Sentences with phrase «cites findings from a study»

The article, exploring the pros and cons of virtual work, cites findings from a study concluding that home - based workers were not only happier, but were less inclined to quit.
This will make China a main driver for the global wine market shift as consumption growth in the next few years will be mainly coming from China - led Asia pacific countries and the US, Guillaume Deglise, CEO of Vinexpo said, citing findings from a study conducted by Vinexpo with IWSR for the global wine and spirits market overview from 2016 to 2020.
You've probably read several articles citing findings from a study done by The Ladders.

Not exact matches

Hoffman cites a staggering figure from a Deloitte study that found only 8 percent of organizations said annual performance reviews were worth the effort they require.
Levy cites a 2009 study based on data from the American Time Use survey, which found that each minute spent commuting translates into a 0.22 minute sleep time reduction.
«It's definitely cheaper to promote from within,» she says, citing a 2011 University of Pennsylvania study that found external hires took two years to catch up to the performance level of an internal hire.
The author's final chapters lay great stress on the work of the Holy Spirit in Christian healing; and many of the verses from the Bible that early AAs studied can be found cited by Hickson in these chapters — verses from the Gospels, from Acts, from James, from Corinthians, from Ephesians — and others dealing with the «gifts of healing.»
As evidence, she pointed to a 2011 study in the United Kingdom which found that three - quarters of the 6,000 young adults ages 18 to 22 years interviewed about their experiences in sports earlier in adolescence reported at least 1 incident of emotional harm playing sports, one third of whom identified their coach as the main source of harm, and to a 2005 study - one which I cited in my 2006 book, Home Team Advantage (Harper Collins), and in articles adapted from that book for MomsTEAM.com - finding that 45 % of children reported verbal misconduct by coaches, including name - calling and insulting them during play.
Citing a 2010 study finding that patients who had at least two 2 rehabilitation visits for persistent dizziness after a concussion showed improvement in their DHI scores (2), the study said that on - field identification of dizziness could lead to earlier implementation of vestibular rehabiliation and other modalities to treat dizziness, which may expedite recovery from concussion.
The researchers cite studies that found a number of benefits for premature babies from delaying clamping for 30 seconds to a minute.
She cites a 2012 study in Pakistan that found the practices from Aamir's time continue, with health workers being targeted.
They cite a study from the Institute for Taxation and Economic Policy, which finds the GOP plan would cause 23 percent of New York taxpayers making $ 65,900 to $ 111,100 to see an average tax increase of $ 460, and 42 percent of taxpayers making between $ 111,100 and $ 240,900 to see an average tax increase of $ 1,960 next year.
The superintendents cite a study from the fiscal watchdog group the Empire Center, which finds that if just 250 of the highest income New Yorkers leave the state due to the resulting higher taxes, the state could lose $ 500 million in revenue.
In an effort to find out, Stephen P. Juraschek, M.D., Ph.D., research and clinical fellow in general internal medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and his colleagues used data from the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) clinical trial, a widely popular and often - cited study whose results were first published in 1997.
The study cites the 1969 case of a British dockworker bitten by an unknown insect while unloading peanuts from Nigeria, and who was subsequently infected by Le Dantec virus, a relative of the virus Goldberg and his colleagues found in abundance in the bat flies they sampled.
The Organic Consumers Association cites several other studies with similar findings: A Kushi Institute analysis of nutrient data from 1975 to 1997 found that average calcium levels in 12 fresh vegetables dropped 27 percent; iron levels 37 percent; vitamin A levels 21 percent, and vitamin C levels 30 percent.
The remaining 27 % became detached from the institution in their original country after moving and were the most highly cited, the study finds.
However, scientists are not sure if the ozone hole can heal itself, BBC reported, citing David Vaughan from the British Antarctic Survey, who reportedly called for cautious optimism in reacting to the data, and added that numbers from a BAS study could help confirm the WMO's findings.
Much of the concern about mold in coffee comes from a frequently cited study which found 91.7 % of green coffee bean sampled (Coffea arabica from Brazil) to be contaminated with mold (Martins, Food Addit Contam 2003).
«Rice - based infant cereals are often the first solid food that babies eat,» the Consumer Reports article said, and cited a 2008 study from U.K. researchers that found 20 - ounce packets of dried infant rice cereal contained 60 to 160 ppb of inorganic arsenic.
To support their algorithm, Pheramor cites a famous 1998 study — appropriately called the «sweaty T - shirt experiment» — that found that women were more attracted to the scent of men who had the greatest genetic difference from them on a specific chromosome.
[2] We also cited a study from Arizona that found that charter schools within one traditional public school district pulled students from 21 distinct districts.
The editorial cites a new study by the California Charter Schools Association which studied the state's Academic Performance Index (API), which runs on a scale from 200 to 1000, and found that, according to the Journal,
The most commonly cited school choice review, by economists Cecilia Rouse and Lisa Barrow, declares that it will focus on the evidence from existing experimental studies but then leaves out four such studies (three of which reported positive choice effects) and includes one study that was non-experimental (and found no significant effect of choice).
He also cites Mathematica's recent Access, Participation, Eligibility, and Certification (APEC) study, which found that most error results from households» misreporting of eligibility information on their applications (Ponza et al. 2007).
(check the facts, Winter 2010), David Bass presents evidence of substantial error in students» eligibility for free or reduced - price school meals through the National School Lunch Program (NSLP), citing a recent Mathematica study that found most errors result from misreporting of household income.
Scott Milliman and I found, after correcting for this and other errors, that one of the key studies cited by the AFT as alleging racial concentration in charter schools in fact found charter schools no more segregated than district schools, with the notable exception of those charters that had converted from private schools.
We cite a 2012 study in the Economics of Education Review by David Stuit of Basis Policy Research and Thomas Smith of Vanderbilt, using data from 2004, which found that teacher turnover in charters was double that found in traditional public schools (24 % vs. 12 %) and seeks to explain why that is the case.
Preliminary findings from our own first - of - its - kind Early Learning Study at Harvard (ELS @H) indicate at least a third of parents cite education and academic skills as their biggest worry for their preschoolers» futures.
A recent report from the Learning Policy Institute, a research and policy organization in Palo Alto, cites studies that found «that teachers of color boost the academic performance of students of color,» on measures such as improved reading and math scores, graduation rates and greater aspirations to attend college.
In all but one of the studies cited by EdChoice, researchers found some sort of gain for public schools facing competition from vouchers or tax - credit scholarships.
In support of this, he cites a recent Harvard study,» Evaluating Newark's Education Reforms,» that finds more than half of the significant English language arts (ELA) gains in Newark over the past five years can be attributed to students opting for a new or different school, as opposed to benefiting from improvements in their existing school.
Typical is a posting on the NY Times Economix blog which cites a study from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development which finds a lag between teacher wages and those of other college grads.
Indeed this is true, although the correlations they observed, as aligned with what is increasingly becoming a saturated finding in the literature (see similar findings about the Marzano observational framework here; see similar findings from other studies here, here, and here; see also other studies as cited by authors of this study on p. 13 - 14 here), is that the magnitude and practical significance of these correlations are «very weak» (e.g., r =.18) to «moderate» (e.g., r =.45,.46, and.48).
But Ms. Weingarten, the union leader, cited another study this year from the Center for Research on Education Outcomes — also at Stanford — that looked at charters in 16 states and found that half did no better than traditional schools, and more than a third performed worse.
Mike's work, like that of previous award winners, is diverse, and includes pioneering and highly cited work in time series analysis (an elegant use of Thomson's multitaper spectral analysis approach to detect spatiotemporal oscillations in the climate record and methods for smoothing temporal data), decadal climate variability (the term «Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation» or «AMO» was coined by Mike in an interview with Science's Richard Kerr about a paper he had published with Tom Delworth of GFDL showing evidence in both climate model simulations and observational data for a 50 - 70 year oscillation in the climate system; significantly Mike also published work with Kerry Emanuel in 2006 showing that the AMO concept has been overstated as regards its role in 20th century tropical Atlantic SST changes, a finding recently reaffirmed by a study published in Nature), in showing how changes in radiative forcing from volcanoes can affect ENSO, in examining the role of solar variations in explaining the pattern of the Medieval Climate Anomaly and Little Ice Age, the relationship between the climate changes of past centuries and phenomena such as Atlantic tropical cyclones and global sea level, and even a bit of work in atmospheric chemistry (an analysis of beryllium - 7 measurements).
One example Engelder cited is this piece from Salon: «Confirmed: Fracking can pollute» — which jumps from an initial finding and related (untested) hypothesis about drilling risk to a definitive statement (talk about «single - study syndrome «-RRB-.
In Reinventing Fire (RF), Lovins et al cite 2 studies finding transportation sector rebounds at 3 and 22 percent, but ultimately exclude transportation rebounds from their analysis (Sorrell 2007's survey and the European Commission's review find transpo rebound between 10 and 30 percent; Gavankar and Geyer 2010 identify long - term rebounds between 20 and 65 percent).
Coldish — Regarding climate sensitivity, and the current estimates that typically cite a range from 2 to 4.5 C for doubled CO2 as the most probable in light of available evidence, please see my response to Ron Cram above, including my suggestions for finding references to dozens of studies on this topic.
Derrick Sontag apparently only cited a range of debunked studies (the «Spanish» study and the flawed Beacon Hill report) and information from Koch - funded interests like the Institute for Energy Research and «State Budget Solutions,» a project of several State Policy Network groups including ALEC and the Mercatus Center, a think tank founded and heavily - funded by the Kochs.
The study found that more than 4,000 nursing home managers from across the country cited Joint Commission nursing home accreditation as being beneficial for patient safety.
Boyd begins the paper by citing the preliminary findings from the CRILF's 2016 study on Canadian perceptions of polyamory.
He starts out by citing a JAMA study from early 2016 that found voice assistants mostly lacking when asked about some basic physical and mental health situations.
Lamb, a well - known and credible researcher (although he has written soft papers like this article all too often since, apparently, being given fatherhood promotion marching orders from the federal government), squirrels out of being called on his sleight of hand by setting up as his precursor alibi, that he did this in this article in this way (without citation to supportive research findings) in order to «facilitate readability» and that «readers can study the cited articles for references to the primary literature.»
In a widely cited study, Professor William Hampes examined the relationship between humor and trust among 89 college undergraduates ranging in age from 16 to 54 and found a significant correlation.
A study by Notarius and Buongiorno, cited by Dr. John Gottman, found that the average couple waits six years from the time problems develop to seek counseling.
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