Sentences with phrase «journal article suggests»

The Wall Street Journal article suggests some raised eyebrows among Japanese consumers over the name, which can also be taken as a reference to «Galapagos Syndrome,» or the Japanese self - perception of their nation as increasingly isolated from the outside world.

Not exact matches

Offer to write business - related articles for your local paper, suggests Hartman, who himself appears in real estate columns in the Orange County Business Journal.
Heard on the news this morning that according to an article in the Journal «Science», a study of cracks on the moon's surface suggests that the core of the moon is cooling, causing the whole satellite to slightly shrink in size.
In an article published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 12 garlic sprouted for five days was found to have higher antioxidant activity than fresher, younger bulbs, and it had different metabolites, suggesting it also makes different substances.
I suggest your readers also check out an article published last year in a Canadian journal about three cases of frequent severe food anaphylaxis to see how dramatic the changes can be.
According to the Journal's Joel Stashenko, some judges were so unhappy with the commission's recommendation (they had wanted more; some had suggested as much as $ 200,000), that they contemplated an Article 78 proceeding.
In a brilliant 1982 article in the British Journal of Political Science Curtice and Steed showed how by the mid-1970s, instead of a net 18 seats changing hands for every one per cent swing, as the Cube Law would suggest, only 12 seats, or even fewer, switched.
An article in today's Journal News suggests that the arguments in Albany about the East Ramapo School Board revolve around the question as to whether State Intervention in appointing a monitor would be a «unique circumstance» or a «dangerous precedent».
«The fact the effects observed were limited to only women with children younger than 13 years suggests that parity was not sufficient to produce changes in flashes and points instead to the increased nurturance needs of young children,» the authors wrote in the journal article.
In at least one case, the authors of a retracted article claim they didn't use an agency and did not propose fake reviewers — which suggests the journal's editors invited the fake review instead.
Now, in a new article published in The FASEB Journal in October, Garrison and Gerbi, along with Louis Justement of the University of Alabama, Birmingham, present data suggesting that the prediction is coming true.
In an article titled, «Allergen Induced Pulmonary Inflammation Enhances Mammary Tumor Growth and Metastasis: Role of CH13L1,» featured on the cover of the current issue of the Journal of Leukocyte Biology, this new research suggests inflammation raises the level of a known biomarker of cancer, called «chitinase -3-like-1» or «CHI3L1,» in the inflamed tissue, which leads to increased metastasis and faster cancer growth in that tissue.
Women may also be likelier to submit their articles to some journals rather than others, the authors suggest.
Further analysis suggested that the direct cost to the NIH is higher for retracted papers published in high - impact journals — those with articles that are the most cited in other research papers within two years of publication.
In a Clinical Crossroads article featured in the March 6, 2013 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), Dr. Dan Alford from Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) and Boston Medical Center (BMC) suggests that prescription opioid abuse can be minimized by monitoring patients closely for harm by using urine drug testing (UDT), pill counts, and reviewing prescription drug monitoring program data when available.
As National Football League playoff games are underway, a new article published in the «Hypotheses» section of the January 2016 issue of The FASEB Journal, suggests that the toll the sport takes on players» bodies extends beyond head trauma and damage to limbs and joints.
«For improved brain function, the results suggest that it's not enough just to exercise more,» said Eric Vidoni, PT, Ph.D., research associate professor of neurology at KU Medical Center and a lead author of the journal article.
The article noted that Andy Miah, at the University of the West of Scotland, in contrast to Olivier Rabin and Theodore Friedmann, the experts (whose study was just published in the journal Science) quoted in the article, suggests that gene doping may be safer than current methods of enhancing performance.
In a «current perspectives» article published by prestigious and world leading journal Nature [4], researchers suggested that the studies into coconut oil for belly fat loss are currently too conflicting to make any clear conclusions.
Glisten Online Gym Journal: I suggest... View Article
My dentist said no, but when this came up in conversation with a dental technician recently, she noted having seen an article in one of the dental journals suggesting there is.
Recently, an article in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology pled with obstetricians to not support planned home birth in any way, and even suggested that those who do «should be subject to peer review and justifiably incur professional liability and sanction from state medical boards» (1).
In January 2009, the School Library Journal published this article, which suggested using Skype to allow authors to virtually visit your classroom.
Maybe I shouldn't have been, but I was struck by an article in the Wall Street Journal noting the outrage by the higher education establishment that met the comments by North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory when he expressed in a radio interview his concern that many recent college graduates can not find jobs and suggested that -LSB-...]
To link to all suggested research articles published in AERA journals, click here.
These resource include, but are not limited to, our lists of research articles (see the «Top 15 ″ articles here, the «Top 25 ″ articles here, all articles published in AERA journals here, and all suggested research articles, books, etc., click here.)
In the now - classic 2006 article «The Secret Source: Sexually Explicit Young Adult Literature as an Information Source» in the journal Young Adult Library Services (YALS), YA lit scholar Amy Pattee suggests that YA fiction can be a «secret source» of information about sex, including everything from the mechanics of sex acts to «a vocabulary of intimacy that [teens] can use to make sense of their own sexual and romantic feelings.»
An article in the Wall Street Journal suggests that extending the federal home buyer tax credit could bankrupt the Federal Housing Administration (FHA).
However, a recent Wall Street Journal article about the company suggests that they target consumers with credit scores around 760, potentially making their product out of reach for borrowers who have poor credit.
A recent article by academic Wade Pfau and financial planner Michael Kitces in The Journal of Financial Planning suggests you can increase the odds of sustaining your nest egg by starting with an unusually high fixed - income allocation when you retire, and then gradually lowering it as you get through the danger zone.
Today's Wall Street Journal brought the latest in a string of articles suggesting that we have entered a period of particular opportunity for active investment management — a so - called «stock - picker's market.»
This Wall Street Journal article (subscription required) suggests former AOL chief Jonathan Miller is talking to investors about raising money to purchase all or part of YHOO.
According to an article in the Open Veterinary Journal in 2017, there is no confirmed therapeutic dose for glucosamine in dogs: «There is currently a lack of evidence to confirm a specific therapeutic dose of glucosamine in canines, yet, an adjunctive chondroitin dose of 15 - 30 mg / kg has been suggested (Plumb, 2015).
In a provocative article titled «The Curious Case of Contemporary Ink Painting» (Art Journal, Fall 2010), art historian Joan Kee has recently suggested that despite being chosen to represent South Korea in international biennials in the 1960s, Suh and other Mungnimhoe painters were marginalized in their own country by being classed as «ink painters» rather than as contemporary artists.
In an article to appear in the journal Child Development, «Distinguishing polemic from commentary in science,» physicist David Grimes and psychologist Dorothy Bishop write: Exposure to nonionizing radiation used in wireless communication remains a contentious topic in the public mind — while the overwhelming scientific evidence to date suggests that microwave and radio frequencies used in modern -LSB-...]
I had barely completed my own «3 trillion reasons» dance when I receive an email with a link to this Wall Street Journal report which suggested to me that the Chinese government had read and taken to heart the policy prescription of my solar policy article.
«Climate - Change Policies Can Be Punishing for the Poor,» an article by Lomborg in The Wall Street Journal, suggests that climate policies «bear an unfair burden» on «the rich world's energy poor.»
While realclimate then denied any other links to Environmental Defence Fund associates, Mann personally circulated a scurrilous Environmental Defense Fund article, suggesting that I was being funded by ExxonMobil (which I'm not) to Natuurwetenschap & Techniek and has possibly distributed similar material to other journals (New Scientist, GRL, Nature) in his efforts to block publication of our material.
It's a softer version of CRU ridiculing the quality of non-conforming journals, or conspiring to shun a journal that published a heretical article and suggesting the journal be stripped of its peer - reviewed status.
They suggest 90 - 92 % journal articles in AR4 WG1, and the lower end of a 61 - 67 % range for WG2 (cf. Andreas's TAR figures of 84 % and 59 %, respectively).
It seems that the very few articles that have been published in science journals suggesting wind farms have adverse health effects are in journals having low impact factors.
I would just suggest that anyone commenting on the technical aspects of the dispute actually cite the literature being critiqued rather than use shorthand in referring to those articles, otherwise those critiques will never show up in search results for interested people who are using the citations (or even partials such as author names, or date and subject and maybe journal) as search terms.
And as this article, Associates Punching the Clock (ABA Journal, August 2007), suggests, older and younger lawyers have different views, even on issues such as the appropriate time to start work.
The ABA Journal recently published an article which suggested that unemployed women lawyers should remain hopeful about their careers.
Some of our colleagues at UNLV have conceptualized the evolution of legal writing scholarship as a series of leaps.2 The first big leap was to take an interdisciplinary approach to writing about teaching writing.3 The second leap was to build community by creating spaces of our own, such as LWI, the Journal, and then later, JAWLD.4 The third leap was to develop a rich, often interdisciplinary approach to studying and writing about legal writing.5 In their article, Linda Berger, Linda Edwards, and Terry Pollman suggested — hoped, perhaps, and I along with them — that scholarship relating to legal analysis, skills and practice is no longer considered inferior to traditional legal scholarship.6 The growing number of schools where legal writing faculty have achieved equal status due at least in part to their legal writing scholarship suggests we have made significant progress as a result of these leaps.7
Why not take a more proactive approach, such as the one suggested by Ari Kaplan in this National Law Journal article: Summer Associates Can Write Their Way to Success.
Right there on the company's Web site is an article, originally from the Los Angeles Daily Journal, that suggests the bonus practice may be unethical by recruiting - industry norms.
Download Full Article Full Article Available in: Fordham International Law Journal Volume 41, Number 3 Suggested Citation: Dr. Brianne McGonigle Leyh, Pragmatism over Principles: The International Criminal Court and a Human Rights - Based Approach to Judicial Interpretation, 41 Fordham Int» l L.J. 697 (2018).
Women lawyers prefer to fly in flocks, suggests the headline from an article to appear Monday in The National Law Journal, Women Choosing Not to Fly Solo.
Now, as discussed in this National Law Journal article, «Law Blogs Raise Prickly Ethical Issues» (10/6/06), some are suggesting that lawyers place disclaimers on blogs to avoid restrictive regulation now under consideration by the New York bar.
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