Not exact matches
In a
study just published in the Financial Analysts
Journal, portfolio manager Antti Petajisto of LMR
Partners, a London - based hedge fund, looked at approximately 1,800 ETFs between 2007 and 2014.
A Dutch
study of
partnered homosexuals, which was published in the
journal AIDS, found that men with a steady
partner had an average of eight sexual
partners per year.
Mar. 18, 2013 — People suffering from complicated grief may have difficulty recalling specific events from their past or imagining specific events in the future, but not when those events involve the
partner they lost, according to a new
study published in Clinical Psychological Science, a
journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
In a 2009
study in
Journal of American College Health, B.J. Willoughby and J.S. Carroll found that «students living in co-ed housing were also more likely [than those in single - sex residences] to have more sexual
partners in the last 12 months.»
• 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).
Men in low and middle income countries are generally positive about gender equality — but their participation in household and caregiving tasks remains low, and levels of intimate
partner violence are still high, according to a
study published in the Men and Masculinities
journal.
These are key findings of a
study, in which Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) was one of the
partners and which is now published in the
journal Science.
The
study, «Reducing Childhood Obesity Through U.S. Federal Policy: A Microsimulation Analysis,» was conducted by Brownson and
partners from seven other institutions, and appears in the online Aug. 27 edition of the American
Journal of Preventive Medicine.
«Mating with multiple
partners improves the chances that at least one chick will have the genes to cope with the variable conditions to come,» explained Carlos Botero, an evolutionary ecologist and the lead researcher of the
study, published yesterday in the
journal PLoS ONE.
The Lililwan
study, published today in the
Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health, was initiated by Aboriginal community leaders who, in 2009, invited researchers and clinicians to
partner with them to provide data they could use to advocate for people living with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome.
Oral human papillomavirus (HPV) infections were more common among men who had female
partners with oral and / or genital HPV infection, suggesting that the transmission of HPV occurs via oral - oral and oral - genital routes, according to a McGill University
study published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a
journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
A recent
study in the
Journal of Environmental Management carried out by researchers at the European Forest Institute and their
partners in the FP7 funded MOTIVE project (Models for Adaptive Forest Management) discusses how forest managers and decision makers can cope with climate uncertainties.
According to a first clinical
study published in the scientific
journal Photoacoustics, the University of Twente and various European
partners have designed a device that shows the difference between healthy fingers and arthritic fingers.
In a new
study recently published in the
journal Global Biogeochemical Cycles, scientists of Kiel University (CAU) with colleagues from GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel and international
partners from the USA, New Zealand, and Great Britain
studied marine benthic shell - forming organisms around the world in relation to the chemical conditions they currently experience — with a surprising result: 24 percent, almost a quarter of the analyzed species, including sea urchins, sea stars, coralline algae or snails, already live in seawater unfavorable to the maintenance of their calcareous skeletons and shells (a condition referred to as CaCO3 - undersaturation).
Koopman's
study, «Physician Information Needs and Electronic Health Records: Time to Reengineer the Clinic Note,» was published by the
Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine and was funded by Mizzou Advantage, an initiative that fosters interdisciplinary collaboration among faculty, staff, students and external
partners to solve real - world problems.
Conservation partnerships between protected lands and their non-protected neighbors could significantly improve a region's ability to accommodate species migration in response to shifting climates, according to a
study published February 28, 2018 in the open - access
journal PLOS ONE by William Monahan of the U.S. National Park Service and David Theobald of Conservation Science
Partners, Inc., U.S.
The new
study, which was published online today in the
journal Molecular Ecology, finds that fungal organisms reduce their core genomic makeup while coalescing with algae to form a lichen partnership, one presumed to be «obligate» (i.e., requiring both
partners) but had previously lacked direct genetic verification.
Read about a new
study published in the
journal Nanoscale by the EPN
partners: the Life Sciences group in the ILL, with the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF) and the Institut de Biologie Structurale (IBS).
A small
study of 59 premenopausal women published in the
journal Biological Psychology found that frequent hugs between the women and their
partners were linked to both higher levels of oxytocin and lower blood pressure.
The
study, published on Feb. 3 in the
journal Human Reproduction, found it may take couples in which both
partners are obese up to 59 % longer to get pregnant compared to couples in the healthy weight range.
«The new model can better recommend
partners that match a user's taste and attractiveness,» said the
study to appear later this year in the IEEE Intelligent Systems
Journal with co-authors Xi Wang, Mo Yu, and Bo Gao.
TECHNOLOGY REVIEW — July 17 — A
study published last month in the
journal Cyberpsychology and Behavior, shows that having more search results leads to a less careful
partner choice.
A 2008
study published in the
journal Psychology of Women Quarterly found that women who are 10 or more years older than their
partner are more satisfied and more committed to their relationships than women who are the same age or younger than their
partners.
In a
study published in 2007 in the
journal AIDS Care, Dr. Brian Mustanski, a professor of medical social sciences at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, concluded that those already prone to high - risk sex use dating services to meet
partners, not that meeting
partners online causes high - risk sex.
So they missed out,» says Michael Pompian, a
partner with Mercer Investment Consulting who co-authored a
study in the
Journal of Wealth Management on how personality type can affect investment choices.
Juana serves on the Board of Trustees of the Brazil Human Rights Fund (2014), the Advisory Board of Open Global Rights (2013) and is a member of the Assembly of
Partners of the Center for Legal and Social
Studies (CELS, Argentina) and of the Developments in the Field Panel of the Business and Human Rights
Journal, published by the Cambridge University Press.
A new
study in the
Journal of Research in Personality finds that, no matter which side of the glass you buy into, having an optimistic
partner leads to a more satisfying marriage for both of you.
Optimists and their
partners experience greater relationship satisfaction when compared to non-optimists, according to a research
study published in the
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
A
study in the
Journal of Interpersonal Violence found that having a high level of jealousy was linked to men who were abusive to their
partners.
Showing support with both verbal and nonverbal cues makes your
partner feel safe to be him or herself in the relationship, which helps build trust and intimacy, according to a
study published in the
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
James K. McNulty is an associate psychology professor at the University of Tennessee and the author of the recent
study, published in the
Journal of Family Psychology, that argues that men and women who absolve their
partners end up with
partners who only behave worse.
That said, a separate
study in the
journal Psychology found that both men and women had higher levels of psychological stress reactions to their
partner having sexual intercourse with another person than less intimate sexual acts or emotional infidelity.
A
study published in the
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (2009 vol.77, pp.160 - 173), a publication of the American Psychological Association, for instance, found that therapy can help even very chronically unhappy married couples if both
partners are committed to improving their marriage.
The
study, by University of Zurich researchers published in the
Journal of Family Psychology, also found that when fathers feel more confident and engaged in parenting, both
partners were likely to feel their relationship had improved.
A recent
study from the
Journal of Applied Social Psychology explores the possibility that one dating
partner may exert pressure on the other
partner to be thin, and that this pressure may vary by ethnicity.2
«Specifically, for each additional month women in this
study were in a relationship with their
partner, their sexual desire decreased by 0.02 on the Female Sexual Function Index,» the authors wrote online Jan. 23 in the
Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy.
The
study, by University of Zurich researchers published in the
Journal of Family Psychology, also found that when fathers feel more confident and engaged in parenting, both
partners -LSB-...]
One
study published in the
journal Psychology and Aging found that these words helped
partners get through disagreements with more affection, less anger and lower stress, while pronouns like «I,» «you» and «me» increased marital dissatisfaction.
In a recent
study in the
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships2, the research team wanted to go beyond demographic features that predict involvement in mixed - race relationships and focus on individual characteristics of the relationship
partners themselves.
Partners that remember these types of details about each other tend to be highly satisfied in their relationships, according to a 2013
study in the
Journal of Couple & Relationship Therapy.
In an upcoming
study to be published in the
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, researchers tracked students over the course of a month.3 A third of the students were randomly assigned to write about what they were grateful for each day and were instructed to share their experiences with their
partners.
In a series of six
studies published last month in the esteemed
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Netta Weinstein and colleagues provide evidence that individuals who are homophobic may, in part, be suppressing their own desires for intimacy or relationships with same - sex
partners.
In a recent pair of
studies published in the
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, researchers Erica Slotter and Wendi Gardner hypothesized that when people are attracted to flawed potential
partners, their romantic desires may motivate them to adopt those flaws themselves.
Researchers have investigated the role of «placemaking» in relationships, seeking to understand how objects in a home reflect and represent the couple that resides in that space.1 In a
study published in the
journal Personal Relationships, researchers asked
partners who were married, or couples that were not married but cohabiting, to list objects in their homes and note whether each item was acquired by a particular
partner individually («that's my ’59 Fender Stratocaster and your first edition of Darwin's Origin of Species»), or whether the couple had acquired it together («our collection of vintage pornography»; see this post for more on language use and relationships).
A
study published in the August 15th issue of the
Journal of the American Medical Association http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1346190 concluded that conjoint cognitive - behavioral couple therapy successfully treated both PTSD symptoms and enhanced intimate
partner relationship satisfaction.
Studies such as one published in the
Journal of Family Psychology have found that negative body image can have a negative impact on overall marital satisfaction for both
partners.
The Pill and other contraceptive methods that alter a woman's natural hormonal cycles may also alter their choice of
partners and possibly their reproductive success, according to a new review of
studies on the issue published in the October issue of the
journal Trends in Ecology and Evolution.
«This field
study demonstrates that [oxytocin] may alter specific aspects of sexual experience and
partner interactions in healthy couples,» the researchers, from Hannover Medical School in Germany, wrote in the March issue of the
journal Hormones and Behavior.
And a 2010
study published in the
Journal of Marriage and Family that looked at 373 married couples found that, when both
partners engaged positively during an argument — meaning they discussed the topic calmly and made an effort to listen to their
partner and better understand his or her feelings — they were far less likely to divorce than couples where there was no positive engagement or when only one
partner would engage positively.
The medical
journal Sexually Transmitted Infections recently published a
study based on a survey of 7,470 American adults who had had at least one sexual
partner.