Sentences with phrase «early nature studies»

Moderna Museet and ArkDes are now featuring Kusama in a retrospective exhibition covering her oeuvre from early nature studies to installations that suspend time and space.

Not exact matches

So for her latest study, published earlier this month in the journal Nature Communications, she decided to try a different tack.
1He has also written a specific technical study of Whitehead's earlier philosophy of nature: «The Location of the Physical Objects,» Philosophy, 4 (1929), 64 - 75.
And the Bible Has Much More: For a much more thorough and complete study, in the Bible itself, of God's name, nature, will, power, commandments, and so on, see my titles: By the Power of God (http://www.dickb.com/powerofgod.shtml) and Why Early AA.
Morgan had earlier complained (EEV) about Whitehead's treatment of mind in CN as wholly distinct from nature, and objected to Whitehead's earlier claim that the study of their relations constitutes metaphysics rather than philosophy of science.
His lab has looked at how the nature of stress in parent - child relationships influences child and family function as well asand has the used longitudinal studies to look at the association between parenting styles and children's emotions and behaviors that may contribute to early mental health issues in children.
A new, slightly morbid study based on the calorie counts of average humans suggests that human - eating was mostly ritualistic, not dietary, in nature among hominins including Homo erectus, H. antecessor, Neandertals, and early modern humans.
Last July, for example, a Nature study pushed back the earliest human presence in Australia to at least 65,000 years ago, nearly 20,000 years earlier than previously thought.
And a fourth study in the same issue of Nature, this one focusing on ancient climate, also makes the case for an earlier exodus.
To test this, Shelby Putt, an anthropologist at the Stone Age Institute and Indiana University, compared the brains of modern people making Oldowan and Acheulean tools in a study published earlier this year in Nature Human Behavior.
A drug that ramps up the inflammatory response could help early in the disease, but applying a boost later might make things worse, suggests Yadong Huang, a U.C.S.F. neuroscientist who studies ApoE but was not part of the Nature study.
But a recent analysis of scientific studies in neuroscience, which was published online in Nature Reviews Neuroscience earlier this month, urges caution both in reading the literature and in designing your own experiments.
A study published yesterday in Nature Climate Change showed that early exposure to high levels of CO2 during the larval stage of development had significant negative effects on the fish's size, metabolism and ability to sense threats in their environment.
The early inventors studied the work of Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell, who had formulated a set of equations — «Maxwell's equations» — that expressed the basic laws of electricity and magnetism, but as a purely theoretical exercise in understanding how nature works.
In an earlier study published in Nature Medicine, an international team of scientists discovered that the additional copy of chromosome 21 in Down's syndrome reduces the production of SNX27 in the brain and results in synaptic dysfunction.
A Nature Communications study published in July, however, found evidence the hook - ups began much earlier: roughly 220,000 to 470,000 years ago.
A new study in Nature Climate Change finds that warming and declines in soil moisture, but also vine management practices to lower yields to produce better - quality grapes, brought the fruit to early maturity.
As early as 2007, in a study published in the scientific magazine Nature, Hackermüller, together with a number of colleagues, was able to demonstrate that not only two per cent of the genome is transcribed into RNA — a template which normally serves the production of proteins — but practically the entire genome, even those areas which are completely neglected when looking at blueprints for proteins.
A recent study published earlier this month in Nature Climate Change by University of Georgia demographer Mathew Hauer showed that Florida could lose as many as 2.5 million people to sea - level rise by the end of the century.
But a 2015 study in Nature Geoscience concluded Earth's early rain was made of iron.
In a study published September 22, 2015 in Nature Communications, a team led by Northen used seven bacterial isolates from desert biocrusts, one of them the cyanobacterium Microcoleus vaginatus - sequenced by the DOE JGI — that had been the focus of earlier work.
As early as 1998, the Cooperation Programme in Europe for Research on Nature and Industry through Coordinated University Studies (COPERNICUS) was launched by CRE, the predecessor of the European Universities Association (EUA).
The study appears in the May 22, 2013 early online issue of Nature.
Published in Nature Communications, the study shows that as egg cells mature in older women, paired copies of matching chromosomes often separate from each other at the wrong time, leading to early division of chromosomes and their incorrect segregation into mature egg cells.
The study, published in Nature Communications, shows that some cells that are «born to be bad» could be identified early on, preventing the need for repeated endoscopies.
In a recent study appearing in Nature Publishing Group's Scientific Reports, the researchers focused on the properties of schreibersite and conducted experiments with the mineral to better understand how — in a chemical reaction with the corrosive effects of water called «phosphorylation» — schreibersite could have provided the phosphate important to the emergence of early biological life.
The work, published in Nature Communications today with a concurrent study on H. naledi's hands, provides insight into the skeletal form and function that may have characterized early members of our genus.
* A study published in Nature Climate Change earlier this month suggests that if the UK increased farm yields in line with what experts believe is possible, and turned spared land into forest and wetland, the resulting carbon «sink» could balance out the nation's agricultural emissions by 2050 — in line with government targets.
A September 2008 study in Nature confirmed earlier findings suggesting that 30 percent of people who have a deleted length of three million base pairs in a region of chromosome 22 suffer from psychiatric conditions such as autism and schizophrenia.
In a new study, published online June 6 in Nature, researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine and Moores Cancer Center, together with colleagues at Keio University, the University of Nebraska and Ionis Pharmaceuticals describe an innovative new model that not only allowed them to track drug resistance in vivo, but also revealed a new therapeutic target, which early testing suggests could provide a strategy to arrest pancreatic cancer growth.
In February, Australian and American researchers who compared ocean and climate modeling results with weather observations published findings in Nature Climate Change advancing earlier studies that explored the oscillation's global influence.
In a pilot study in 59 patients, it picked up early - stage pancreatic cancer in more than 90 per cent of cases (Nature Biomedical Engineering, doi.org/bzch).
As their hunting behavior shifts from ice to land, the polar bears «have progressively arrived earlier and earlier to have access to more eggs,» says biologist Børge Moe, another principal author of the study who works at the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research in Kongsfjorden, where seabird egg predation is just beginning to increase.
The new results, published in Nature Geoscience, contradict those previous studies and indicate that tropical sea surface temperatures were warmer during the early - to - mid Pliocene, an interval spanning about 5 to 3 million years ago.
Because tumor growth is a concern when cells are reprogrammed to an earlier stage of development, the researchers followed the mice in the Nature Cell Biology study for nearly a year to look for signs of tumor formation and reported finding none.
In a study published in Nature Communications, they demonstrate for the first time that this rapid evolution was facilitated by earlier hybridization between two distantly related cichlid species from the Upper Nile and Congo drainage systems.
Published this week in the journal Nature, the study reveals the earliest sign of developing autism ever observed — a steady decline in attention to others» eyes within the first two to six months of life.
In their study, published today in the Springer scientific journal «The Science of Nature,» the team of scientists therefore postulates that the evolution of penguins started much earlier than previously thought, probably already during the age of dinosaurs.
Another separate study, detailed in the May 21 issue of the journal Nature, looked at the question of how liquid water might have formed on early Mars.
Listen to the Nature Podcast in which study author María Martinón - Torres explains how the ancient teeth challenge ideas of early human migration here.
A preclinical study in mice, published earlier this week in Nature, showed that a single dose of ZPIV generated an immune response, which protected the mice against subsequent Zika challenge with a Brazilian strain of the virus.
Currently, Cocker Spaniels have been trained to assist scientists and researchers in the study of cancer by sniffing out cancer proteins from different samples.Due to their small and compact size and friendly nature Cocker Spaniels are also trained to be service and therapy dogs.All forms of training for your Cocker Spaniel puppy should start at an early age.
Her paintings from that period of late 60's and early 70's are mainly studies of transparent objects and represent the beginnings of her exploration of nature and essence of light that will occupy her attention throughout her career [2].
Variations: Conversations in and Around Abstract Painting, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, California Painter's Painters: Gifts from Alex Katz, High Museum of Art, Atlanta Georgia Nature Study: A Group Exhibition, Crown Point Press, San Francisco, California Summer Choices: A Group Show, Crown Point Press, San Francisco California Joyride, Marlborough Broome St, New York, New York Capture the Rapture, CB1 Gallery, Los Angeles, California Persian Rose Chartreuse Muse Vancouver Grey, Equinox Gallery, Vancouver, Canada The good, the bad and the ugly, Gesso Artspace, Vienna Austria Another Cats Show, 356 S. Mission Rd, Los Angeles, California Cornucopia, Parkett Exhibition Space, Zurich, Switzerland The Machine Project Field Guide to the Gamble House, Gamble House, Pasadena, California Wake Up Early, Fear Death, curated by Philipp Kaiser.
One of Britain's most original and inventive sculptors, Penelope Curtis, former director of Tate Britain, has described Flanagan as «a maverick figure but a maverick who was absolutely central to the artistic conversation of the 1960s and 70s».2 One of the influential generation of artists studying at St Martin's School of Art in the early to mid-1960s, Flanagan reacted against the formal rigidity of sculpture at that time, challenging the nature of the medium and contributing to a new understanding of the practice.
Turner was born in Kansas City, Missouri and developed an early love of the outdoors through nature studies and high school botany classes.
She studied under the Lithuanian - born sculptor William Zorach, who had made his reputation earlier in the century for what art historian Sam Hunter calls «a new candor about the nature of the artist's materials.»
Her paintings from the late 60s and early 70s, studies of transparent objects, begin a life - long preoccupation with the nature and substance of light.
Such direct contact doesn't guarantee environmental values (see Rick Perry's boyhood), but several studies show that early contact with nature — particularly in the form of self - directed play (see Nancy Wells» studies)-- is pretty much a requirement for long - term, positive environmental values.
Now, a new study in Nature Energy by a young economist at Carnegie Mellon University, finds that the temporary closure of two nuclear plants in the early 1980s led directly to lower birth weights — a key indicator of poor health outcomes later in life [3].
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