Sentences with phrase «royal society journal»

Writing last year in a special edition of the Royal Society journal Philosophical Transactions that was dedicated to geo - engineering, Brian Launder of the University of Manchester and Michael Thompson of the University of Cambridge said: «While such geo - scale interventions may be risky, the time may well come when they are accepted as less risky than doing nothing.
Cutting down trees could be a double whammy for the climate Dominick Spracklen, one of the study's leaders and the author of a forthcoming article in the Royal Society journal Philosophical Transactions A, believes this function makes trees the planet's «air conditioners.»
In a paper published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society journal we lay out a framework for the response of polar environments to the effects of human - induced changes to the climate.
The nine new studies in the Royal Society journal provide valuable detail and find a mix of impacts.
The paper was downloaded over 30,000 times on the first day and is now the second most read paper of the Royal Society journal, Biology Letters.
A peer - reviewed Royal Society journal published the original findings of 25 elementary school students who spent a semester rigorously determining how a Bombus Terretris (aka, a bumble bee) decides which flowers to forage.
Athens, Ga. — Sexual transmission of the Ebola virus could have a major impact on the dynamics of the disease, potentially reigniting an outbreak that has been contained by public health interventions, according to research by University of Georgia ecologists just published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters.
Dr Shane Maloney, an animal researcher whose findings are published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters, said: «If environmental effects are the cause of the decline, then we can expect the proportion of dark coloured Soay sheep to decrease further.»
It is published in Royal Society Journal Biology Letters.
Sexual transmission of the Ebola virus could have a major impact on the dynamics of the disease, potentially reigniting an outbreak that has been contained by public health interventions, according to research by University of Georgia ecologists just published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters.
In 1751, Grew's description was cited by James Parsons in the Royal Society journal Philosophical Transactions (vol 47, p 109).
A study in the Royal Society journal Biological Sciences shows that one reason why we swing our arms while walking is probably because it makes ambulation a significantly more efficient operation, saving about 12 percent of the energy required to walk with the arms immobile.
The study, which has just been published in the Royal Society Journal Biology Letters was carried out by a team of researchers from Queen's University Belfast, in collaboration with other Institutions in the UK (University of Aberdeen, University of Swansea, Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London, University of Oxford), and elsewhere (North Carolina State University, The Lewis Foundation, South African National Parks, Earth and OCEAN Technologies, Kiel, Germany).
Previous studies suggest that the Late Cretaceous skies were only occupied by much larger pterosaur species and birds, but this new finding, which is reported in the Royal Society journal Open Science, provides crucial information about the diversity and success of Late Cretaceous pterosaurs.
Ian S. Pearse, lead author on the study in the current issue of the Royal Society journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, says that, «competition for resources has often been thought to limit invasions in diverse plant communities, but herbivory could also limit these invasions.»
The research, published in the Royal Society journal Interface, took advantage of the fact that dinosaur bones occasionally preserve evidence of trauma, sickness and the subsequent signs of healing.
But according to an article in the Royal Society journal Biological Sciences, superstitious behaviors are a natural product of evolution.
A study by a team of archaeologists based at the University of Copenhagen published today in the Royal Society journal Open Science documents that the region now known as the Black Desert in eastern Jordan could sustain a population of wild sheep.
Its editorial team will draw on the expertise of the society's fellows and the journal will accept direct submissions as well as referrals from other Royal Society journals.

Not exact matches

Michael Dillon, a Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory researcher, crunched the numbers and helped figure out just that in a 2014 study published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical and Physical Sciences.
This study, published in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, found that 22 patients who played the memory game made significantly fewer errors and needed significantly fewer attempts to remember the location of different patterns specific tests.
That's what a new study published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface suggests.
The role of the Royal Society in early science, or of specialized journals today, can be pointed out.
Schader, C., Muller, A., El - Hage Scialabba, N., Hecht, J., Isensee, A., Erb, K. - H., Smith, P., Makkar, H.P.S., Klocke, K., Leiber, F., Schwegler, P., Stolze, M. and Niggli, U., 2015, Impacts of feeding less food - competing feedstuffs to livestock on global food system sustainability, Journal of the Royal Society Interface 12: 20150891
From: Timehri: Being the Journal of the Royal Agricultural and Commercial Society of British Guiana, Volume 3, by The Royal Agricultural and Commercial Society of British Guiana.
Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 1997; 90 (10): 551 - 559.
Here's an interesting paper from the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine Nov 2006: «British maternal mortality in the 19th and early 20th centuries» G Chamberlain
The findings, published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B journal, appear to vindicate the instinct of spin doctors that having a lower voice will help attract support - even if the candidate is female.
The paper continues research first described in the Journal of The Royal Society Interface in April 2017.
Led by Dr Robert Grand of the Heidelberger Institut fuer Theoretische Studien, the work of the Auriga Project appears in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
The team also publish their findings in two papers in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society and the data are now publicly available for other astronomers to make further discoveries.
The researchers publish their results in the Oxford University Press journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
Published today in the journal Royal Society Open Science, the research also shows that, rather than steadily increasing in size, hominin bodies evolved in «pulse and stasis» fluctuations, with some lineages even shrinking.
The hairyflower wild petunia (Ruellia ciliatiflora) shoots seeds that spin up to 1,660 times per second, which helps them fly farther, researchers report March 7 in Journal of the Royal Society Interface.
The research, which was supported by the National Science Foundation and reported October 11th in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society A, involved building a computer model to simulate the interaction between the two facets of a folded sheet, including how easily and how far the folds would bend and how much the flat planes would deform during movement.
The findings, published in the journal Proceedings of The Royal Society B, suggest that by disturbing predator - prey interactions, ocean acidification could spur cascading consequences for food web systems in shoreline ecosystems.
In the 1970s Barbour began publishing his ideas in respected but slightly unconventional journals, like The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science and Proceedings of the Royal Society A.
This is the finding of a study, conducted by researchers at the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ), the University of California and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, the results of which were published recently in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
All 22 Royal Society of Chemistry electronic - only and online science journals will be available free from the RSC Web site during Chemistry Week 2001.
The research, carried out in collaboration with the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Puerto Rico, is published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Their work is reported in the Royal Society of Chemistry journal, Nanoscale.
The results, published January 24 in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface, offer the clearest look yet at fetal kicking and provide hints about why these moves are so important.
The proposal appears in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, which focuses on «Geoscale engineering to avert dangerous climate change.»
Last year, Jaramillo and a dozen co-authors studied four factory - scale production schemes in an article for The Royal Society of Chemistry's journal of Energy and Environmental Science.
The Royal Society of Chemistry runs a graduate scheme for people wanting to get into journal publishing.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B — a journal from the Royal Society whose motto is «Take nobody's word for it» — wades into these treacherous waters this week with a special issue, «The Impact of Population Growth on Tomorrow's World.»
Journal reference: Proceedings of the Royal Society B, DOI: 10.1098 / rspb.2010.0155 (Image: Julian Finn / Museum Victoria)
According to the paper published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society journal, the orbital evolution of Annama shows some similarity to the 2014 UR116, a potentially dangerous asteroid (i.e. an object that might collide the Earth) of about 400 meters in diameter that was discovered last year.
In a «proof - of - principle» study published in the journal Royal Society Open Science, the researchers described how this brain - computer interface (BCI) produced a 36 % improvement in motor function of a stroke - damaged hand.
The research appears this month in the Royal Society of Chemistry's Journal of Materials Chemistry A.
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