Results of a new study led by researchers at William & Mary's Virginia Institute of Marine Science show that adult blue crabs are much more tolerant of low - oxygen, «hypoxic» conditions than previously thought.
Results of new study led by Linda Pagani, professor at the University of Montreal's School of Psychoeducation, show that young children who watch too much television are at risk of victimization and social isolation and adopting violent and antisocial behaviour toward other students at age 13.
Results of a new study led by Johns Hopkins researchers offer new evidence for a strong link between angiotensin receptor autoantibodies and increased risk of frailty.
Not exact matches
The
results of this
study not only advance science's understanding
of the links between genes, the brain and behavior, but may
lead to
new insight into such disorders as autism, Down syndrome and schizophrenia.
The
results of a
new study could
lead to a better understanding
of how to improve the health
of dairy cows, and keep the milk flowing.
Their
results, published in the journal Climatic Change, point to the need for
new or modified wildfire management and evacuation programs in the nation's high - risk regions, said Jia Coco Liu, a recent Ph.D. graduate at the Yale School
of Forestry & Environmental
Studies (F&ES) and
lead author
of the
study.
In 2011, Science's editors will be watching a smaller detector at the Large Hadron Collider called LHCb, which will
study B mesons in great detail;
new techniques that should
lead to the discovery
of many more genes contributing to adaptation; an ignited fusion burn at the National Ignition Facility; broadly neutralizing antibodies, which are capable
of disabling a wide range
of viral variants; the first plug - in hybrid electric cars whose batteries are charged from a wall socket go on the market; and the
results of the first phase III trial
of a malaria vaccine.
The
new six - year
study, «Cognitive enhancement therapy for adult autism spectrum disorder:
Results of an 18 - month randomized clinical trial,» involved 54 adults and was
led by Shaun Eack, Ph.D., M.S.W., Pitt's David E. Epperson Professor
of Social Work and Psychiatry, and Nancy Minshew, M.D., Pitt professor
of psychiatry and neurology.
«Based on the
results of this
study, I think very elderly patients, particularly those with few or no comorbidities, should strongly consider the benefits
of these procedures,» said
lead study author Hiroyuki Yoshihara, MD, PhD, an orthopaedic surgeon at State University
of New York (SUNY) Downstate Medical Center and Nassau University Medical Center.
This is the
result of a current
study,
led by primary author Peter Ferenci from the University Department
of Internal Medicine III at the MedUni Vienna, which has been published in the highly
New England Journal
of Medicine.
Although requiring further investigation, there is no reason to think that these
results could not be extrapolated to other types
of surgery,» said Stavros Memtsoudis, M.D., Ph.D., director
of Critical Care Services at Hospital for Special Surgery,
New York City, who
led the
study.
We already know that smoking causes early menopause in women
of all races, but these
new results show that if you are a white smoker with these specific genetic variants, your risk
of entering menopause at any given time increases dramatically,» said the
study's
lead author Samantha F. Butts, MD, MSCE, assistant professor
of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Penn Medicine.
However, Claude Canizares
of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology in Cambridge, who
led the earlier quasar
study, says that the XMM - Newton
results provide important
new information.
The
results of the
study, published in a research article in the journal Nature Medicine, could
lead soon to
new treatments for chronic kidney disease that target these risk factors, according to Dr. Jochen Reiser, the senior author
of the paper.
Although the
study was conducted throughout Europe, where residents
of countries such as Greece and Italy are thought to have healthier diets to begin with, the researchers say that
results would probably be similar if the analysis had been done in the U.S. «There is no reason to expect a different effect in the U.S. vs. Europe for a comparable level
of consumption,» Paolo Boffetta,
of the Mount Sinai School
of Medicine in
New York and
lead researcher on the
study, wrote in an e-mail to ScientificAmerican.com.
Vanderbilt -
led research, as part
of an international, multicenter trial, found regular blood transfusion therapy significantly reduces the recurrence
of silent strokes and strokes in children with sickle cell anemia who have had pre-existing silent strokes, according to
study results released today in the
New England Journal
of Medicine (NEJM).
The
results fit in with a
new theory
of conformity, says the
study's
lead author Jamil Zaki.
«The aim
of this
study was to establish whether providing a comprehensive program
of exercise or manual therapy
results in significant additional benefits, over and above usual medical care,» said J. Haxby Abbott, DPT, PhD, FNZCP at the University
of Otago in Dunedin,
New Zealand, and a
lead author on the
study.
«This information yields
new insights into how sperm stem cells function and develop under normal circumstances,» says the
study's
lead author Bradley Cairns, PhD, senior director
of basic science at HCI and professor and chair
of oncological sciences at the U
of U. «We have built a very important framework we can now use to help us understand what happens when things go wrong,
resulting in issues like infertility and cancer in men.»
«The
results of our
study have huge implications for better understanding early sea turtle survival and behavior, which may ultimately
lead to
new and innovative ways to further protect these imperiled animals,» said Mansfield.
Should the
results of this
study be repeated in the larger Phase III trial, it would
lead to a
new standard
of care for kidney cancer patients, said Dr. Hammers, formerly
of Johns Hopkins medical system, who holds the Eugene P. Frenkel, M.D. Scholar in Clinical Medicine at UT Southwestern.
«The
results of the
study suggest a need to focus on
new ways to treat the underlying causes
of agitation and confusion in the elderly,» said
lead author Mark Olfson.
This fact makes the LCSB scientists»
results of extraordinary interest to Parkinson's researchers worldwide, as Schwamborn stresses: «On our
new cell cultures, we can
study the mechanisms that
lead to Parkinson's much better than was ever the case before.
The
results, published in the current issue
of Human Molecular Genetics, open the door for pursuing gene editing in nonhuman primates as models for
new therapies, including pharmacological, gene - and stem cell - based therapies, said Keith Latham, MSU animal science professor and
lead author
of the
study.
In addition to expanding our understanding
of brain, this
study could help people with attention deficits
resulting from brain injury or disease, possibly
leading to improved screening and
new treatments.
Results from this
study could
lead to promising
new treatments that actively target and control the spread
of cancer.
«Earth is losing a huge amount
of ice to the ocean annually, and these
new results will help us answer important questions in terms
of both sea rise and how the planet's cold regions are responding to global change,» said University
of Colorado Boulder physics professor John Wahr, who helped
lead the
study.
James A. Edmonds • Member, IPCC Steering Committee on «
New Integrated Scenarios» (2006 - present) •
Lead Author, Working Group III, «Framing Issues,» IPCC Fourth Assessment Report (2007) •
Lead Author, Working Group III, «Global, Regional, and National Costs and Ancillary Benefits
of Mitigation,» IPCC Third Assessment Report (2001) •
Lead Author, Working Group III, «Decision - Making Frameworks,» IPCC Third Assessment Report (2001) •
Lead Author, Working Group III, Summary for Policy Makers, IPCC Third Assessment Report (2001) •
Lead Author, Working Group II, «Energy Supply Mitigation Options,» IPCC Second Assessment Report (1996) •
Lead Author, Working Group II, «Mitigation: Cross-Sectoral and Other Issues,» IPCC Second Assessment Report (1996) •
Lead Author, Working Group III, «Estimating the Costs
of Mitigating Greenhouse Gases,» IPCC Second Assessment Report (1996) •
Lead Author, Working Group III, «A Review
of Mitigation Cost
Studies,» IPCC Second Assessment Report (1996) •
Lead Author, Working Group III, «Integrated Assessment
of Climate Change: An Overview and Comparison
of Approaches and
Results,» IPCC Second Assessment Report (1996) •
Lead Author, IPCC Special Report, Climate Change 1994: Radiative Forcing
of Climate Change and An Evaluation
of the IPCC IS92 Emission Scenarios (1994) •
Lead Author, IPCC Special Report, Climate Change 1992: The Supplementary Report to the IPCC Scientific Assessment (1992) • Major contributor, IPCC First Assessment Report, Working Group III, Response Strategies Working Group (1991).
Now a
new genetic
study suggests it also
led to the modern Age
of Fishes,
resulting in the extraordinary diversity
of fishes now seen throughout the oceans.
Mike Ludwig, Professor
of Neurophysiology at The University
of Edinburgh and
lead investigator
of the
study said «Our exciting
results show a potentially
new pharmacological route to manipulate our internal biological clocks.»
In the
new study, a research team
led by David M. Nathan, MD,
of Massachusetts General Hospital, in Boston, looked at
results from three large, long - term
studies: the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT); its follow - up
study, the Epidemiology
of Diabetes Interventions and Complications (EDIC); and the Pittsburgh Epidemiology
of Diabetes Complications (EDC)
study.
«This is one
of the largest
studies to have examined the adverse mental health and neurodevelopmental outcomes associated with PCOS, and we hope the
results will
lead to increased awareness, earlier detection and
new treatments,» Rees said in a journal news release.
Results of the Canadian
study were so promising that one
of the
lead investigators, Roman Przbylski, is currently collaborating with Canadian - based Kade Research to develop
new buckwheat varieties with much higher amounts
of chiro - inositol.
Dr. Giulio Maria Pasinetti,
lead study researcher from the Mount Sinai School
of Medicine in
New York found the
results «strongly suggest that GSPE should be further tested as a potential prevention and / or therapy for AD Alzheimer's Disease.»
According to the
results of the Stanford
study, an excess
of GABA inhibits the brain in a way that
leads to short term memory problems and the inability to retain
new information.
And last month I wrote about a
new paper
studying an early retirement plan in Illinois that
led to huge numbers
of older, more experienced teachers retiring but which
resulted in no academic harm.
Design a school that pays more and reaches all with excellence — October 10, 2013 Public Impact Co-Directors Refresh Vision: Opportunity Culture for ALL — September 25, 2013 Report shows promising alternative to closing failing charter schools — August 14, 2013 Rocketship Education: Bringing tech closer to teachers — July 24, 2013 Case
study:
New charter pays more, extends teachers» reach, gets strong
results — July 9, 2013 Case
study: How Charlotte zone planned Opportunity Culture schools — June 27, 2013 Case
study: How one
Leading Educators fellow extends her reach — June 17, 2013 Opportunity Culture district creates paid role for student teachers — May 22, 2013 Reports: City - based organizations» roles in quality digital learning — May 15, 2013 Nation's fifth - largest district explores extending reach
of excellent teachers — May 9, 2013 A Better Blend: Combine digital instruction and great teaching to dramatically improve learning — April 30, 2013 Indiana Encourages Dramatically Different Models in
New Charter Schools — April 18, 2013 Charlotte Flooded with Teacher Applicants Seeking Roles to Extend Their Reach — April 11, 2013
New charter school
study shows the steps to great schools — March 14, 2013 Nashville Joins Sites Extending Excellent Teachers» Reach — March 7, 2013 Opportunity Culture Network to Link Charter School Organizations — February 6, 2013 Share Opportunity Culture with Your Teachers:
New Slide Deck and Two - Pager — Dec 13, 2012 Career Paths That Respect Teachers» Time and Talent — Nov 15, 2012 You Know Who Your Great Teachers Are — Now What?
Academic Gains, Double the #
of Schools: Opportunity Culture 2017 — 18 — March 8, 2018 Opportunity Culture Spring 2018 Newsletter: Tools & Info You Need Now — March 1, 2018 Brookings - AIR
Study Finds Large Academic Gains in Opportunity Culture — January 11, 2018 Days in the Life: The Work
of a Successful Multi-Classroom Leader — November 30, 2017 Opportunity Culture Newsletter: Tools & Info You Need Now — November 16, 2017 Opportunity Culture Tools for Back to School — Instructional Leadership & Excellence — August 31, 2017 Opportunity Culture + Summit Learning: North Little Rock Pilots Arkansas Plan — July 11, 2017 Advanced Teaching Roles: Guideposts for Excellence at Scale — June 13, 2017 How to
Lead & Achieve Instructional Excellence — June 6, 201 Vance County Becomes 18th Site in National Opportunity Culture Initiative — February 2, 2017 How 2 Pioneering Blended - Learning Teachers Extended Their Reach — January 24, 2017 Betting on a Brighter Charter School Future for Nevada Students — January 18, 2017 Edgecombe County, NC, Joining Opportunity Culture Initiative to Focus on Great Teaching — January 11, 2017 Start 2017 with Free Tools to
Lead Teaching Teams, Turnaround Schools — January 5, 2017 Higher Growth, Teacher Pay and Support: Opportunity Culture
Results 2016 — 17 — December 20, 2016 Phoenix - area Districts to Use Opportunity Culture to Extend Great Teachers» Reach — October 5, 2016 Doubled Odds
of Higher Growth: N.C. Opportunity Culture Schools Beat State Rates — September 14, 2016 Fresh Ideas for ESSA Excellence: Four Opportunities for State Leaders — July 29, 2016 High - need, San Antonio - area District Joins Opportunity Culture — July 19, 2016 Universal, Paid Residencies for Teacher & Principal Hopefuls — Within School Budgets — June 21, 2016 How to
Lead Empowered Teacher - Leaders: Tools for Principals — June 9, 2016 What 4 Pioneering Teacher - Leaders Did to
Lead Teaching Teams — June 2, 2016 Speaking Up: a Year's Worth
of Opportunity Culture Voices — May 26, 2016 Increase the Success
of School Restarts with
New Guide — May 17, 2016 Georgia Schools Join Movement to Extend Great Teachers» Reach — May 13, 2016 Measuring Turnaround Success:
New Report Explores Options — May 5, 2016 Every School Can Have a Great Principal: A Fresh Vision For How — April 21, 2016 Learning from Tennessee: Growing High - Quality Charter Schools — April 15, 2016 School Turnarounds: How Successful Principals Use Teacher Leadership — March 17, 2016 Where Is Teaching Really Different?
A
study led by Tulane's Douglas N. Harris found that the
New Orleans reform efforts
resulted in student learning gains
of 0.4 standard deviations.
In time for the exhibition, BoD (Books on Demand), Germany's
leading selfpublishing service platform (especially for print books) presented the
results of its
new study on the growth and potential
of selfpublishing in Germany and Europe.
The
new guidelines follow the
results of a
study conducted at the Kansas State Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory (KSVDL) by veterinary researchers
led by Dr. Michael C. Moore.2
Drastic reductions in Arctic sea ice in the last decade may be intensifying the chemical release
of bromine into the atmosphere,
resulting in ground - level ozone depletion and the deposit
of toxic mercury in the Arctic, according to a
new NASA -
led study.
A
new study shows that as climate change enhances tree growth in tropical forests, the
resulting increase in litterfall could stimulate soil micro-organisms
leading to a release
of stored soil carbon.
Lead author, Prof Jennifer Francis from Rutgers University, tells us: «Our
new results, together with other
new studies in this field
of research, are adding substantial evidence in support
of the connection.»
According to Farjana Sikandar Birajdar,
lead author
of the
study, the melting
of glaciers would reduce the ice mass balance even as it
resulted in formation
of new lakes with loose moraine.
A
new university study and the ever - increasing use of wireless devices, such as the BlackBerry, could result in a flood of lawsuits against employers for creating an allegedly dangerous environment where unpaid overwork is required for success, promotion and job security, a leading law firm warns -LSB-...] Giving rise to possible claims, is a recent study by Gayle Porter, Associate Professor of Management at Rutgers University in New Jersey, which suggests possible liability for companies if they keep their employees on «electronic leashes» as part of their job requiremen
new university
study and the ever - increasing use
of wireless devices, such as the BlackBerry, could
result in a flood
of lawsuits against employers for creating an allegedly dangerous environment where unpaid overwork is required for success, promotion and job security, a
leading law firm warns -LSB-...] Giving rise to possible claims, is a recent
study by Gayle Porter, Associate Professor
of Management at Rutgers University in
New Jersey, which suggests possible liability for companies if they keep their employees on «electronic leashes» as part of their job requiremen
New Jersey, which suggests possible liability for companies if they keep their employees on «electronic leashes» as part
of their job requirements.
In these webcast slides, our panel
of in - house legal experts will discuss
results from this legal spend
study and provide specific insights into the spend management techniques employed at
leading law departments, giving you
new ideas to reduce legal spend at your organization without sacrificing quality.
In this on - demand webcast, our panel
of in - house legal experts will discuss
results from this legal spend
study and provide specific insights into the spend management techniques employed at
leading law departments, giving you
new ideas to reduce legal spend at your organization without sacrificing quality.
But in the
new analysis, which combined the
results of 21 previous
studies, researchers found no clear evidence that higher saturated fat intakes
led to higher risks
of heart disease or stroke.
• Lab Technician - Branson's Laboratories - Los Angeles, CA - 2015 to presento Conduct tests and experiments using the most advanced technology availableo Work directly with test subjects, educating them on standard procedures, what to expect, and potential risks, receiving informed consent with documentationo Contribute data for over 25
studies with published findings in peer - reviewed journalso Maintain a proper laboratory work environment and train
newer staff and those in other areas
of expertise in appropriate protocol • Graduate Research Assistant - University
of Denver - Denver, CO - 2007 - 2017o Performed experiments and investigations under the direct supervision
of the
lead scientists and professorso Aided
lead scientists and / or head researchers in collecting and interpreting information for their projectso Recorded data and
results, and collected relevant information for the official reportso Directed a group
of 11 biomed students through a research project for light therapy on rats