Sentences with phrase «university study published»

Power struggles area also common in relationships, writes associate professor of psychology and neuroscience Keith Sanford in a Baylor University study published in the Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology.
Human emissions of the potentially harmful trace metal vanadium into Earth's atmosphere have spiked sharply since the start of the 21st century due in large part to industry's growing use of heavy oils, tar sands, bitumen and petroleum coke for energy, a new Duke University study published in the Proceedings... Read more →
A Purdue University study published in 2000 in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association found that eating from an elevated bowl is actually a risk factor for bloat, as well as increased speed of eating.
A glimmer of hope is that most educators are homegrown; more than 60 percent of teachers work within 20 miles of where they attended high school, according to a Stanford University study published in 2012.
of where they attended high school, according to a Stanford University study published in 2012.
A Brown University study published in September 2011 found that online daters are reluctant to identify politically and weigh politics low on their priority list.
In a recent Purdue University study published in the journal Molecular Nutrition & Food Research, 20 participants were fed salads topped with dressings consisting of either saturated, monounsaturated, or polyunsaturated fats.
According to the Times, a 2009 Old Dominion University study published in the Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, found that a 20 - minute walk about 15 minutes after dinner «led to lower post-meal blood sugar levels in people with Type 2 diabetes than either a walk before dinner or no walking at all.»
Here's welcome news for any mom who, like me, couldn't breast - feed and felt like she was dooming her baby to a fat, hyperactive, less intelligent future: The long - term benefits of breast - feeding have been exaggerated, according to a new Ohio State University study published in the journal Social Science & Medicine.
«There has been an increasing number of studies that show how damaging UV rays can be,» says Dr. Engelman, pointing to a 2015 Yale University study published in the Journal of Science showing skin damage caused by UV rays can continue for hours after you leave the sun.
A new Tel Aviv University study published in The American Journal of Addictions indicates that high - schoolers involved in competitive sports are at an elevated risk of gambling.
A new Tel Aviv University study published in Maternal and Child Nutrition found that infantile Vitamin B1 (thiamine) deficiency severely affected the motor function of preschoolers who were fed faulty formula in the first year of their lives.
Now a new Tel Aviv University study published in Nature Communications sheds light on a unique biological model of arsenic detoxification.
It may be easier and cheaper for parents to manage a key asthma trigger in children — exposure to cockroaches — than previously thought, according to a new Tulane University study published in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.
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.
Women who breast feed for longer have less chance of getting rheumatoid arthritis, a Malmo University study published online ahead of print in the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases suggested (See Women Who Breast Feed for More than a Year Halve Their Risk of Rheumatoid Arthritis).
A Ryerson University study published in the Fall 2012 Journal for Advancement of Marketing Education found that college students prefer reading online when they are looking for quick information.
An Ohio State University study published in the scientific journal Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience found that acetaminophen, the painkilling ingredient in the Johnson & Johnson (johnson - johnson - 40) brand medicine, not only suppresses your own pain, but causes you to perceive other people's pain as being less severe.

Not exact matches

Earlier this year, for example, Judy Zaichkowsky of Simon Fraser University's Beedie School of Business published a study indicating that the presence of just one woman on a company's board resulted in significantly higher standards of corporate governance (which has an established correlation to better financial performance).
Researchers at the University of Basel in Switzerland recently published findings from a series of studies in which 480 people were shown portraits of faces manipulated to appear warm or cold and competent or incompetent.
A peer - reviewed study by researchers at the University of British Columbia and Simon Fraser University, published recently in The International Journal of Drug Policy, pegged the retail value of marijuana consumption in B.C. alone at between $ 443 million and $ 564 million.
... in 2015, University of Toronto sociologist Melissa Milkie published a study showing that the amount of time children aged 3 to 11 spent with parents had no measurable impact on their emotional well - being, behavior, or academic success.
Previous studies have shown a little bit of anxiety helps you avoid danger and reach peak motivation, now new research out of Canada's University of Waterloo that was recently published in Brain Sciences is adding another item to the growing list of anxiety's benefits: improved memory.
In a study published earlier this month, researchers at Michigan State University monitored the brains of 79 female and 70 male students, who were asked to fill out a survey about their own anxiety levels.
Another study led by Michael Kane, a psychologist at the University of North Carolina Greensboro, and published in Psychological Science also found that some forms of mind wandering can be beneficial.
In a large review of studies published in the Journal of Nutrition, Purdue University scientists found that whole tree nuts and peanuts have roughly 15 % fewer calories than the figure calculated using the Atwater method.
A study published by Carnegie Mellon University found that people with supportive spouses are «more likely to give themselves the chance to succeed.»
In 2009, researchers at Stanford University published a study revealing that online multi-taskers are more easily distractible, struggle more with organization and concentration and are not as dynamic as their uni-tasking counterparts.
In 2015, researchers at the University of Washington's Cancer Vaccine Institute published a study on designing vaccines to prevent breast cancer.
A group of psychologists from Yale and other universities tested this in 2009 with a study published in «Psychological Science».
Woo counters that Maastricht University in the Netherlands is currently conducting a clinical trial studying his company's supplements, which will publish at ClinicalTrials.gov.
«People have a false assumption that they're more productive working as a group than individually, even though all evidence shows it's the opposite,» explains Nicholas Kohn, co-author of the University of Texas study, published in the journal Applied Cognitive Psychology.
SAN FRANCISCO — The scientific journal that published a study by Facebook and two U.S. universities examining people's online mood swings regrets how the social experiment was handled.
The agency also said that the company couldn't find a publisher for the study, so the company hired researchers Vinson and Burnham, of the University of Scranton in Pennsylvania, to rewrite the study and get it published, according to the FTC.
It's notable that this study was posted to arXiv, Cornell University's open access website that lets researchers publish findings before they appear in a formal publication.
In a commentary published alongside the Neurology study, two doctors — Adam Spira of Johns Hopkins University and Yo - El Ju of Washington University — emphasized the potential benefits of facilitating better sleep.
I'm not alone in having a hard time hearing what my gut has to say when I'm already anxious, something a new study published in Clinical Psychological Science supports: researchers from the University of Basel and the Berlin Psychological University found that anxiety may impair your ability to listen to your intuition.
D. G. Horowitz of Ohio State University published a study that found the 1994 — 95 and 2004 — 05 NHL lockouts, and the 1998 — 9 NBA lockout, had no significant effect on fan attendance.
A recent study published by Northern Kentucky University suggests that mixing alcohol with diet soda results in higher blood alcohol levels than mixing with sugary sodas.
William Goodling and Samuel Olson, two economics professors at the University of Oregon, published a paper this summer studying parking citations in Eugene, Ore..
A University of Calgary study published in the journal Environment and Behavior found that people who moved from a traditional office to an open - office layout reported decreased satisfaction with the physical environment and co-worker relations, and increased physical stress.
A recent study published by researchers from the University of Iowa, University of Illinois - Chicago, and Arizona State finds that opportunity for advancement is one of the most influential factors impacting both employee morale and turnover rates.
A study by researchers from the universities of Texas, Harvard and Yale published in June found that flextime requests were most likely to be granted to senior male employees who were using the time to take professional development courses.
In a study published this year that tracked Best Buy's ROWE program, researchers at the University of Minnesota found that, while it had helped reduce employee turnover, women who took part still spent 10 hours more on child care per week than their male flextime colleagues.
Alberta's oilsands operations are getting increasingly more efficient in producing energy, though they still lag behind conventional oil, according to a new study published by researchers at the Haskayne School of Business and China University of Petroleum (Beijing).
The survey is published jointly by the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada, the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT) and the Jack Austin Centre for Asia Pacific Business Studies at Simon Fraser University (SFU).
Domestically, universities such as Pontificia Universidad Catolica and the Universidad de Chile have published studies focusing on entrepreneurship influencing cultural change and and the value of the traditional business accelerator.
Unemployment, Marginal Attachment and Labor Force Participation in Canada and the United States Stephen Jones, McMaster University Craig Riddell, University of British Columbia Jones and Riddell build on two previous papers: one by David Card and Riddell (originally published in Small Differences that Matter) that studies the reasons for higher rates of unemployment in Canada than the U.S. in the 1980s, the other by Jones and Riddell which uses data from the U.S. Labor Force Survey to study the differences in rates of job creation for people who are counted as unemployed versus those who are counted as out of the labor force.
Researchers at the University and Chicago and Minnesota last week published an extraordinary study on broker misconduct.
A team led by David Sinclair of the University of New South Wales published a study...
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