A Nutrition
Journal review of studies comparing grass - fed beef to the conventional kind that spanned more than 30 years found that grass - based diets raise cancer - fighting antioxidant activity (glutathione and superoxide dismutase) higher.
Not exact matches
A peer -
reviewed study by researchers at the University
of British Columbia and Simon Fraser University, published recently in The International
Journal of Drug Policy, pegged the retail value
of marijuana consumption in B.C. alone at between $ 443 million and $ 564 million.
Chew tells me that one
of the main reasons he's drawn to Omada is that the company has several wide - ranging
studies published in actual peer -
reviewed medical
journals suggesting its system really works.
Last year, in a
review published in the
journal Nature, Beebe and coauthors wrote that hematology, the
study of blood, was one
of the leading areas
of use for microfluidic technology, though «a «killer application'that propels microfluidics into the mainstream has yet to emerge.»
In a large
review of studies published in the
Journal of Nutrition, Purdue University scientists found that whole tree nuts and peanuts have roughly 15 % fewer calories than the figure calculated using the Atwater method.
Following are a sample
of studies published in peer -
reviewed journals showing that as a result
of participating in MOC activities, physicians have:
Her work has been published in
Studies in American Political Development, the
Journal of Policy History, Enterprise and Society, and the Business History
Review.
His research has been published in the leading finance
journals, such as the
Journal of Financial Economics,
Review of Financial
Studies,
Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, and
Review of Finance.
These genetic regulators may be the reason ho - mose - xuality persists in nature despite the fact that gay people are less likely to reproduce, suggests the new
study published in the (Dec, 2012)
journal ** The Quarterly
Review of Biology **.
It was written for China
Review International, the
Journal of the Center for Chinese
Studies, University
of Hawaii, February 10, 2014 by Franklin J. Woo.
These genetic regulators may be the reason homosexuality persists in nature despite the fact that gay people are less likely to reproduce, suggests the new
study published in the [Dec, 2012]
journal The Quarterly
Review of Biology.
Nelson in The
Review of Metaphysics, XVII, 2 (December 1963), 235 - 242; David Platt in The
Journal of Bible and Religion, XXXIV, 3 (July 1966), 244 - 252 J. E. Smith in The Chicago Theological Seminary Register, LIII, 5 (May 1963), 41 - 43; and R. J. Wood in The
Journal of Religion, XLVI, 4 (October 1966), 477 - 490; and David A. Pailin, «Some Comments on Hartshorne's Presentation
of the Ontological Argument,» Religious
Studies, 4, 1 (October 1968), 103 - 122.
Co., 1978); Thomas C. Campbell and Yoshio Fukuyama, The Fragmented Layman: An Empirical
Study of Lay Attitudes (Philadelphia: Pilgrim Press, 1970); James D. Davidson, «Religious Belief as an Independent Variable,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 11 (1972): 65 - 75; James D. Davidson, «Religious Belief as a Dependent Variable,» Sociological Analysis 33 (1972): 81 - 94; James D. Davidson, «Patterns of Belief at the Denominational and Congregational Levels,» Review of Religious Research 13 (1972): 197 - 205; David R. Gibbs, Samuel A. Miller, and James R. Wood, «Doctrinal Orthodoxy, Salience and the Consequential Dimension,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 12 (1973): 33 - 52; William McKinney, and others, Census Data for Community Mission (New York: Board for Homeland Ministries, United Church of Christ, 1983), part of a denomination - wide study of census data relevant to each congregation in the United Church of Christ; David O. Moberg, `' Theological Position and Institutional Characteristics of Protestant Congregations: An Explanatory Study,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific Study of Religion, 1
Study of Lay Attitudes (Philadelphia: Pilgrim Press, 1970); James D. Davidson, «Religious Belief as an Independent Variable,»
Journal for the Scientific
Study of Religion 11 (1972): 65 - 75; James D. Davidson, «Religious Belief as a Dependent Variable,» Sociological Analysis 33 (1972): 81 - 94; James D. Davidson, «Patterns of Belief at the Denominational and Congregational Levels,» Review of Religious Research 13 (1972): 197 - 205; David R. Gibbs, Samuel A. Miller, and James R. Wood, «Doctrinal Orthodoxy, Salience and the Consequential Dimension,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 12 (1973): 33 - 52; William McKinney, and others, Census Data for Community Mission (New York: Board for Homeland Ministries, United Church of Christ, 1983), part of a denomination - wide study of census data relevant to each congregation in the United Church of Christ; David O. Moberg, `' Theological Position and Institutional Characteristics of Protestant Congregations: An Explanatory Study,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific Study of Religion, 1
Study of Religion 11 (1972): 65 - 75; James D. Davidson, «Religious Belief as a Dependent Variable,» Sociological Analysis 33 (1972): 81 - 94; James D. Davidson, «Patterns
of Belief at the Denominational and Congregational Levels,»
Review of Religious Research 13 (1972): 197 - 205; David R. Gibbs, Samuel A. Miller, and James R. Wood, «Doctrinal Orthodoxy, Salience and the Consequential Dimension,»
Journal for the Scientific
Study of Religion 12 (1973): 33 - 52; William McKinney, and others, Census Data for Community Mission (New York: Board for Homeland Ministries, United Church of Christ, 1983), part of a denomination - wide study of census data relevant to each congregation in the United Church of Christ; David O. Moberg, `' Theological Position and Institutional Characteristics of Protestant Congregations: An Explanatory Study,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific Study of Religion, 1
Study of Religion 12 (1973): 33 - 52; William McKinney, and others, Census Data for Community Mission (New York: Board for Homeland Ministries, United Church
of Christ, 1983), part
of a denomination - wide
study of census data relevant to each congregation in the United Church of Christ; David O. Moberg, `' Theological Position and Institutional Characteristics of Protestant Congregations: An Explanatory Study,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific Study of Religion, 1
study of census data relevant to each congregation in the United Church
of Christ; David O. Moberg, `' Theological Position and Institutional Characteristics
of Protestant Congregations: An Explanatory
Study,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific Study of Religion, 1
Study,»
Journal for the Scientific
Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific Study of Religion, 1
Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific
Study of Religion, 1
Study of Religion, 1974).
The peer -
reviewed social science
journal that published the
study, along with commentary alongside it, commissions a member
of its own editorial board (who has an openly hostile view
of the
study) to «audit» the peer -
review process.
There are several
studies, published in peer
reviewed journals that are really quite suggestive that consciousness is in some way unrelated to the biological functioning
of the brain.
The
journals of the American Diabetes Association work toward these goals by publishing high - quality and timely peer -
reviewed diabetes research articles,
review articles, case
studies, and patient information.
One the largest analysis
of the peer -
reviewed literature was published in The American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition in 2010, and this meta - analysis looked at almost 350,000
studies published on saturated fats, and concluded:
In fact, a 2012
review of 25
studies published in the European
Journal of Nutrition found that full - fat milk does not increase the risk
of cardiovascular disease or diabetes any more than low - fat options.
Since 1969, dozens
of studies of food - grade carrageenan have been published in peer -
reviewed academic
journals.
As a research - driven organization led by nutrition scientists, the McCormick Science Institute is focused on advancing the scientific
study of the health and wellness properties
of spices and herbs, with all research teams required to submit their findings to reputable, peer -
reviewed scientific
journals for publication.
Two earlier peer -
reviewed studies published in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition by researchers from the University
of North Carolina in 2012 and 2013 randomly assigned non-dieting participants to drink either water or diet beverages.
In case you missed it, a recent landmark
study published in the peer
reviewed International
Journal of Epidemiology found that risk for coronary heart disease, stroke, total cardiovascular disease and death other than from cancer was reduced with each 200g a day increase in fruit and vegetables up to 800g a day, and 600g a day for cancer.
>> Read the complete research
study: Endocrine disrupting chemicals and other substances
of concern in food contact materials: An updated
review of exposure, effect and risk assessment in the
Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
• A
review of nine cohort
studies published in international peer -
reviewed journals found «partner's smoking habit» to be one
of the key determinants
of a pregnant woman's smoking (Lu et al, 2001).
For this debut issue, the
Journal of Attachment Parenting highlights 41
studies selected through a
review process that evaluated articles published in high - quality, peer -
reviewed journals from around the world.
Last week, we posted to the site a group
of four articles about a peer -
reviewed study in the
Journal of Neurosurgery showing that football helmet design affected concussion risk among a large group (or what scientists call a «cohort»)
of college football players.
Two 2003
studies suggest that heading in soccer may result in weaker mental performance, including a decline in cognitive function, difficulty in verbal learning, planning and maintaining attention and reduced information processing speed, but a critical
review of the literature in 2010 by an expert panel
of the American Academy
of Pediatrics found no support for such a finding, and a 2012
study in the
journal Neurosurgery concluded that it was «unlikely» that the subtle cognitive differences detected were sufficient to affect the daily lives
of players.
Even though I am not a researcher or medical professional and the peer -
reviewed study is to appear in the American
Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, I thought the results were a scare tactic.
Fransen (2015) makes a few intriguing points: The Midwives Alliance
of North American (MANA) identifies a systematic
review written within the official «
journal»
of Lamaze International as one «best available
studies on planned home birth and maternal fetal outcomes.»
In 1995, the
Journal of the American Medical Association
reviewed the various
studies.
A recent
study in the
journal Pediatrics
reviewed the deaths
of 119 sleeping infants (less than 2 years
of age) in St. Louis over a four - year period.
Personally, I find it rather ironic that you're lecturing the blog author on the rigor
of language, when, faced with the need to support the claims made by a documentary that has faced absolutely no real standards
of intellectual rigor or merit (the kind
of evidence you apparently find convincing), you have so far managed to produce a
study with a sample size too small to conclude anything, a
review paper that basically summarized well known connections between vaginal and amniotic flora and poor outcomes in labor and birth before attempting to rescue what would have been just another OB
review article with a few attention grabbing sentences about long term health implications, and a
review article published in a trash
journal.
NHERI executes, evaluates, and disseminates
studies and information (e.g., statistics, facts, data) on homeschooling (i.e., home schooling, home - based education, home education, home school, home - schooling, unschooling, deschooling, a form
of alternative education), publishes reports and the peer -
reviewed scholarly
journal Home School Researcher, and serves in consulting, academic achievement tests, and expert witness (in courts and legislatures).
The exact ages
of the infants
of the
study aren't mentioned in the summary
of the report and the report doesn't appear to have been published in a peer -
reviewed journal so my access to the specifics are limited.
Leslie & Romano: The second
study listed was a systematic
review of nonhospital birth
studies by Leslie and Romano, published in the
Journal of Perinatal Education in 2007.
I was horrified to discover the [2010] media attention given to the findings
of Prof. Marjorie Gunnoe's small, twice - rejected - by - peer -
reviewed -
journals,
study on the positive value
of spanking children.
Evidence Basis for the Ten Steps
of Mother - Friendly Care in the
Journal of Perinatal Education, 2007, Issue 16, a Special Supplement The result
of a 2 - year research project by a team
of maternity care experts, this important work
reviews 15 years worth
of scientific
studies which and found that the evidence supports complying with each aspect
of the ten steps
of Mother - Friendly Care.
In today's peer -
reviewed Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health (JMWH), a landmark
study confirms that among low - risk women, planned home births result in low rates
of interventions without an increase in adverse outcomes for mothers and babies.
International research on safety
of homebirths [1]: «In 2014, a comprehensive
review in the
Journal of Medical Ethics
of 12 previously published
studies encompassing 500,000 planned home births in low - risk women found that perinatal mortality rates for home births were triple that
of hospital births.
Studies had to be case control for the purpose of the statistical analysis; have breastfeeding as a measured exposure and leukemia as a measured outcome; include data on breastfeeding duration in months, including but not limited to, 6 months or more (where relevant data were unavailable in the publication, the authors of the studies were contacted); and been published in peer - reviewed journals with full text available in E
Studies had to be case control for the purpose
of the statistical analysis; have breastfeeding as a measured exposure and leukemia as a measured outcome; include data on breastfeeding duration in months, including but not limited to, 6 months or more (where relevant data were unavailable in the publication, the authors
of the
studies were contacted); and been published in peer - reviewed journals with full text available in E
studies were contacted); and been published in peer -
reviewed journals with full text available in English.
In two separate peer -
reviewed research
studies, which were published in the medical
journals Neurosurgery and
Journal of Neurosurgery, respectively, the researchers found an 83 percent reduction in the number
of torn fibers in a standard concussion model when the band was utilized.
Also, see whether the
study has been replicated, if it was published in a peer -
reviewed journal, and don't forget to check out the researcher's own discussion
of limitations.
In order to clarify where social science stands on these issues, a February 2014
study published in the highly ranked peer -
review journal, Psychology, Public Policy, and Law with the endorsement
of 110
of the world's top authorities (from 15 countries) in attachment, early child development, and divorce concludes that overnights and shared residential parenting should be the norm for children
of all ages including infants and toddlers.
A
review of 52 sleep
studies using various methods published in the
journal Sleep found almost all the techniques were effective if applied consistently.
It's not clear why the
study and results were not submitted to a peer -
reviewed journal of experts where toxicologists and other professionals could
review the data, the findings and the context for the conclusions.
One
study they
reviewed, which was published in the
journal Development and Psychopathology in 2012, took into account pairs
of sisters whose fathers» involvement in their life differed.
His scholarly write - ups have been published in international
journals such as Human Rights Quarterly (US),
Journal of Commonwealth and Comparative Politics (UK), African Affairs (UK), and
Review of Human Factor
Studies (Canada).
Mohammad I. Aslam is a Ph.D candidate in Political Science at the Department
of Middle - East & Mediterranean
Studies, King's College London, and a former Editor at the Montreal
Review Journal.
His work has been published in the European
Journal of International Relations, International Negotiation,
Review of International
Studies, British
Journal of Politics and International Relations, Global Policy,
Journal of Global Ethics and The Hague
Journal of Diplomacy.
They looked at a
study by David Hemenway (director
of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center and the Harvard Youth Violence Prevention Center), who
reviewed commonly cited research from peer -
reviewed journals.