures by 200 and 400 % in the lower and mid troposphere respectively.»
The end result is that where Santer et al found the error bars could overlap, McKitrick found that the models overestimated temperatures by 200 and 400 % in the lower and mid troposphere respectively.
Cook et al finds that the higher the level of expertise in climate science, the greater the level of consensus.
The former is a far bigger problem than most people realize: a 2011 economic analysis by Nicholas Muller et al found that coal power's associated «damages range from 0.8 to 5.6 times value added.»
, 1991) assert that the recent rise in some high elevation conifers in the western U.S. could be explained as a temperature response (she can not confirm the LaMarche et al findings).
Herweijer et al found evidence of what they call megadroughts in N. America during the MWP, and evidence that this also occured outside of N. America.
Karl et al found standard errors of 0.1 to 0.2 C associated with the adjustment at individual stations held out of sample for testing.
Davis, Knappenberger et al found that heat - related mortality has been declining significantly, by a factor of 4 from the 1960s to 1990s: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1241712/ «Heat - related mortality rates declined significantly over time in 19 of the 28 cities.
Spencer et al find some potential support for Lindzen's «infrared iris» hypothesis of climate stabilization, which presupposes AGW,; it might hypothetically, potentially, be reduced but not eliminated.
In 2009 a paper in Science by Honisch et al found that CO2 is higher now than in the past 2 million years.....
As surveys should be interpreted as consistent if they can be, that means Cook et al find that 97 % of papers discussing the issue endorse the theory that > 50 % of recent warming has been anthropogenic in origin.
Comparing face to face group cognitive behaviour therapy with internet CBT for social phobia Andrews et al found both equally effective but that internet therapy required less clinician time and was 13 times more cost effective (Andrews G, Davis M, Titov N: Effectiveness randomized controlled trial of face to face versus Internet cognitive behaviour therapy for social phobia.
Barkley et al found increased rates of comorbid substance abuse disorder, anxiety disorder, mood disorder, personality disorders, and disruptive behavior disorders among adults with ADHD that had persisted from childhood into adulthood.23 Adults whose childhood ADHD did not persist also had increased rates of psychiatric comorbidity, although lower than those with persistent ADHD (47.3 % vs 84.3 %).23 Other smaller studies also report elevated rates of psychiatric comorbidity (65 — 89 %) among adults with ADHD.15 — 22 However, these studies used nonrepresentative samples of children referred to specialty treatment programs for ADHD.
Lustman et al found that CBT effectively treated depression in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Although Nansel et al found important evidence regarding the potential detrimental effects of bullying on self - perceived academic achievement and school attendance, no objective measures of academic achievement or attendance were collected.
Finally, given the differences in parenting reported above, it is not surprising that Herr et al29 noted chronic stress in the relationship between mothers with high levels of BPD symptomatology and their 15 - year - old offspring, and Feldman et al found extremely low self - reported satisfaction with their family (at the 1st centile) in mothers with BPD.19
Keep in mind that a 1998 study (10 years old) by Michael et al found only 22 % of men and 18 % of women age 18 to 24 had abstained from sex before marriage.
Of interest, Wolraich et al found markedly different patterns of co-occurring disorders according to diagnostic subtype.
No significant effects were found on Externalising, Withdrawn, Somatic Symptoms, Intrusive, Thought Problems, Delinquent Behaviour and Aggressive Behaviour.50 Minkovitz et al found no statistically significant effects on SSRS Total score or the PEDS Total score 12 — 18 months postintervention.
Doherty et al found a significant positive effect on dyadic synchrony [0.37 (0.03 to 0.71)-RSB-, but no significant effects on total score, warmth and emotional support, engagement with child, positive affect and intrusiveness.
It is certainly the case that, in the study of Lyons - Ruth and colleagues, infant outcome in terms of both cognitive development and attachment security was more compromised in the context of severe, rather than mild, maternal depression.3 In addition, Campbell et al found poor infant behaviour to occur in the context of interactions with the mother where the mother was chronically, but not more briefly, depressed.12 In contrast, other studies have found adverse infant outcome to obtain in spite of maternal remission from depression some months before the infant assessment.
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