In fact, a large
experimental study published in the BMC Endocrine Disorders journal reported that all subjects with benign or malignant thyroid disease had low levels of antioxidants, particularly with selenium, zinc, and vitamin C.
The results of a recent
experimental study published in the March 2016 issue of Developmental Psychology found that not only what we say but how we say it may affect the development of emotional traits of a child starting at a very young age.
Not exact matches
The
study, which was
published in the September issue of Journal of
Experimental Social Psychology, also indicated that one's perception of available time led powerful people to be, in general, less stressed.
Even if you have the willpower to ignore the constant tones and alert lights in the background, the sound can still impair your concentration, according to a
study published in the Journal of
Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance.
«A
study published last year in
Experimental Brain Research appeared to provide some partial scientific support for this idea,» notes BPS, explaining that brain scans of experienced long - distance runners revealed running really does seem to reduce activity in certain key brain areas.
In response to «Effects of Energy Drinks Mixed with Alcohol on Behavioral Control: Risks for College Students Consuming Trendy Cocktails,» a
study to be
published in the July issue of Alcoholism: Clinical &
Experimental Research, Dr. Maureen Storey, senior vice president of science policy for the American Beverage Association, issued the following statement:
Published in the Journal of
Experimental Medicine online Oct. 31, the new
study found that infliximab prevents TNF alpha from speeding the death of Paneth cells, which protect the gut from microbes.
The
study, Increase in pollen sensitization in Swedish adults and protective effect of keeping animals in childhood, was
published in the scientific journal, Clinical and
Experimental Allergy on June 6.
People with an uncommon form of cystic fibrosis started gaining weight and were better able to breathe than their untreated counterparts after just two weeks on an
experimental drug, according to a
study published November 2 in The New England Journal of Medicine.
The
Studies «The
Experimental Induction of Out - of - Body Experiences» by H. Henrik Ehrsson and «Video Ergo Sum: Manipulating Bodily Self - Consciousness» by Bigna Lenggenhager et al., both
published in the August 24, 2007, issue of Science.
The
study, «Trans - generational transmission of the effect of gestational ethanol exposure on ethanol use - related behavior,» was
published Feb. 15 in Alcoholism: Clinical and
Experimental Research.
The research, which was
published online in the Journal of
Experimental Psychology: General, is the first
study to find this relationship between happiness and experiencing desired emotions, even when those emotions are unpleasant, Tamir said.
In the
study,
published recently in the Journal of
Experimental Psychology: General, college - age students and adults aged 60 to 90 performed timed tests of word recognition and recall.
Frequent, low - dose chemotherapy regimens avoid this effect and may therefore be more effective at treating certain types of breast and pancreatic cancer, according to the murine
study «Metronomic chemotherapy prevents therapy - induced stromal activation and induction of tumor - initiating cells,» which will be
published online November 23 in The Journal of
Experimental Medicine.
«If this
study is representative of the medical cannabis market, we may have hundreds of thousands of patients buying cannabis products that are mislabeled,» says
experimental psychologist Ryan Vandrey, Ph.D., an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and lead author of a report on the
study published June 23 in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The new
study, using an
experimental mouse model of diabetes, is
published online in the journal PLOS One.
The
study, «AKR1B1 promotes basal - like breast cancer progression by a positive feedback loop that activates the EMT program,» which has been
published in The Journal of
Experimental Medicine, suggests that an inhibitor of this enzyme currently used to treat diabetes patients could be an effective therapy for this frequently deadly form of cancer.
The
study, which will be
published March 7 in the Journal of
Experimental Medicine, suggests that CDK2 inhibitors prevent the death of inner ear cells, which has the potential to save the hearing of millions of people around the world.
An early - stage clinical
study by another institution,
published in the Lancet Oncology in May 2016, combined chemotherapy with an
experimental drug that blocks CCR2, a receptor on monocytes and macrophages whose activation stimulates these cells to infiltrate tumors.
The Rutgers scientists coauthored a
study — «Evolution Alters the Consequences of Invasions in
Experimental Communities» — that was
published recently in Nature Ecology & Evolution.
Two new
studies published in the journals Proceedings of the Royal Society B and The Journal of
Experimental Biology show that lungfish and salamanders can hear, despite not having an outer ear or tympanic middle ear.
In investigating how this spike occurred, Narula pored through dozens of
published studies and noticed a discrepancy between some
experimental results and the widely accepted view of the interactions between two key players in the sporulation network, a protein called Spo0F and a kinase called KinA.
The
study, which will be
published March 6 in the Journal of
Experimental Medicine, suggests ways to improve the ability of laser surgery to remove unwanted tattoos.
The
study,
published online last week in the Journal of the Federation of American Societies for
Experimental Biology, is the first to demonstrate that PQQ can protect offspring of obese mothers from acceleration of obesity - induced liver disease.
An
experimental drug designed to help regulate the blood's iron supply shows promise as a viable first treatment for anemia of inflammation, according to results from the first human
study of the treatment
published online today in Blood, the Journal of the American Society of Hematology
In a recent
study published in the scientific journal Nature Nanotechnology, physicists and chemists of the University of Münster (Germany) describe an
experimental approach to visualising structures of organic molecules with exceptional resolution.
A serious problem in the Turing test for computer intelligence is exposed in a
study published in the Journal of
Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence.
The results of a
study recently
published by the Journal of
Experimental Child Psychology show that bilingual children are better than monolinguals at a certain type of mental control, and that those children with more practice switching between languages have even greater skills.
The
study, «Anti-TNF drives regulatory T cell expansion by paradoxically promoting membrane TNF - TNF - RII binding in rheumatoid arthritis,» which will be
published online June 6 in The Journal of
Experimental Medicine, may help explain the divergent efficacies of different TNF - targeting drugs.
In a
study led by Duke Health and
published in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and
Experimental Research, scientists demonstrate in rats that a short duration of the drug donepezil can reverse both structural and genetic damage that bouts of alcohol use causes in neurons, or nerve cells, in the young brain.
In the new
study,
published in the Journal of
Experimental Medicine, the scientists found that it is also involved in how cells in the immune system develop with age.
The technique, which is described in the
study «Detection of interferon - protein reveals differential levels and cellular sources in disease»
published April 18 in The Journal of
Experimental Medicine, will aid the diagnosis and treatment of numerous autoimmune diseases, including systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and dermatomyositis.
Findings of the new
study by sensory and evolutionary biologists at the University of Lincoln, UK, in collaboration with teams in Canada and France, have been
published in the Journal of
Experimental Biology.
It's unclear exactly why this is, they write in their
study,
published in Alcoholism: Clinical and
Experimental Research, but they speculate that it's because drinkers become less aware of their intoxication when they mix caffeine and alcohol.
An
experimental drug that protected monkeys from the deadly Marburg virus appears to have potential for treating people who have been exposed to the virus, according to a
study published in the July 23 edition of The New England Journal of Medicine.
In order to answer the question if animals are capable of mental time travel, the researchers relied on
published experimental studies and matched the results with their model.
The
study was
published in the December issue of
Experimental Hematology, the official publication of the Society for Hematology and Stem Cells, and also highlighted in the journal's editorial due to its significance in the biology and treatment of blood cancer.
Experimental evidence confirms what surveys have long suggested: Physicians are more likely to prescribe antibiotics when they believe there is a high expectation of it from their patients, even if they think the probability of bacterial infection is low and antibiotics would not be effective, according to a
study published by the American Psychological Association.
In a preliminary
study published in The Quarterly Journal of
Experimental Psychology, researchers from the Department of Psychology at Cambridge found an association between high body mass index (BMI) and poorer performance on a test of episodic memory.
In the first
study,
published in the March issue of the Journal of
Experimental Social Psychology, 45 participants were told they would have to ask 10 strangers, either in person or via e-mail, to complete a survey for no pay.
Now two
studies published in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and
Experimental Research suggest that they may in fact share similar mechanistic pathways in the brain.
In the
study,
published today in the Journal of
Experimental Psychology: Animal Learning and Cognition, all of the squirrels showed clear improvement over successive attempts with the box, becoming more efficient in adjusting their behaviour to adapt to the task.
A
study published today inThe Journal of
Experimental Biology reveals how the creature puts on its colorful show: by flexing its muscles.
When Chinese soft - shelled turtles (Pelodiscus sinensis) need to relieve themselves, they just open wide, according to a
study published online today in The Journal of
Experimental Biology.
Bohannon also noted that a 2015
study of reproducibility in psychology, which found that «60 % of the 100
experimental results failed to replicate» and was «cautiously welcomed by the research community,... has... been called into question» in a Technical Comment
published in this week's issue of Science.
The
study, which was
published in the Journal of
Experimental Psychology, was undertaken by Dr. Arik Cheshin from the Department of Human Services at the University of Haifa, together with an international team of researchers from the United States and the Netherlands, headed by Prof. Peter Kim of the University of Southern California.
But a much cited
study,
published in 1984 in the journal Science by environmental psychologist Roger Ulrich, now at Texas A&M University, was the first to use the standards of modern medical research — strict
experimental controls and quantified health outcomes — to demonstrate that gazing at a garden can sometimes speed healing from surgery, infections and other ailments.
In
study results recently
published online in
Experimental Neurology, breathing function improved in patients after gene therapy, compared to a period of treatment with breathing exercises before the gene therapy.
A junk food diet can cause as much damage to the kidney as diabetes, according to a
study published in
Experimental Physiology.
An
experimental drug prevented learning deficits in young mice exposed repeatedly to anesthesia, according to a
study led by researchers from NYU Langone Medical Center and
published June 22 in Science Translational Medicine.