Not exact matches
According to a
fascinating TED talk by Stanford University health psychologist Kelly McGonigal, new
studies suggest the answer might be stress.
Several large, recent, peer - reviewed
studies have
suggested a
fascinating but seemingly counterintuitive idea: That the amount of fat you eat may not be as directly linked with how fat you are as we once thought.
Inspired by Gregory Bateson, who
suggested that we concentrate on shapes, patterns and relations when
studying anything from anthropology to cybernetics, Volk has written a
fascinating study of patterns of patterns, or metapatterns.
A
fascinating new academic
study suggests that peoples» political orientation affects their perceptions and knowledge regarding basic facts about the North and South Poles.
Claudia Mancuso, SISSA researcher and first author of the
study together with SISSA professors Andrea Lapi and Luigi Danese,
suggested a
fascinating alternative explanation: «According to the approach we developed at SISSA and published only a few months ago, collision and merging, while possible, are not so relevant as to be able to account for the formation and evolution of galaxies, including the outliers observed in GMS,» says the scientist.
A
fascinating study out of the University of North Carolina
suggests that damage and inflammation of the gut severely decreased the variety of bacterial species in the microbiome.
There's
fascinating research underway on nature as therapy, with some
studies suggesting that 20 minutes immersed in nature can significantly decrease stress hormones in the body.
are consistent with research on student motivation, such as Stanford psychologist Carol Dweck's (2006)
fascinating studies, which
suggest that students tend to perform better if they believe their intelligence depends on their own efforts.
A New
Study Has
Suggested A
Fascinating Theory Behind The Fast Radio Bursts That Are Being Observed
A
fascinating study recently conducted at the University of Toronto's Dr. Eric Jackman Institute of Child Study suggests that a focus on the negative ramifications of lying may be the wrong way to encourage honesty from chil
study recently conducted at the University of Toronto's Dr. Eric Jackman Institute of Child
Study suggests that a focus on the negative ramifications of lying may be the wrong way to encourage honesty from chil
Study suggests that a focus on the negative ramifications of lying may be the wrong way to encourage honesty from children.