Consequently, we had a simple goal for the three studies featured in
the PNAS article: finding out whether these growth mindset and belonging interventions could be replicated successfully in other settings, and when delivered as preparation, prior to students» entrance in college.
I have posted on the PNAS paper on my weblog — Comments On
The PNAS Article «Expert Credibility In Climate Change» By Anderegg Et Al 2010 [http://pielkeclimatesci.wordpress.com/2010/06/21/comments-on-the-pnas-article-expert-credibility-in-climate-change-by-anderegg-et-al-2010/]
In his 2006
PNAS article, Thompson also used a seventh series from Puruogangri, which is included in PAGES2017, but I was unable to figure out from his description how he had incorporated it, and so did not attempt to calibrate the resulting 7 - core composite index.
The PNAS article is interesting.
And when they got it up front for
the PNAS article, did they bother to look at it?
As Jan Minx, from the Department Economics of Climate Change of the Technical University Berlin and co-author of
the PNAS article explains: «Most of the change in in global emission patterns is mirrored in China and Russia: While Chinese emissions increased dramatically in the last two decades, significantly also fueling increasing consumption in OECD countries, emissions from Russia and Ukraine fell significantly after 1990».
(note: the word «tenets» was used in the infamous
PNAS article whose authors included Steve Schneider.)
Yet the first author of the paper was described in an August 21, 2002 New York Times article5 as «among the 10 biggest recipients of National Institutes of Health grants,» and the research reported in
the PNAS article was also NIH supported.
Independent analyses, such as those described in the Santer et al
PNAS article, show that this warming is inconsistent with natural variability, i.e. it is likely only explainable in terms of anthropogenic forcing.
UT Austin required all authors to disclose any potential conflicts of interest and to affirmatively approve the language about them that was included in
the PNAS article.
The scientists speculate in
their PNAS article, «the Ro autoantigen may not be simply a passive target in the lupus immune response but, instead, may be important for the prevention of autoimmune disease.»
At last
the PNAS article previewed earlier this week by In Sequence is available on the journal's site.
In an idle moment David Korasick, a graduate fellow in the Strader and Jez labs and first author on
the PNAS article, did a back - of - the - envelope calculation to put a number on the complexity of the system they were trying to understand.
In
their PNAS article, the researchers describe how they used their method to discover patterns in the connections between patents.
Related sites
PNAS article Tree of Life Strepsiptera at University of Rostock Biological Control site
The PNAS article is titled «Surface Biosignatures of Exo - Earths: Remote Detection of Extraterrestrial Life.»
The recent research published in
the PNAS article, builds on work reported earlier this year in Nature Chemical Biology, which was led by York, and involved Professor Bernard Henrissat, of CNRS, Aix - Marseille Université, Marseille, France.
«When that happened, some killer whales, which had been preying on big whales, had to do other things to make a living,» says James Estes, a research scientist in Santa Cruz, California, for the U.S. Geological Survey and coauthor of
the PNAS article.
«However, recently, we discovered a counterintuitive mechanism by which cells can acquire resistance to proteasome inhibitors in vitro,» explains Peter Tsvetkov, lead author of
the PNAS article and a post-doctoral researcher at Whitehead Institute.
The authors of
the PNAS article are generous to the scientific and governmental figures who have long ignored repeated calls for reform and who for so long failed to see (or to acknowledge) that problems even exist.
The significance of
the PNAS article lies not so much in its specific proposals as in the possibility that it signals the start of such a realignment.
The PNAS article authors do not provide a practical strategy for overcoming the dense tangle of vested interests and perverse incentives that protect the current system.
Not exact matches
-- by Ivanka Savic
article in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, (
PNAS) «Brain Response To Putative Pheromones In Homosexual Men,» (Vol.
Scientists have learned that the lice genome is incredibly streamlined and the critters have few genes that could detoxify harmful chemicals, as explained in an
article in
PNAS.
It appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, or
PNAS,
article «Identification of the VERNALIZATION 4 gene reveals the origin of spring growth habit in ancient wheats from South Asia.»
The outcomes of this
article published this week in
PNAS, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, raise several questions some of which are expected to be immediately dealt with, although dependent on the availability of funding.
The research team's findings are detailed in a peer - reviewed
article in the scholarly journal for the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS).
Researchers from the Radboud university medical center have provided the first scientific evidence for this in an
article published in the scientific journal
PNAS.
The
article «Multiple pathways in pressure - induced phase transition of coesite,» written by the international cooperative, was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS).
Science has the dubious distinction of being ranked first for the number of
articles retracted, 70, just edging out
PNAS, which comes second with 69.
• The DOI reference in our
article reporting the use of paper as a skeleton for growing animal tissue (24 October, p 10) should have read: 10.1073 /
pnas.0910666106.
The research appeared online this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS) in an
article titled, «Strategic siting and regional grid interconnections key to low - carbon futures in African countries.»
In late June, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS) published an
article showing that elite male scientists hire fewer women (as postdocs and graduate students) than other male scientists or elite women do.
The manuscript, tracking number of 17 - 19275, can be found online in
PNAS Latest
Articles.
DOI: 10.1073 /
pnas.1409507111 The full
article can be read here in Duke Space, the university's online repository of research.
The work described in this
article will be published in a paper titled «In situ modeling of multimodal floral cues attracting wild pollinators across environments,» in the journal
PNAS.
A second study, to be published next week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS), shows how these brain signals can be used to predict virality of the same news
articles around the world.
In 2013, Boslough published an
article about all this, published in
PNAS, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.
Mark Jacobson pushed back with this
article, published in the same issue of
PNAS: «The United States can keep the grid stable at low cost with 100 % clean, renewable energy in all sectors despite inaccurate claims»
La Jolla, CA — The editors of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS) selected the
article «Targeted delivery of proteins across the blood - brain barrier» by Brian J....
According to an
article published in
PNAS by István Zachar, András Szilágyi, Szabolcs Számadó and Eörs Szathmáry, it is possible that present organisms exist because bacteria «domesticated» the ancestor of mitochondria much like humans farm pigs today.
Two weeks ago, Rebecca Calisi Rodríguez and a Working Group of Mothers in Science published an opinion
article in the journal
PNAS about the challenges of not only being a woman but also being a mother in academia.
Zavaleta and two ecologists who recently received Ph.D. s from UCSC illustrate the importance of landscape diversity in their
article «Several scales of bioversity affect ecosystem multifunctionality» published this week in
PNAS, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Prof. Cryan has an H - Index of 57 (Google Scholar) having published over 250 peer - reviewed
articles and book chapters including
articles in high - impact journals such as
PNAS, Neuron, Nature Reviews Neurosci.
98, Ed.D.» 05, was awarded a 2009 Cozzarelli Prize, for her
article, «Neural correlates of admiration and compassion» published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS).
If you look up the actual
article from
PNAS (National Academy of Sciences) you will see where the problem originated from.
Click here to obtain the
article from
PNAS.
In this
article you speak to how science communication to the public should occur, and I would submit that there is a lot more communication happening in these op - eds than the
PNAS paper.
I am glad to locate this picturesque discussion, having read of the
PNAS report's publication in our local Sonoma County, CA, Alexander Valley AVA ridgetop location's nearby press outlet on the first page yesterday in a decent
article by the viticulture writer.
The
PNAS paper is reported by the Climate Central site in an
article titled Pacific Northwest Warming May Have Natural Roots.