Sentences with phrase «pnas suggested»

Another recent study published in the journal PNAS suggested that many of the stereotypes associated with birth order, such as first - borns being bossy or last - borns being irresponsible, don't necessarily hold water.
But a recent study in PNAS suggested that wind (and other renewables) will fall short of slashing carbon emissions, because there just isn't enough of it in the U.S. Based on data from a company owned by one of the study's authors, this map's white areas show where wind turbines would be most effective — but because wind isn't available all the time, they'd only produce roughly 50 percent of the energy wind turbines could at maximum capacity.
Another paper in PNAS suggests links between global warming and the terrible, ongoing drought in California.
But the new research published in PNAS suggests that such white roofs would have different impacts in different places.
Although research published in the journal PNAS suggests that dogs in Africa have as diverse DNA.
Recent research published in PNAS suggests that decentralizing forest carbon management - putting local communities in charge of the «forest commons» may be a very useful strategy for implementing forest carbon policies, though the authors offer that more and better data is needed for more concrete conclusions (Chhatre 2009).

Not exact matches

The 2015 paper, published in the journal PNAS, suggests that Facebook «likes» can reveal more about people than just interest and music, movie, book, and sports preferences.
When the rats were retested one or two days later, the ones that received OEA performed better, suggesting they had stronger memories of their training (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, DOI: 10.1073 / pnas.0903038106).
The team, led by Liz Pellicano of London's Institute of Education, suggests that while autistic kids may be good at spotting preset visual patterns, they find it harder to work out rules from apparently random events (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, DOI: 10.1073 / pnas.1014076108).
The findings, published in the journal PNAS, suggest that if the bodily environment that a mother provides for her baby is unfavourable, for example through small body size or metabolic dysfunction, the placenta will change the flow of nutrients to the fetus relative to her own state.
In the research published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), the researchers presented evidence suggesting that a failure to degrade miR - 21 contributes to its increase in diseases.
This suggests that the chimps frequently felt compelled to reward Tai for her perceived unselfishness, even at their own expense, the researchers report today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
The report in PNAS said laboratory studies of how the virus evolves in response to exposure to neutralizing antibodies suggest that the MERS virus won't easily shape - shift to evade antibody treatments, as some viruses do.
In their current PNAS paper, the multidisciplinary team of Rodó, Burns, Dan Cayan, PhD, a climate researcher at UC San Diego Scripps Institution of Oceanography and co-authors in New York, Barcelona and Japan, say the new evidence suggests that the most likely cause of KD is a «preformed toxin or environmental molecule» originating from northeastern China, possibly related to Candida, which has been linked to Kawasaki - like coronary artery vasculitis in mouse models.
Their study published online ahead of print in PNAS Early Edition suggests a new therapeutic strategy for patients with Duchene muscular dystrophy, a progressive neuromuscular condition, caused by a lack of dystrophin, that usually leaves patients unable to walk on their own by age 10 - 15.
Scientific misconduct, and not honest mistakes, account for more than two - thirds of retractions, a paper published today online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) suggests.
The experiment is the first to suggest that emotions expressed via online social networks influence the moods of others, the researchers report in «Experimental Evidence of Massive - Scale Emotional Contagion through Social Networks,» published online this month in PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Science) Social Science.
Beerling's models suggest that high carbon dioxide and methane levels contributed to this (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, DOI: 10.1073 / pnas.1102409108).
This suggests that the urge to seek out salt is indeed linked to the reward mechanism (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, DOI: 10.1073 / pnas.1109199108).
The researchers suggest that these changes help cells cope with raised acidity (PNAS, doi.org/k5h).
This suggests a very sudden addition — within a year — of atmospheric CO2 (PNAS, doi.org/n8t).
Now, a study in PNAS journal suggests they descend from early farmers who mixed with local hunters before becoming isolated for millennia.
However, a new study published in the journal PNAS on Jan. 15 suggests that the maligned rodents were not the culprits.
Finally, a question for David and Gavin: McNeil & Matear (2008, PNAS 2Dec08, «Southern Ocean acidification: A tipping at 450 - ppm atmospheric CO2») suggest that by 2030 and no later than 2038 seasonal aragonite undersaturation is likely to disrupt the Southern Ocean ecosystem, due to key forms of zooplankton being unable to form shells.
There are some arguments suggesting that models might systematically overrate the stability of the AMOC, which we summarized in PNAS in 2009.
For example, a 2010 study published in the proceedings of The National Academy of Sciences of The United States (PNAS) titled «Global Demographic Trends and Future Carbon Emissions» demonstrated that slowing population growth could provide 16 to 29 percent of the emissions reductions suggested to be necessary by 2050 to avoid dangerous climate change.
This is a point that we are in basic agreement on — and to me at least this suggests an alternative reason why the individuals who voluntarily put themselves on the lists would be opposed to PNAS paper.
The evidence to date suggests that Climategate involved leaders of the US National Academy of Sciences, the UK's Royal Society, editors of leading research journals — Nature, Science, PNAS, etc., the news media, the Norwegian Nobel Prize Committee, the International Alliance of National Academies, etc..
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