Sentences with phrase «cited article suggests»

Not exact matches

What if, as it has been suggested in articles cited above, «boomerang children» place an unfair burden on their parents?
Another bit of prima facie evidence that might be considered in favor of Hartshorne's «personalism» is that in Virgilius Ferm's 1945 classic Encyclopedia of Religion, a work to which Brightman contributed forty articles, 14 and in which Brightman had particular editorial input, 15 the article on «God, as personal» was written by none other than Charles Hartshorne.16 This, along with Brightman's review of me Divine Relativity (cited below), suggests that Brightman himself considered Hartshorne a personalist.
Goal.com are citing an article by La2 thats suggests Bartomeu is not happy with the lack of transparency that came from Neymar's camp.
I'd suggest just citing the articles that vetted the book instead.
Further analysis suggested that the direct cost to the NIH is higher for retracted papers published in high - impact journals — those with articles that are the most cited in other research papers within two years of publication.
Actually, it's due to the polls cited in the article — and those I have seen elsewhere — that suggest that the American public thinks, among other things, that scientists are still trying to determine if global warming is for real and that it's a major issue in the upcoming Presidential election.
And as the final lines of the Telegraph article you cited, said: «To suggest that the theory relating saturated fat to increased total cholesterol is flawed, is nonsense, and contradicts 50 years of evidence - based medicine»
The article cites the UK's FT as saying that they are «looking at this with a great deal of interest», suggesting the device could be coming to the UK, finally.
For example, the article by Prelec and Simester cites an unpublished study by Dilip Soman suggesting that people are less likely to remember the amount they spent on a purchase when they pay with a credit card than when they pay with cash.
As Hank and dhogaza suggest, your opinions will be better informed if you rely on peer - reviewed articles and sites such as Real Climate that are based on, and cite, them.
Blogger Joe Romm cites a 2009 article at the New York Times quoting you as suggesting that some of the sharp responses from people like Romm to the George Will columns at the Washington Post might backfire in several ways.
I would just suggest that anyone commenting on the technical aspects of the dispute actually cite the literature being critiqued rather than use shorthand in referring to those articles, otherwise those critiques will never show up in search results for interested people who are using the citations (or even partials such as author names, or date and subject and maybe journal) as search terms.
Anecdotal evidence from mortgage companies cited in The Times article suggest that «undoubtedly» fake documents have been presented to them.
This March 2017 article chronicles leading advances in AI, including natural language processing, and cites a University of North Carolina School of Law study suggesting that if all available new legal technology were put in place, firms would experience a 13 percent decline in lawyers» hours.
And Dale Carpenter has an even more provocative view: He suggests that the failed Bork nomination may deter lower - court judges with higher aspirations from citing certain law review articles to avoid association with what may later be regarded as an extreme political position.
The court cited remarks by Edward L. Greenspan in a comment on a panel discussion at a law school in 1984, a criminology article that suggests that the media can be a source of victimization, and even a law review piece about the outrageous farce of the O.J. Simpson trial before the hapless Judge Lance Ito.
Although it is hard to be certain without more publicly available information, FISC judges likely treat their opinions as non-precedential, as is standard practice for federal district courts.19 The relatively few public FISC opinions do cite earlier FISC opinions and principles of law, 20 but we have seen no clear evidence to suggest that the judges feel formally bound by those earlier opinions in any manner that would set them apart from other Article III district courts.
In the article, Rosen — Founder and CEO of background check firm Employment Screening Resources (ESR)-- writes that while the NCLC report suggested «inaccurate criminal background checks are widespread,» the report only cited «a handful of anecdotal stories and some court cases where an inaccurate background check had grave consequences on a consumer's ability to get a job out of the millions of background checks conducted yearly.»
In the article, Rosen writes that while the NCLC report «suggests inaccurate criminal background checks are widespread,» the report only «cites a handful of anecdotal stories and some court cases where an inaccurate background check had grave consequences on a consumer's ability to get a job out of the millions of background checks conducted yearly.»
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