Sentences with phrase «colleagues published an analysis»

After a workshop on red dwarfs in 2005, Jill Tarter of the SETI Institute — a leading thinker on alien life — and her colleagues published an analysis that convinced many researchers that red dwarfs are worthy targets for Earth hunters.

Not exact matches

It was amid the turmoil of the Great Depression and vast financial losses that Graham (along with colleague David Dodd) published the first edition of Security Analysis.
In the most recent meta - analysis of published studies, Robert Carpenter and colleagues found that the risk of SIDS increases dramatically for young babies when their mothers have consumed 2 units or more of alcohol in the previous 24 hours.
While academics continue to study the subject, a meta - analysis of research on the subject, published in 2006 by researcher Harris Cooper and colleagues, is often cited.
The Yale, UC Berkeley, and UMBC programs are also trying to spell out what they have done so that other schools can replicate their success: Hrabowski and his colleagues, for example, have published a detailed description of their methods, including statistical analyses of their outcomes.
Tessler and colleague Theresa Clark of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas published the first ever analysis attempting to quantify the impact of bouldering on the environment.
The paper, published in the online version of Risk Analysis, a publication of the Society for Risk Analysis, was co-authored by Cova with colleagues Philip E. Dennison, Dapeng Li, and Frank Drews, also of University of Utah, as well as Laura K. Siebeneck of University of North Texas and Michael K. Lindell of University of Washington.
Some of the best support for this contention came in 2012, when researchers at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and their colleagues published a meta - analysis of 29 studies involving nearly 18,000 patients, which found that traditional acupuncture produced a somewhat greater reduction in pain than placebo or sham acupuncture.
Moreover, the entire article is gainsaid by a massive meta - analysis study by Northwestern University psychologist Michael Bailey and his colleagues published in the September issue of the peer - reviewed journal Psychological Science in the Public Interest, showing that «there is considerably more evidence supporting nonsocial causes of sexual orientation than social causes.»
Unfortunately, the journal article which was published in the Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America by Mr Rockwell and his colleagues provides an erroneous, alarmist and editorialised analysis of the sound research that has been conducted regarding the risk of earthquakes around the canal and Panama City.
In a paper published this past February in PLOS ONE, Nick Ashton of the British Museum and his colleagues reported that analysis of the footprints — which show impressions of the arch, ball, heel and toes of several individuals — suggests they were left by a party of five as they walked south along a large river.
Anderson continued to monitor the signals, but it wasn't until late last year that he and five colleagues, including Michael Martin Nieto of Los Alamos, published an exhaustive 50 - page analysis of the Pioneer mystery.
Last year, Devereaux and his colleagues at McMaster, the University of Toronto, and the University at Buffalo published pioneering systematic reviews and meta - analyses of studies comparing the mortality rates of private for - profit hospitals and those of private not - for - profit hospitals (more commonly, although somewhat inaccurately, referred to as «public hospitals» in Canada).
Motyl, Skitka and their colleagues report their analysis in a paper also published in the July Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
Dutil and his colleagues at Dalhousie University describe the results of their analysis this month in the Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy, from AIP Publishing.
In an update to an analysis first published in June 2005, Bufe and colleague David Perkins, a USGS geophysicist also in Denver, argue that the most recent round of large temblors may mark the beginning of a new global outbreak of megaquakes.
THE METHODS For the analysis, Kirsch and his colleagues were reluctant to rely solely on published drug trials.
In their first paper, published in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology in 1997, Schweitzer, Horner, and colleagues reported that spectroscopy and chemical analyses of extracts from a T. rex femur suggested preserved proteins, including a form of collagen abundant in modern animal bones.
Floyd and his colleagues, including Semih Ergintav of the Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute in Istanbul and MIT research scientist Robert Reilinger, have published their seismic analysis in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.
In three separate large analyses published between 2015 and this year, researchers at the University of Sydney and their colleagues compared evidence from dozens of studies to determine how well various pharmaceutical options assuage back pain and found all the drugs lacking.
Flipping the laws was associated with 15 percent fewer gun suicides in Connecticut and 16 percent more in Missouri, a statistical analysis by Webster and colleagues, published last year in Preventive Medicine, estimated.
According to new analyses by Goldfinger and his colleagues, soon to be published in a U.S. Geological Survey report, that quake is just one of 19 such quakes to have slammed the region in the past 10,000 years.
Cleveland and colleagues first used data from published meta - analyses that examined the effect of foods on diseases.
Some confusing comparisons Martin Heller, a research specialist with the Center for Sustainable Systems at the University of Michigan and a colleague, published a similar analysis last year.
These secondary analyses conducted by Unick and colleagues published in the July issue of Obesity, the scientific journal of The Obesity Society examined the association between initial weight loss (first two months of treatment) and long - term weight loss (eight years after initial treatment).
The new study, published in the journal American Antiquity, is one of several recent analyses of the site from researchers at the Illinois State Archaeological Survey at the University of Illinois and their colleagues at other institutions.
Hlusko and her UC Berkeley colleagues — former postdoctoral fellow Christopher Schmitt, now at Boston University, and graduate students Tesla Monson and Marianne Brasil — along with Michael Mahaney of the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley in Brownsville, will publish their analysis this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
In 2012, for example, Willerslev's lab published an analysis of proteins, which are generally longer lived postmortem than genetic material, of 43,000 - year - old woolly mammoth bones.16 And last year, Willerslev, Orlando, and colleagues published a genome - wide nucleosome map and survey of cytosine methylation levels in the DNA they pulled from the 4,000 - year - old hair shafts of a Paleo - Eskimo, effectively launching the field of ancient epigenetics.17 Also last year, Pääbo's group at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology published the first full DNA methylation maps of the Neanderthal and Denisovan genomes.18 «For the first time we'll be able to address what is the role of epigenomics and epigenetics in evolution,» Willerslev says.
«My colleagues at the Ceibal - Petexbatun Archaeological Project will publish additional analyses, and I'm looking forward to finding out if all of the human remains at the site are from the region,» Sharpe said.
Puskas and his colleagues have published an analysis of bilateral vs single grafting at Emory, as well as a proposed metric for when single grafting should be used in the context of patients with diabetes:
Initial results of this study have been published by Kaufmann and colleagues, and additional analyses are underway.
In fact, according to a scholarly 2011 content analysis published in Education Researcher by Andrew Porter and colleagues, the Common Core math standards bear little resemblance to the national curriculum standards in countries with high - achieving math students: «Top - achieving countries for which we had content standards,» these scholars note, «put a greater emphasis on [the category] «perform procedures» than do the U.S. Common Core standards.»
Some colleagues and I recently published an analysis that uses public opinion data to test a series of hypotheses about just that.
In a 1996 meta - analysis published in the Review of Educational Research, Rob Greenwald and his colleagues concluded that «school resources are systematically related to student achievement and that these relations are large enough to be educationally important» and «resource variables that attempt to describe the quality of teachers (teacher ability, teacher education, and teacher experience) show very strong relations with student achievement.»
Recently, a meta - analysis of over 200 studies by Joe Durlak and colleagues published in Child Development found that in schools intentionally implementing comprehensive and continuous social - emotional learning programs, students attitudes toward school and learning improved, they gained an average of over 10 points on standardized academic tests, and their problem behaviors, including violence, diminished.
These young men were also half again as likely to attend college, according to an analysis published last year by University of Minnesota professor Arthur Reynolds and his colleagues (who have been conducting the Child - Parent Center studies for a quarter - century).
It was amid the turmoil of the Great Depression and vast financial losses that Graham (along with colleague David Dodd) published the first edition of Security Analysis.
For example, my colleagues and I published an analysis of the status of government - guaranteed and direct student loans.
Another peer - reviewed study, published by Victoria L. Voith, PhD, DVM, DACVB, and colleagues from the Western University of Health Sciences, originally compared the breed identifications assigned by adoption agencies (shelters and rescue groups) to dogs of unknown parentage with DNA breed analysis of the same dogs.
In April 2011, my colleagues Tony Ingraffea, Renee Santoro, and I published the first comprehensive analysis of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from shale gas obtained by hydraulic fracturing, with a focus on methane emissions, in the journal Climatic Change Letters.
Gabriele C. Hegerl of the University of Edinburgh concurred with Meehl and snipped a line from «Using the Past to Predict the Future,» an analysis of the Schmittner paper that she wrote with a colleague, Tom Russon, and which was published in the same issue of Science:
«A technical comment published in Science on 28 April 2006 points to a specific difference between the original method of Mann and colleagues and the analysis of this method by von Storch et al. (2004).
Early last year, I accepted the journal's invitation to review Recursive Fury, a narrative analysis of blog posts published by climate deniers * in response to Lewandowsky's earlier work in which he and his colleagues showed that endorsement of free - market economics and a propensity for conspiratorial thinking are contributing factors in the rejection of science.
I personally published what was wrong (with) my own original 1971 cooling hypothesis a few years later when more data and better models came along and further analysis showed [anthropogenic global warming] as the much more likely... In fact, for me that is a very proud event — to have discovered with colleagues why our initial assumptions were unlikely and better ones reversed the conclusions — an early example of scientific skepticism in action in climatology.»
Our initial work was not the final word on the matter, but it stimulated follow - up research by an economist from the UK, Mark Freeman, who together with colleagues Gernot Wagner and Richard Zeckhauser from Harvard's Kennedy School, published a more extensive mathematical analysis of the problem that came to roughly the same conclusions.
Hsiang was Lead Economist for the 2014 analysis Economic Risks of Climate Change: An American Prospectus, the scientific analysis behind the Risky Business report published by Michael Bloomberg, Hank Paulson, Thomas Steyer and colleagues.
I would add to Robert's analysis a reference to a comment by a former American colleague, who said that the major legal publishers had «lost their faith» in publishing legal information.
You, as a law school professor, can publish and urge your colleagues to publish and speak in several venues about analyses of the cause of the problem, and the responsibility of those accountable for its solution, including law societies, and governments and lawyers who have failed to hold law societies to account for their refusal to try to solve the problem.
This new meta - analysis seeks to update and expand both Gini and Pozzoli's and Reijntjes and colleagues» meta - analyses3, 12 by (1) including the subsequently published studies that allowed to estimate the risk for psychosomatic problems in children and adolescents who are bullied by peers (ie, cases) compared with nonbullied peers (ie, controls), (2) performing separate meta - analyses of longitudinal and cross-sectional studies, and (3) testing for potential moderators of variation in the magnitude of effect sizes.
Recently, a meta - analysis of over 200 studies by Joe Durlak and colleagues published in Child Development found that in schools intentionally implementing comprehensive and continuous social - emotional learning programs, students attitudes toward school and learning improved, they gained an average of over 10 points on standardized academic tests, and their problem behaviors, including violence, diminished.
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