Sentences with phrase «colleagues decided»

The Faculty of Law at the University of Ottawa is known for its expertise in social justice and in my experience many of my colleagues decided to attend this institution for this reason.
Hansen told reporters during a press call on Monday that he and he colleagues decided to publish the paper in an open access, open peer review journal to ensure the results were available to international leaders ahead of the Paris climate treaty talks in December.
That's one of the reasons Temkin and her colleagues decided to stage the exhibition: to remind the public of a time when artists sought to reinvent a shattered world, and art - making assumed a heroic, mythic stature.
After experiencing excellent student learning outcomes and presenting her research findings at a school - wide forum, several of Aija's colleagues decided to try that methodology in their reading instruction as well.
She and her colleagues decided to solicit geography presentations from classrooms both in the United States and across the world, reaching out to teachers through social media, particularly Twitter.
Rep. Hoskins and his colleagues decided not to bring the bill up for a vote on the floor.
Avigan and his colleagues decided to create a vaccine that would teach the immune system to find and attack leukemia cells.
Langer, Brusatte and several of their colleagues decided to tackle this problem head on.
Fink and his colleagues decided to pitch HP Chief Executive Officer Meg Whitman on the idea of assembling all this technology to form the Machine.
Edward Holmes, professor of biology at the University of Sydney, and his Australian colleagues decided to confront this mystery head on.
Since female athletes» hormones fluctuate across the menstrual cycle, Tenan and his colleagues decided to investigate whether these changes affect motor unit activity.
So, Voci and his colleagues decided to enlist the help of SiREM's Dehalococcoides bacteria.
Since other research has suggested that exercise can remodel the immune system, making it more effective at fighting disease in general, Bilek and her colleagues decided to investigate how exercise affects the immune system of cancer patients.
Torkamani and colleagues decided to examine whether iPSCs additionally retain signs of the age of their somatic progenitor cells.
Linda Griffith, PhD, the MIT School of Engineering Professor of Teaching Innovation, a professor of biological engineering and mechanical engineering, and her colleagues decided to pursue a technology that they call a «physiome on a chip.»
So Stephen Conley of the University of California - Davis and his colleagues decided to measure natural - gas levels in the air downwind of the leak.
A few years ago, Kaptchuk and colleagues decided to take placebos «out of the trash bag of biomedicine» for a study on irritable bowel syndrome.
To solve this dilemma, Fan and colleagues decided to compare real - life summer storm clouds to a computer model that zooms deep into simulated clouds.
He and his colleagues decided to study how zebrafish regenerate tissue, looking for ways to activate this process in humans.
In our international newsroom, some of our Chinese colleagues decided to spread the joy, and taught our non-Chinese friends the tradition song «Gong Xi Gong Xi.»
So Chen and colleagues decided to see if they could design peptoids to make them more lipid - like.
Yasseri and his Oxford colleagues decided to formally analyze the data and built an algorithm that parsed data on all pages on aircraft crashes in Wikipedia's two most popular language versions, English and Spanish.
Wettlaufer and his colleagues decided to look for exoplanets in the same way they had sorted through satellite data to find complex changes in Arctic sea ice.
So Marco Falasca of the University College London Sackler Institute in the United Kingdom and colleagues decided to put IP5 to the test.
Noah Fierer of the University of Colorado at Boulder and his colleagues decided to get an idea of how such a community might look for the Midwest tallgrass prairies — once a highly productive, lush landscape now degraded thanks to intense farming.
Tzay - Ming Hong at the National Tsing Hua University in Taiwan and his colleagues decided to investigate curling scrolls after a trip to the National Palace Museum in Taipei, where they talked to art conservationists about ways to use physics to protect hanging scrolls.
To bypass farming, University of California, Berkeley, chemical engineer Jay Keasling and colleagues decided to harness the synthetic powers of microorganisms.
And given its role in modulating social interactions, she and her colleagues decided the striatum would be a logical brain region to test.
So Bohs and colleagues decided to try to find more specimens.
Holger Hennig, a physicist at the Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self - Organization in Göttingen, Germany, and colleagues decided to analyze the technique of prolific drummer Jeff Porcaro, one of the more famous musicians most people have never heard of.
Rather than wait for the results of that study, Reiman says that he and his colleagues decided to conduct the two trials simultaneously to ensure that any positive results from the Colombian study can be quickly tested into a more representative population — drugs that work for people with early - onset Alzheimer's might not necessarily help those with late - onset Alzheimer's, he says.
Lacking that epidemiological data in the field, Meyer and his colleagues decided to explore the multiple - hit hypothesis in mice.
Park and colleagues decided to test this directly in a second experiment with 171 university students.
Jeffery and her colleagues decided to look at how they respond to changes in altitude.
To test that idea, he, Powers, and colleagues decided to apply a version of the 1890s experiment to four different groups: healthy people, people with psychosis who don't hear voices, people with schizophrenia (a subtype of psychosis) who do, and people — such as self - described psychics — who regularly hear voices but don't find them disturbing.
So he and colleagues decided to look for another source of nitrogen.
Taking a slightly different tack, Ellena Peterson of the University of California, Irvine, and her colleagues decided to look for signs of infection elsewhere in the body of MS patients.
Instead of focusing on those edges of a species range, Jonathan Lenoir, a plant ecologist at the Paris Institute of Technology in France, and colleagues decided to examine what climate change was doing to optimum ranges — the zones where most of a population lived — for plants in the mountain forests of western France.
So Hariyama and colleagues decided to create artificial nano - suits.
So he and his colleagues decided to see how much of a problem human hunters are in other parts of the world.
Knowing this, Dr. Soliman and colleagues decided to search the DNA of ALTS patients for specific changes in genes associated with scarring and wound healing.
Gage, Hetzer, Mertens and colleagues decided to try another approach, turning to an even newer technique that lets them directly convert skin cells to neurons, creating what's called an induced neuron.
Cosmologist Hiranya Peiris of University College London and colleagues decided to test for a multiverse by examining the cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation, a remnant of the big bang that provides a map of what the universe looked like some 380,000 years into its existence.
So ecologist Henry Adams, a doctoral candidate at the University of Arizona (U.A.) in Tucson, and his colleagues decided to test the effect of higher average temperatures on the pinyon, Pinus edulis.
Geneticist Chris Tyler - Smith from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Hinxton, U.K., and his colleagues decided to find out how the mutated gene spread around the world.
As part of a project spearheaded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Griffith and her colleagues decided to pursue a technology that they call a «physiome on a chip,» which they believe could offer a way to model potential drug effects more accurately and rapidly.
So Lozier and his colleagues decided to apply ecological niche modelling to an obviously false data set — Sasquatch sightings.
Several months later he and some colleagues decided to enhance their knowledge by staging a simulated crime.
So Patryk Cieslak, a PhD student at AGH University of Science and Technology in Cracow, Poland, and colleagues decided to take a different approach.
To find out, Scarf and his colleagues decided to give the same test to three pigeons.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z