Kansas State
University research suggests that eating plenty of foods high in antioxidants helps slow the processes associated with aging and protect against many chronic diseases.
However, new Oxford
University research suggests that social media and the internet are not the root of today's fragmented society, and echo chambers may not be the threat they are perceived to be.
Race - based stressors, including perceived discrimination and the fear of fulfilling negative stereotypes, have psychological effects and physiological effects on the body, which may contribute to the racial - ethnic achievement gap, new Northwestern
University research suggests.
Princeton
University research suggests that idle conversation could be a social - bonding tool passed down from primates.
Princeton
University research suggests that termite mounds can help prevent the spread of deserts into semi-arid ecosystems and agricultural lands by providing a moist refuge for vegetation.
New Tel Aviv
University research suggests that periods of fasting or starvation may significantly shorten the lifespans of both children and their male descendants.
While it can be easy to imagine telecommuters slacking off because they can, a recent Stanford
University research suggests the opposite, revealing that working remotely actually makes employees up to 13 percent more productive — because they enjoy more job satisfaction.
Not exact matches
University of California
research suggests that it can take up to 23 minutes and 15 secs for people to resume work once interrupted and that typically they will execute two intervening tasks before resuming the original activity.
While proponents often
suggest simply concentrating on your breathing as a good way to do it,
research conducted at the
University of Wisconsin - Madison has found that actually counting your breaths is a good way to measure mindfulness.
In her seminal
research on the subject from 2012, Sabine Sonnentag of the
University of Mannheim in Germany
suggests that it's a process of recovery.
Now, new
research conducted by Moran Cerf, a neuroscientist at Northwestern
University,
suggests that one of the best ways to reduce stress and feel happier is to spend time with people who make better decisions.
«Our findings
suggest Zika virus should be officially added to the list of congenital infections,» said Thália Velho Barreto de Araújo of Brazil's Pernambuco
University, who also worked on the
research team.
«No matter how open you are as a manager, our
research shows, many of your people are more likely to keep mum than to question initiatives or
suggest new ideas at work,» wrote James Detert of Cornell and Ethan Burris of
University of Texas as Austin on HBR recently.
Research from the
University of Warwick
suggests that happiness makes people 12 % more productive.
But there's plenty of other
research that
suggests tidiness has a downside: a
University of Minnesota study
suggests that people with clean desks make more conventional decisions.
Research from Dalhousie
University suggests that given just 15 years, a modern industrialized fishery can reduce the biomass of large predatory fish communities by 80 %.
But recent
research suggests that there's an exception: when employees work significantly more hours early in their career, it pays off in the long - run, Dr. Dora Gicheva, an assistant professor at The
University of North Carolina at Greensboro, found.
Research from Birmingham
University suggests that lastborns tend to venture into traditional business roles only if other family members have chosen different career paths.
Research from the
University of Michigan
suggests that these nervous habits are indicative of a perfectionistic personality, and that perfectionists are more likely to engage in these habits when they're frustrated or bored.
Research at the
University of Liege in Belgium
suggests they may come down to biological rather than spiritual factors.
But a recent study by the Center for Survey
Research (CSR) at the
University of Virginia for Stewardship Journal
suggests that some significant differences are emerging between the leaders of evangelical relief and development (R&D) agencies and their donor constituencies.
While Leon Otis, in his report on Stanford
University research into TM, warns that «up - tight» people may find that the only thing «liberated» in their meditations is their problems, Herbert Benson has
suggested that deep mental relaxation may be as essential to our survival today as were quick wits and reflexes in primitive times.
Mintz does not refer at all to
research by developmental psychologists such as Jay Belsky of London's Birkbeck College and Alan Sroufe of the
University of Minnesota; nor does he cite the huge, multicenter National Institute of Child Health studies, all of which
suggest that more than 20 hours per week of child care beginning before the age of one correlates with a higher incidence of interpersonal difficulties by early grade school.
While family scholars acknowledge that studies in Sweden and Britain have found more instability among same - sex couples, they would contend that
research, such as a new study from Bowling Green State
University, also
suggests that gay and lesbian couples can enjoy more stable relationships when communities extend legal and cultural support to them.
New
research from Harvard
University actually
suggests that attending «religious services» at least once a week will significantly lower your risk of dying over the next decade and a half — and these results have been replicated in enough studies and populations to be considered highly reliable.
Mar. 18, 2013 — Buried for 100,000 years at Xujiayao in the Nihewan Basin of northern China, the recovered skull pieces of an early human exhibit a now - rare congenital deformation that indicates inbreeding might well have been common among our ancestors, new
research from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Washington
University in St. Louis
suggests
The Australian Beverages Council, representing the local soft drinks industry, has responded to
research published in the British Journal of Nutrition from Deakin
University which
suggests the presence of caffeine in soft drinks increases consumption.
Jonathan Johnson from the
University of Surrey examines new
research which
suggests that the effects of shift work or jet lag on our body clocks could be reduced simply by changing the times at which people eat.
Keith E. Belk, a Colorado State
University professor who works closely with the beef industry, said
research on risks like liver abscesses was more uncertain than many studies
suggested.
Research recently presented at the American Psychological Association's annual meeting
suggests that helping teens learn to count their blessings can play a significant role in positive mental health, says study author Giacomo Bono, a professor of psychology at California State
University in Dominguez Hills.
Try initiating a make - believe game with your child,
suggests Jerome L. Singer, co-director of the Family Television
Research and Consultation Center at Yale
University.
Research from the
University of Maryland and Harvard
University suggests that young infants benefit from hearing words repeated by their parents, and that parents who repeat words more to 7 - month - olds find their children have larger vocabularies when they are toddlers.
A 2013 white paper by Denise Pope and Madeline Levine, both co-founders of Challenge Success, a
research - based organization at Stanford
University that develops holistic curriculum, conferences and other programs for parents, schools and students,
suggests that isn't always the case.
Research also
suggests that women who use hospital - based birthing centers are more likely to have a normal vaginal birth and more likely to be breast - feeding six to eight weeks after delivery than those who give birth in a typical hospital setting, said Ellen Hodnett, a professor of nursing at the
University of Toronto and a review author for the Cochrane Collaboration Pregnancy and Childbirth Group.
According to Dr. Maria Hernandez - Reif, a child development professor and the director of the Pediatric Development
Research Lab at the University of Alabama, «Research in infant teething suggests that more research needs to be done
Research Lab at the
University of Alabama, «
Research in infant teething suggests that more research needs to be done
Research in infant teething
suggests that more
research needs to be done
research needs to be done.»
Research out of the Robinson
Research Institute at the
University of Adelaide, Australia
suggests that mothers with PPD who take antidepressants have a higher chance of nursing their babies until at least six months.
By Yahoo! Canada Sports (blog)
University of Alberta researcher Dr. Dhiren Naidu's findings
suggest concussion education... Concussions are a key issue facing the CFL, but new
research from the
University of Alberta
suggests that some of the league's efforts on that front are having... See all stories on this topic»... read more
«Our results
suggest that breastfeeding duration is independently associated with better educational outcomes in middle childhood, especially for boys,» reported Wendy H. Oddy, associate professor at the Telethon Institute for Child Health
Research and
University of Western Australia, and colleagues.
The
research paper by the Oxford
University Project on Computational Propaganda
suggested a sophisticated effort to spread disinformation using automated accounts, or «bots.»
The recent protests and conversations that have surrounded #feesmustfall #RhodesMustFall and #CanaanStudies
suggest that
universities in Africa are still marginalising the voices that should be at the centre of their teaching, learning, and
research.
Research by Dr Robin Purshouse of Sheffield
University for the Scottish government
suggests a minimum price on every unit of alcohol of 40p would cut 1,000 premature deaths a year.
Statement from Breast Cancer Care on
research from the Leiden
University Medical Centre presented to the European Breast Cancer Conference which
suggests that women from lower socioeconomic groups have a poorer breast cancer survival rates
Statement from Breast Cancer Care on
research from the
University of Frankfurt presented to the European Breast Cancer Conference which
suggests that pregnant women can receive chemotherapy for breast cancer without endangering the health of their babies.
Research by the
University of Nottingham's Philip Cowley
suggests that new MPs tend to be very loyal to the leadership that helped them into the Commons.
During Monday's hearing, Mr. Russell
suggested forming a partnership with Long Island
universities to establish a new
research center on Plum Island should the government facility close.
New
research from the Department of Political Science at Sam Houston State
University in Huntsville, Texas, USA,
suggests that just half of the Red Cross and Red Crescent national societies around the world have adopted Twitter.
The new theory
suggests the first of the two explosions reported by eyewitnesses was a nuclear and not a steam explosion, as is currently widely thought and is presented by researchers from the Swedish Defence
Research Agency, Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute, and Stockholm
University.
«Our
research suggests that in mice, males may be more vulnerable to the effects of maternal inflammation than females, and the impact may be life long,» says study leader Irina Burd, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor of gynecology / obstetrics and neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and director of the Integrated Research Center for Fetal M
research suggests that in mice, males may be more vulnerable to the effects of maternal inflammation than females, and the impact may be life long,» says study leader Irina Burd, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor of gynecology / obstetrics and neurology at the Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine and director of the Integrated
Research Center for Fetal M
Research Center for Fetal Medicine.
At the inaugural National Postdoc Association meeting, Keith Yamamoto, vice dean for
research at the
University of California, San Francisco,
suggested we consider redefining the mission of graduate education.
More than half of Europe's forests have disappeared over the past 6,000 years thanks to increasing demand for agricultural land and the use of wood as a source of fuel, new
research led by the
University of Plymouth
suggests.