Women study pretty much every field at a higher frequency than men?every field, that is, except the more technical ones.
Not exact matches
This sweet, rich oil was shown to do some
pretty nifty things for abdominally obese
women in a 2009
study out of Brazil, including decreasing their waist circumference, increasing beneficial HDL (high - density lipoprotein) cholesterol and improving the ratio of «bad» LDL (low - density lipoprotein) to «good» HDL cholesterol.
One
pretty effective way to get the message across is telling them this: regardless of where you sleep, getting more sleep can lead to getting more sex, at least for
women, according to a 2015
study.
«It's
pretty clear that caring for children is a barrier for
women entrepreneurs,» says Jason Wiens, policy director for the Kauffman Foundation, citing a
study that looked at men and
women who had a PhD in a scientific field.
It seems
pretty clear though that 12 weeks should just be the beginning of what's considered an acceptable amount of leave: a 2013
study published in the Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law found that
women who return to work earlier than six months after giving birth are more likely to develop PPD than those who were able to spend more time at home.
Last weekend saw broadsheets mocking the Tories for using
Pretty Little Head, which delivers an «understanding of
women» based on the «scientific
study of gender difference and the culmination of our personal experience».
There was a famous
study in 1977 put out by the
Women's City Club that
pretty convincingly disproved this theory.
According to the researchers on the
study, the risk for a heart problem in the 10 years following fertility therapy is still
pretty low — about 10 events for every 1,000
women.
According to a
study discussed in the Telegraph,
studies have shown that men actually do lose much of their ability to think and reason when around
pretty women:
I don't have any
studies to back it up, but I'm
pretty sure 100 percent of
women prefer to date men who are alive.
But the results still show «a
pretty profound effect on some
women's lives,» said
study author Janet Currie, a health economist at Princeton University.
But this week we received a pitch for a video game that made me so angry, I'm
pretty sure my
women's
studies degree became sentient, broke out of the frame in my office, and is currently trying to escape the building to protest.