Injecting wastewater deep underground as a byproduct of oil and gas extraction techniques that include fracking causes human - made earthquakes, the lead
author of new research from Arizona State University said Thursday.
Not exact matches
Author Carmine Gallo, who has written on the history
of TED Talks, cites scientific
research from Dr. Paul King
of Texas Christian University as well as insight into how the brain processes
new information (and expends energy while doing so).
Well there is, according to
new research from Yale's Alia Crum and Peter Salovey, and Shawn Achor,
author of The Happiness Advantage.
Dr. Daniel Taber, the
new study's lead
author from the Institute for Health
Research and Policy at the University
of Illinois at Chicago, said students who receive free or reduced - price lunches
from the government tend to be more obese, but that may be due to their families» low - income status.
Dr Robert Boyle, lead
author of the
research from the Department
of Medicine at Imperial, said: «This
new analysis pools all existing data, and suggests introducing egg and peanut at an early age may prevent the development
of egg and peanut allergy, the two most common childhood food allergies.
To get a better feel for the specific effects
of parenting that is not in line with
research, this API Editor's Pick highlights the Psych Central post, «Unloved in Childhood: 10 Common Effects on Your Adult Self» by Peg Streep, a parenting book
author from New York City, USA.
Finding medications that restore this network to normal could provide desperately needed
new treatments, explained Professor Michael Johnson, senior
author of the
research from the Department
of Medicine at Imperial.
This may have been an adaptation to
new environments and endurance hunting, as early Homo species left the forests and moved on to more arid African savannahs,» says lead
author Dr Manuel Will
from Cambridge's Department
of Archaeology, and a
Research Fellow at Gonville and Caius College.
Fresh
from surviving the slings and arrows
of co-chairing the 42nd Annual Drosophila
Research Conference, your intrepid
authors step into a
new field
of cow patties to offer 10 hints on how to nurture a scientific conference.
Problems resulting
from these deficiencies — such as blindness, anemia and death, particularly among children and women — are a major public health challenge,» said Dr. Saurabh Mehta, associate professor
of global health, epidemiology and nutrition in the Division
of Nutritional Sciences, and a senior
author on this
new research.
As the
authors of the
new UNC study write, admissions committees often assume that «[t] ypical selection criteria [such as] standardized test scores, undergraduate GPA, letters
of recommendation, a resume and / or personal statement highlighting relevant
research or professional experience, and feedback
from interviews with training faculty... correlate with
research success in graduate school.»
«It's one
of the clearest examples
of how humans are actually changing the intensity
of storm processes on Earth through the emission
of particulates
from combustion,» said Joel Thornton, an atmospheric scientist at the University
of Washington in Seattle and lead
author of the
new study in Geophysical
Research Letters, a journal
of the American Geophysical Union.
First
author Professor Martin Hrabe de Angelis, Director
of Institute
of Experimental Genetics at the Helmholtz Zentrum München, who invented the mouse clinic concept, said: «Our findings with regard to the genes examined are now available to the scientific community as a valid data set, which can be downloaded free
of charge
from the IMPC (International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium) website, and form an excellent basis on which we and other
research groups can develop and test
new hypotheses.»
«This is the first time [stimulated movement has] been linked to signals recorded
from within the brain,» says biomedical engineer Chad Bouton, one
of the study's
authors and vice president
of advanced engineering and technology at the Feinstein Institute for Medical
Research in Manhasset,
New York.
«This is a huge public health issue that urgently requires
new tools for the active monitoring
of outbreaks and rapid diagnosis
of the pathogens involved,» explains senior
author and evolutionary geneticist Franck Prugnolle,
from the National Center for Scientific
Research (CNRS) in Montpellier, France.
«This is just the beginning
of a
new and exciting line
of research,» predicts Verena Schuenemann,
from Tuebingen University, the second lead
author of the study.
The study was
authored by a group
of international scientists
from Australia,
New Zealand, the United States, Switzerland and Singapore and marked a major collaboration between Duke - NUS and the Bioinformatics Institute (BII), Agency for Science, Technology and
Research (A * STAR).
«The biochemical mechanisms
of these proteins have been known for years
from experiments involving purified protein and DNA, and that's very important, but in this
new work we've clarified these proteins» roles in living cells,» said co-senior
author Christopher P. Selby, PhD,
research assistant professor
of biochemistry and biophysics at UNC.
«This
research would not have been possible without support
from NASA,» said Kristin Laidre, lead
author of the
new study and a polar scientist with University
of Washington in Seattle.
A
New Scientist analysis based on
research papers
from this year indicates that US
research on hESCs leaves others trailing: 45 per cent
of 204 papers mentioning hESCs had at least one US - based
author; UK scientists were a distant second, with 17 per cent (for full details, see bit.ly / r7N3zm).
Purdue University doctoral student Yang Xu, lead
author of a
new research paper on «topological insulators,» an emerging class
of materials that could make possible «spintronic» devices and practical quantum computers far more powerful than today's technologies, is shown here inspecting devices made
from topological insulators under a microscope before electrical measurements.
«The penguins are the innocent bystanders experiencing feast or famine depending on what the Equatorial Undercurrent is doing
from year to year,» said Kristopher Karnauskas, a climate scientist who performed the
research while at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and lead author of the new study recently accepted in Geophysical Research Letters, an American Geophysical Union
research while at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and lead
author of the
new study recently accepted in Geophysical
Research Letters, an American Geophysical Union
Research Letters, an American Geophysical Union journal.
The rapid increase in the prevalence
of myopia globally is attributed to, «environmental factors (nurture), principally lifestyle changes resulting
from a combination
of decreased time outdoors and increased near work activities, among other factors,» say the
authors from Brien Holden Vision Institute, University
of New South Wales Australia and Singapore Eye
Research Institute.
The
authors of this
new research paper analysed data and models
from the USEPA's updated global non-CO2 GHG mitigation assessment to investigate the potential for GHG reductions
from agricultural emissions
from seven regions globally, offsetting costs against social benefit
of GHG mitigation (e.g. human health, flood risk and energy costs).
The land is dry and brown,» said study
author Nadia Al - Mudaffar Fawzi, an Iraqi marine ecologist who returned
from New Zealand to the city
of her birth in 2009 to teach and conduct
research at the University
of Basrah.
To solve this problem and make the leap
from three volts to four, the first
author, University
of Maryland assistant
research scientist Chongyin Yang, designed a
new gel polymer electrolyte coating that can be applied to the graphite or lithium anode.
«The need to conserve the environment by reducing the wash temperature and the use
of biodegradable washing products have grown in importance in the
new millennium, making this type
of research more high profile,» explained Professor John Dean, corresponding
author of the study
from the University
of Northumbria.
«Our findings show that, under the right circumstances, a large part
of the periphery may become a visual illusion,» says psychology researcher Marte Otten
from the University
of Amsterdam, lead
author on the
new research.
In
research appearing March 2 in the Journal
of Medical Entomology, lead
author Matthew Frye, an urban entomologist with Cornell University's
New York State Integrated Pest Management (IPM) Program, reported collecting more than 6,500 specimens
of five well - known species
of fleas, lice and mites
from 133 rats.
«We've identified a splashing behavior that nobody's seen before,» said Yannis Hardalupas, one
of the
authors of this
new research appearing in a cover article this week in the journal Physics
of Fluids,
from AIP Publishing.
«Although we tend to think
of paleontological discoveries coming
from new field work, many
of our most important conclusions come
from specimens already in museums,» says Dr. Christian Kammerer,
Research Curator
of Paleontology at the North Carolina Museum
of Natural Sciences and
author of the
new study.
The
author of this
new research, Tom Booth
from the Natural History Museum, notes that although it was once believed that soil bacteria caused most
of this bioerosion in bone, it is the gut microbia that is responsible for corpse putrification that causes this process.
The paper, with principal
research physicist Weixing Wang as lead
author, identifies two important
new sources
of turbulence based on data
from experiments on the National Spherical Torus Experiment prior to its upgrade.
In the
new research, Pollen and co-first
author Tomasz Nowakowski, PhD, also a postdoctoral researcher in the Kriegstein lab, partnered with Fluidigm Corp. to develop a microfluidic approach to map out the transcriptional profile — the set
of genes that are actively producing RNA —
of cells collected
from the VZ and SVZ during embryonic development.
In 1990, Hardin was an
author on one
of the key papers
from a body
of research that was recognized today with the 2017 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine, which went to three American researchers: Michael Rosbash and Jeffrey Hall
of Brandeis, and Michael Young
of Rockefeller University in
New York.
A
new paper
authored by scientists
from the Southwest
Research Institute asserts that the Martian moons Phobos and Deimos were created in much the same way, albeit with the involvement
of a much smaller aggressor.
While previous methods used county - level slash data to estimate the amount
of wood residue available as a feedstock, the
new research reported in the journal Biomass and Bioenergy, uses more refined data on demand
from individual sawmills, said Natalie Martinkus, one
of the
authors of the paper and an assistant professor in WSU's Composite Materials and Engineering Center.
In addition to Fabrick and Tabashnik, the following
authors collaborated on the study: Jeyakumar Ponnuraj
from the National Institute
of Plant Health Management in Hyderabad, India, who studied pink bollworm resistance as a visiting scholar in Tabashnik's lab; Amar Singh and Raj Tanwar
of the National Centre for Integrated Pest Management at the Indian Agricultural
Research Institute in
New Delhi; and Gopalan Unnithan, Alex Yelich, Xianchun Li and Yves Carrière
from the UA Department
of Entomology.
«With nearly 200
authors and 47 chapters, «Snow Leopards» covers a wide range
of topics
from ecology, threats, conservation success stories,
new research tools and technologies and country status reports, concluding with an outlook for the species» future.
«If you have too much sodium and too little potassium, it's worse than either one on its own,» said Dr. Thomas Farley,
New York City's health commissioner, who has led efforts to get the public to eat less salt... «Potassium may neutralize the heart - damaging effects
of salt,» said Dr. Elena Kuklina, one
of the study's
authors at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention... The
research found people who eat a lot
of salt and very little potassium were more than twice as likely to die
from a heart attack as those who ate about equal amounts
of both nutrients.
Kelly Turner, Ph.D. is the
New York Times bestselling
author of Radical Remission: Surviving Cancer Against All Odds, which summarizes her
research into the radical remission
of cancer — when someone heals
from cancer without Western medicine or after Western medicine has failed.
The following will give teachers an idea
of what to expect
from this resource: - Descriptive writing
of characters and The Island Diary writing Comparing and contrasting characters Argumentative writing Opinion / fact Spelling Speech
Research skills: - Leprosy, The Philippines, The Bible and Facts about The
Author Drawing activities: -
new cover, characters, map Life cycle
of a butterfly Themes in the novel Writing a book review Craft: - How to make a symmetrical butterfly
The design
of the «Student Help Desk» course evolved over the year
from tier 1 support to deconstructing problems, testing updates,
authoring tutorials,
researching new and emerging technologies, and developing passion projects.
The
authors are part
of cross-disciplinary
research team
from the University
of New England Schools
of Education, Law and Social Work.
Check out blog posts
from our
research authors and the EdChoice
research team, including slide show summaries
of report findings,
new data analyses, fiscal breakdowns, behind - the - scenes tips on methodology and more.
That might have less to do with Teach for America and more to do with the other teachers in the schools, said Melissa Clark, one
of the
authors of the
new report
from Mathematica Policy
Research.
The
new working paper — published by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and authored by Abdulkadiroğlu, Pathak, Jonathan Schellenberg, and Christopher Walters — discusses data from the New York City Department of Education, which enrolls around 90,000 ninth - graders every year at more than 400 high schoo
new working paper — published by the National Bureau
of Economic
Research (NBER) and
authored by Abdulkadiroğlu, Pathak, Jonathan Schellenberg, and Christopher Walters — discusses data
from the
New York City Department of Education, which enrolls around 90,000 ninth - graders every year at more than 400 high schoo
New York City Department
of Education, which enrolls around 90,000 ninth - graders every year at more than 400 high schools.
With support
from Carnegie Corporation
of New York, the
authors researched multiple sources worldwide in order to demonstrate how paid residencies can address a range
of persistent challenges facing schools and districts.
In addition to her successful career in public education (see a detailed account below), her work and contributions include being a HuffPost education blogger, a board member
of Programs for Parents, a member
of the
New Jersey Council for Young Children, a parenting blogger for Psychology Today, and the
author of SHAPE: The 5 Keys to Parenting
from Research and Real Life.
Founder Lauren Wise spends a ton
of time
researching the
new methods
of publishing, talking with CEOs
of publishers that range
from hybrid to traditional to electronic, and compiles a hand - picked list every year
of the best companies for Midnight Publishing
authors to work with.