Sentences with phrase «fascinating new study»

A fascinating new study delves into how our brains conceive of distance and time and comes to some very strange — but potentially useful — conclusions.
But according to a fascinating new study from Pew, all this hype about information overload might amount to much ado about very little.
In a fascinating new study published in the journal Obesity, researchers found that cutting sugar in children's diets for just ten days caused marked improvements in their metabolic health - despite the fact that the sugar was replaced by other... [Continue reading]
We know that sleep is important for babies to grow healthy and strong, but a fascinating new study has found that sleep also has a powerful impact on infants» ability to remember the names of objects, form categories and sort new similar objects into learned groups.
Fascinating new studies into brain activity and behavioural responses have highlighted the overlap between pathological gambling and drug addiction.
How you motivate yourself may determine how successful you are at a given task, according to a fascinating new study that suggests people who...
A clue to this question rests in a fascinating new study by Steve Cole at the University of California, Los Angeles, and APS Fellow Barbara Fredrickson at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
In a fascinating new study by Robert W. Fairlie and Peter Riley Bahr, they examine the effects of an experiment in which some community college students received free computers and others did not by lottery.
A fascinating new study by University of Maryland analyst Dave Marcotte shows that even the loss of a few instructional days can erode academic performance.
A fascinating new study examines how people overestimate the risks to children based on their moral judgments of a parent's behavior.
This Twitter item leads to a Grist / Climate Desk piece on «Political ideology affects energy - efficiency attitudes and choices,» a fascinating new study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that, in part using light bulb choices, shows how polarization over the merits of cutting greenhouse gas emissions appears to torque the behavior of conservatives away from commonsense energy choices.
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