Sentences with phrase «authors someone cites»

This price issue actually includes the lack of control over the pricing, which many independent authors cite as one of the main reasons they first opted to self - publish.
Hybrid authors cite good reasons for self - publishing and for sticking with traditional publishers.
When asked the reason for taking the indie publishing path, authors cited greater revenue as their primary reason followed by greater product control.
The copyright in the Work shall belong to the Author or the party that Author cites as the copyright holder.
The paper's authors cite research showing «that male editors are more likely to assign manuscripts to male reviewers and that reviewers are more likely to recommend rejection» of papers authored by members of the opposite sex.
So just what did the IPCC AR4 authors cite in support of their «assessment» that Antarctic sea ice extent was not increasing in a statistically significant manner?
Traditional publishers have long issued quarterly sales reports to their authors, often distributed three months after the fact, and that's one of the many reasons authors cite for trying to go it alone.
The same author cites, as part of the faith, love for anyone who may be loved by God and thus by Gabriel and all those in paradise.
Authors cite urgent need for additional TB research.»
To support their approach, the CRP authors cite a 1998 «study from Arizona that found that charter schools within one traditional public school district pulled students from 21 distinct districts.»
Truth is data on real estate developers, speculators and flippers is sparse, but, as the report authors cite, «there is a creeping sense that, even in just the past 6 - to - 12 months, speculation is starting to pick up.»
However, a preliminary data analysis by the Carbon Brief revealed that nine of the ten most prolific authors cited have links to organisations funded by ExxonMobil, and the tenth has co-authored several papers with Exxon - funded contributors.
Cai & Kalnay, 2004 was actually on the following page of the same journal issue of two of the articles the chapter authors cited.
It's bigger and better even than the previous IPCC report, with 600 contributing authors citing 9,200 publications.
The op - ed's authors cited research by William D. Nordhaus, economics professor at Yale, to back them up.
While the authors cite the countless bills targeted to small businesses as evidence that lawmakers coddle them, let's remind ourselves how they voted to spend their money.
It's admittedly a particular take on the field — all of the authors cited above are philosophers.
The authors cite nearly 20 years» worth of case studies that show how category kings swiftly take over the market cap in a particular category, leaving scraps for other competitors in the space.
For example, the authors cite a 2012 Facebook study in which users» news feeds were manipulated «to examine how people transmit positive and negative emotions to others.»
The author cites the following as evidence: «At least one in 10 people will say they've had such an experience if you ask them bluntly.»
It is an interesting argument, but it fails primarily because the evidence the author cites tends to prove the opposite — namely, that bachelor life in America has always been experienced as a phase, and a mostly uncomfortable phase at that.
[15] The authors cited that this may be due to same - s.
The authors cite fundamentalists Charles J. Woodbridge, «Dr. Smith,» John R. Rice and William E. Ashbrook.
At least three of the authors cite Jewish or pagan feminists to build up their argument that Christian feminist theology is post-Christian; this is hardly responsible scholarship.
The attempt to show how religion intersects with regional and local politics is more convincing in the specific cases various authors cite.
But astonishingly, in support of these claims the authors cite a 1971 paper by Ehrlich, which predicted a tipping point by 1991!
The author cites numerous liberationist sources as authority, including the late Penny Lernoux, a notorious master of Marxist agitprop.
As expected, the authors cited Biblical values as a key reason for the coming catastrophe.
The authors cite four «massive social and cultural trends» that have had a destructive effect on the American family: «heightened individualism»; the «increased role of market forces and government bureaucracies in family life,» or «technical rationality»; the «powerful psychological shifts caused by these forces»; and the «lingering influence» of patriarchy.
The authors cited represent a consensus of the New Testament church.
Moreover, neither Rauch nor the authors he cites even addresses the issue of polyamory, which is, if anything, a harder case for them than polygamy, because many of the pragmatic and prudential considerations they cite against polygamy would not apply to polyamorous arrangements.
The authors cite Thomas Paine and Thomas Jefferson as what I call sophisticated primitives.
Has the author cited studies to support this belief?
While data on outdoor tanning were unavailable, the authors cited previous studies showing that indoor tanners are also more likely to engage in outdoor tanning.
The authors cite research that counted nearly 2,000 hospital data breaches of varying kinds between 2009 and 2016.
The authors cite literature showing this is a strategy that many patients would prefer anyway, since it could reduce their out - of - pocket costs, and would not expose them to the risk of serious side - effects associated with biologic therapy.
The author cites various elderly achievers to demonstrate that mental vigor can persist late in life.
The authors cite funding from the National Research Foundation of Korea and the Rural Development Administration of Korea.
The authors cite the example of using AIS to establish areas where large cetaceans and vessels are likely to over ¬ lap in space and time — a critical step to understanding and reducing vessel strikes.
The authors cite tumor heterogeneity as the most likely reason for the success of their variance - based approach.
The authors cite examples of animals that migrated from mainland environments to colonize an island for which they were too large and those species that grew in response to a new, relatively colossal home range.
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