The evidence has been there in dribs and drabs for years, but a recently
published study puts the hole issue to bed in a commanding way:
Not exact matches
A small 2014
study,
published in the Journal of Athletic Enhancement, found that listening to music can indeed improve
putting performance.
While many of us «
put on a happy face,» a
study published in Current Directions in Psychological Science determined that individuals under stress benefit from expressing their emotions.
We
put the question to 207 sales and marketing professionals in a director position or above, and
published our findings in a resulting
study of 80 + individual data points and datapoint combinations.
One example would be Aimee Dorr Leifer's essay entitled «Teaching with Television and Film,» (TTF)
published in N. L. Gage's The Psychology of Teaching Methods, a widely read Yearbook of the National Society for the
Study of Education.1 Even in this essay, however, Leifer reviews what has been learned from various psychological
studies of television and film narratives, and the limited range of the
studies limits the vision of narrative teaching that she
puts forth.
Curiously, this position is similar to that of the great Julius Wellhausen, whose Prolegomena to the History of Ancient Israel,
published over a century ago,
put the documentary hypothesis on a firm footing and set the agenda of Old Testament
studies down to the present.
She also has recently
published Standing Firm:
Putting on the Whole Armor of God (a bible
study for K - 2 graders and available for purchase at SHOP).
Preventing SIDS is the most important reason to
put your baby to sleep on her back, but a
study published in 2003 in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine found other benefits, too: Infants who sleep on their back suffer from fewer ear infections, fevers, and stuffy noses than babies who sleep in other positions.
«Organisms can deal with these stressful transitions from warm to cold by either acclimating - think about dogs
putting on their winter coats - or by populations genetically evolving to deal with new stresses, a phenomenon known as rapid climate adaptation,» said Alison Gerken, a post-doctoral associate with UF's Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology and the lead author of a new
study,
published this month in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
For the new
study,
published January 15 in Nature, Portugal and his colleagues wanted to
put the aerodynamics hypothesis to the test.
Now, in a
study published in the journal Physical Review Letters, IceCube researchers may have largely
put to rest the notion of this fourth kind of neutrino.
The
study,
published in Psychology and Marketing, shows that when fruit is
put in a nice bowl next to your car keys — or when a cafeteria
puts it next to a well - lit cash register — it becomes more convenient, attractive, and normal to grab a banana than the chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream in the far back of the freezer.
The same year that Creel
published his
study, Middleton, then a Ph.D. student at the University of Wyoming, was
put in charge of an ambitious research project to investigate more directly the effects of wolves on the elk population.
«Our
study suggests that direct current stimulation can compensate somewhat for the loss of dopamine by decreasing the effort the brain has to
put into getting its motor neurons to fire,» adds Shadmehr, the senior author of a report on the research
published online in The Journal of Neuroscience on Sept. 2.
In one
published study, where we
put melanoma cells into mice, we
published it with mouse melanoma cells, but we repeated it with human cells.
A review of health - related
studies published last month inEnvironmental Science & Technology concluded that the current scientific literature
puts forward «both substantial concerns and major uncertainties to address.»
Researchers found working out in a group lowers stress by 26 percent and significantly improves quality of life, while those who exercise individually
put in more effort but experienced no significant changes in their stress level and a limited improvement to quality of life, according to a
study published in The Journal of the American Osteopathic Association.
James A. Roberts, Ph.D., professor of marketing, and Meredith David, Ph.D., assistant professor of marketing,
published their latest
study — «
Put Down Your Phone and Listen to Me: How Boss Phubbing Undermines the Psychological Conditions Necessary for Employee Engagement» — in the journal Computers in Human Behavior.
Exposure to the endocrine - disrupting chemical bisphenol A (BPA) during pregnancy can cause oxidative damage that may
put the baby at risk of developing diabetes or heart disease later in life, according to a new
study published in the Endocrine Society's journal Endocrinology.
Now, a
study of nearly 1 million engineering paper co-authorships
puts hard numbers on the problem in this male - dominated scientific field, and finds a paradoxical trend: Female engineers are
publishing in slightly more prestigious journals on average than their male colleagues, but their work is getting less attention.
A new argument against the unilateral reduction of SLCF emissions has now been
put forth in a
study just
published in the scientific journal PNAS.
A
study published today inThe Journal of Experimental Biology reveals how the creature
puts on its colorful show: by flexing its muscles.
The data are
put together with the results of thousands of
published studies on molecular interactions.
Published yesterday in the online version of the journal Nature Climate Change, the
study depicts how such a shift could
put new strains on U.S. infrastructure, as rails and trains replace riverboats as the primary mode of agricultural transportation.
The
study, just
published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found heightened neural activity in the brain's connector hubs during complex tasks, such as puzzles and video games, while networks dedicated to specific functions did not need to
put in extra work.
The eventual outcome was a new
study published online August 13 in the journal Appetite, which suggests that an accurate judgment of satiety depends more on what we see with our eyes rather than what we
put in our stomachs.
Adverse drug reactions kill tens of thousands of people annually; one widely cited
study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) in 1998
puts the number at more than 100,000.
This unique
study,
published in Frontiers in Psychology,
puts to rest the debate on the influence a blue uniform has on beating the opponent.
In fact, J. D. Houser's 1938 book, What People Want from Business,
put money 21st on the list, and Robert Hoppock's extensive
study entitled Job Satisfaction,
published in 1935, found that the best predictors of workplace satisfaction were autonomy, variety, security, appreciation, positive relationships and opportunities for advancement.
The
study,
published Monday in PLOS Biology,
put male and female zebra finches into a room and let them pair up.
Based on a recent, special compilation of 12 reports
published in the scientific journal Cereal Foods World during 2014 - 2017, eating whole grains is actually beneficial for brain health and associated with reduced risk of diverse types of cancer, coronary disease, diabetes, hypertension, obesity and overall mortality.EL BATAN, Mexico (CIMMYT)-- A new, exhaustive review of recent scientific
studies on cereal grains and health has shown that gluten - or wheat - free diets are not inherently healthier for the general populace and may actually
put individuals at risk of dietary deficiencies.
In a review
published in Science in December, Golding and Alvaro Sanchez, a biologist at Harvard University who
studies how yeast might use noise,
put aside their differences to explore a question at its very heart.
As a 2003
study published in the same Science journal
put it, «there will not be enough nitrogen available to sustain the high carbon uptake scenarios.»
Again,
putting aside questions about the accuracy or utility of this information, there is a lot of
published scientific literature that is potentially relevant to people with a particular genotype (including genome - wide association
studies as well as a lot of classical human genetic literature and other functional
studies).
As MIT's Kerry Emanuel, who
published one of the key
studies in the wake of Katrina,
put it to The Post last week: «New York, when Sandy hit, the sea level was already about a foot higher than it was 100 years earlier.
It could allow researchers to take fragments of DNA extracted from human cells,
put them into a test tube, and quickly and precisely engineer multiple changes to the genetic code, according to a new
study published today in the CRISPR Journal.
In a
study published Wednesday in PLOS One, exercise science professor James LeCheminant and neuroscientist Michael Larson report their findings after
putting treadmill desks to the test.
Just recently, a
study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association revealed how to
put the brakes on mid-life weight gain: Exercise.
A
study undertaken by researchers from Birzeit University in Palestine,
published in the peer - reviewed Obesity Research and Clinical Practice Journal,
put carbonation under the microscope for a period of six months.
Now, a new
study published in the journal Environmental Health adds more evidence to the cautionary stance, showing that women who use douches can
put themselves at a greater risk for exposure to harmful chemicals called phthalates, which are said to interfere with the body's hormones.
A 2002
study published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
put cabbage at the top of the fermented vegies list when it showed the German favourite produces phytochemicals called isothiocyanates during fermentation.
According to one
study published in the «Journal of Clinical Psychiatry», not getting enough folic acid in our diet can
put us greater risk of developing depression (19).
According to a
study published in the Journal of Obesity and Research in 2013, researchers
put 2 groups of men on different diets for 28 days.
In a new
study published in Open Heart, a publication of the British Medical Journal, researchers argue that dietary guidelines should
put the spotlight on reducing added sugar consumption — rather than salt — in order to really slash hypertension, heart disease and stroke rates.
Study Until recently no
studies had been
published on what these proteins contain, so the researchers at the University of Manitoba decided it was time to
put this right.
We are
putting «healthy» in quotation marks because we don't know whether this
study's definition of healthy was adequate: it was composed of exercising moderately or vigorously a minimum of three hours a week and not smoking, but the
published results referenced eating an unspecified amount of fruits and vegetables each day.
On Sunday February 15, 2015, the Sunday Express in the UK
published a headline story stating that Oxford professor Dr. Rory Collins, whose research had been used to support
putting millions of patients on statin drugs, was reassessing the data behind those
studies for possible drug side effects.
A
study published in the International Journal of Obesity and Related Metabolic Disorders [5] found that when 50 overweight or obese volunteers were
put on either a high protein or medium protein diet, their body composition changed significantly.
Cutting daily calorie intake by 30 percent may
put the brakes on the aging process, have beneficial effects on the brain, and result in a longer life span, according to a new 20 - year
study of monkeys
published in the journal Science.
In 2012, Finkel and four other psychologists specializing in the
study of human relationships
published a paper in the journal Psychological Science in the Public Interest that
put forward this theory.