That's
the finding of a new study published in the Journal of Marketing Research: «Healthy Choice: The Effect of Simplified Point - of - Sale Nutritional Information on Consumer Food Choice Behavior,» co-authored by Hristina Nikolova, the Coughlin Assistant Professor of Marketing at the Carroll School of Management at Boston College and J. Jeffrey Inman, Associate Dean for Research and Faculty and the Albert Wesley Frey Professor of Marketing at the University of Pittsburgh Joseph M. Katz Graduate School of Business.
That's
the finding of a new study published on Thursday in Science, which uses updated information about how temperature is recorded, particularly at sea, to take a second look at the global average temperature.
That's
the finding of a new study published on Thursday in Science, which uses updated information about how temperature is recorded, particularly at sea, to take a second look at the global
That's the surprising
finding of a new study published in the Economics of Education Review.
Not exact matches
A
new study published in the New England Journal of Medicine finds that Valeant Pharmaceuticals» infamous price hikes for a pair of heart drugs called nitroprusside and isoproterenol — whose prices were increased by 310 % and 720 %, respectively — had significant downstream effects on patient ca
new study published in the
New England Journal of Medicine finds that Valeant Pharmaceuticals» infamous price hikes for a pair of heart drugs called nitroprusside and isoproterenol — whose prices were increased by 310 % and 720 %, respectively — had significant downstream effects on patient ca
New England Journal
of Medicine
finds that Valeant Pharmaceuticals» infamous price hikes for a pair
of heart drugs called nitroprusside and isoproterenol — whose prices were increased by 310 % and 720 %, respectively — had significant downstream effects on patient care.
Decades
of research, including a
new study published in December in the Journal
of the American Medical Association, has failed to
find substantial evidence that vitamins and supplements do any significant good.
I'm not alone in having a hard time hearing what my gut has to say when I'm already anxious, something a
new study published in Clinical Psychological Science supports: researchers from the University
of Basel and the Berlin Psychological University
found that anxiety may impair your ability to listen to your intuition.
A recent
study published in the Journal
of Consumer Research
found that people who were asked to think about the past were willing to pay more for products than those who were asked to think about
new or future memories; another experiment showed an increased willingness to give more money to others after recalling a nostalgic event.
You don't have to drastically change your diet in order to add years to your life,
finds a
new study published in the New England Journal of Medici
new study published in the
New England Journal of Medici
New England Journal
of Medicine.
A 2016 review
of 130
studies in 10 countries,
published in Epidemiologic Reviews,
found that
new legal restrictions on owning and purchasing guns tended to be followed by a drop in gun violence — a strong indicator that restricting access to firearms can save lives.
The research supports gun control: A 2016 review
of 130
studies in 10 countries,
published in Epidemiologic Reviews,
found that
new legal restrictions on owning and purchasing guns tended to be followed by a drop in gun violence — a strong indicator that restricting access to guns can save lives.
The
findings of the ComRes
study commissioned by Christian Aid have been
published ahead
of the Budget on Wednesday, which is expected to include
new measures against tax avoidance following further revelations made in the Paradise Papers.
A
new study published in The Lancet medical journal has
found a link to heightened stress and a greater risk
of heart disease and stroke within three to four years.
Not only are graduate theological schools producing more theses and dissertations on Wesleyan subjects, but Methodist periodicals (Quarterly Review, Methodist History, Proceedings
of the Wesley Historical Society) are increasingly printing their articles, and
new publishing enterprises are emerging to take up their longer monographic works (among these are Zondervan's Francis Asbury Press imprint, Abingdon's Kingswood Books imprint, and Asbury Theological Seminary's
new series in Pietist and Wesleyan
Studies) These scholars are quite likely to be
found in the Wesley
Studies Working Group
of the American Academy
of Religion.
A
new study,
published in the British Journal
of Nutrition
finds clear nutritional differences between organic and non-organic milk and meat.
A
study of almost 1,300 East Coast hospitals
published Tuesday in the September issue
of Archives
of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine
found that 94 percent distributed free samples
of infant formula to
new mothers, despite opposition from a number
of medical and public health organizations.
A
new study out
of the University
of Michigan and
published in this month's the American Journal
of Human Biology
found that men experience significant hormonal shifts as they become fathers.
A
new study published in the Journal
of the American College
of Nutrition
found that children who dash out the door without eating breakfast are more likely to miss out on calcium and not make up for it at other meals.
A
new study published in the Journal
of the Academy
of Nutrition and Dietetics (subscription only)
finds that home - packed lunches are nutritionally lacking, as compared to school food.
A small
new study published Friday highlights just how damaging it can be for mothers» mental health when those breastfeeding goals and realities don't line up,
finding that many women who stopped breastfeeding before six months were at greater risk
of depressive symptoms in the postpartum period.
Hat tip to Dana Woldow for sharing with me a
new Reuters article casting doubt on a recent, much - heralded
study published in the Journal
of the American Medical Association (summarized on TLT) which had
found a 43 % drop in obesity among children ages... [Continue reading]
Hat tip to Dana Woldow for sharing with me a
new Reuters article casting doubt on a recent, much - heralded
study published in the Journal
of the American Medical Association (summarized on TLT) which had
found a 43 % drop in obesity among children ages 2 to 5 over an eight year period.
Experts estimate that one in four
new fathers becomes depressed after the birth
of their child, and a 2014
study published in Pediatrics
found that depression among
new dads increases by 68 percent during the first five years
of baby's life.
A
new study published in the Journal
of Early Adolescence
found that dads are in a unique position to instill persistence and hope in their children, particularly in the pre-teen and teen years.
«The guidelines are largely based on dramatic
findings from a large
study published in the
New England Journal
of Medicine in 2015.
A
new study,
published in the Journal
of Pediatrics, has
found that parents who have a hard time getting their toddlers to sleep at night also often have trouble getting their children to eat balanced meals.
Also
of note, this
new peer - reviewed paper was
published not long after another
study found that methane is also an issue even where no natural gas development is occurring in northeastern Pennsylvania.
Most recently, in a report
published in January by researchers from McGill University, an analysis
of New York City, Newark and
New Jersey between September 2014 and August 2017
found that the median tenant within the
study's area was paying $ 380 more in rent due to a decrease in housing stock caused by Airbnb's operations.
This is the key
finding from a
new report
published today by the Institute
of Alcohol
Studies (UK) and the Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education — FARE (Australia).
A
new paper
published by scientists in the Northeast
finds that long - term
studies at the local scale are needed to accurately predict and manage the effects
of climate change.
The article
published in Politico on May 14th revealed that Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt, the White House, and Department
of Defense sought to block the release
of a
study into PFAS chemicals like PFOA and PFOS, which have been
found in
New York communities like Hoosick Falls, Petersburgh and Newburgh, and Bennington, Vermont.
A
study published last year by Vanderbilt Law
found that 84 percent
of claims filed in
New York's state courts are settled.
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.
One
of these
studies,
published in the Annals
New York Academy
of Sciences,
found that poor linguistic ability early in life is associated with a risk
of developing dementia later on.
A
new study published in PLOS ONE confirms this,
finding that performance gaps between male and female students increased or decreased based on whether instructors emphasized or de-emphasized the value
of exams.
A groundbreaking
study by Suthana and colleagues,
published in 2012 the
New England Journal
of Medicine,
found that people performed better on a memory task if their entorhinal cortex — a brain hub for memory and navigation — was given a low jolt
of electricity during the task.
«In 2001, the
New England Journal
of Medicine
published an important meta - analysis
study that
found placebo effects to be insignificant.
As CRISPR - Cas9 starts to move into clinical trials, a
new study published in Nature Methods has
found that the gene - editing technology can introduce hundreds
of unintended mutations into the genome.
The idea to specifically
study this group
of patients was based on groundbreaking research Garon
published in the
New England Journal
of Medicine last year, which
found that among patients who received pembrolizumab, those with PD - L1 expression on at least 50 percent
of their cancer cells showed the longest survival and disease control.
But in a
study published in this week's advance online publication
of the journal Nature, Peters, the first author
of the paper, and his colleagues
found that the motor cortex itself plays an active role in learning
new motor movements.
In a
new study published in the Journal
of Health Psychology, researchers from the University
of Surrey have
found dieters who eat «on the go» may increase their food intake later in the day which could lead to weight gain and obesity.
A single protein building block commonly
found in food may hold a key to preventing the spread
of an often - deadly type
of breast cancer, according to a
new multicenter
study published today in the medical journal Nature.
A
new near - complete fossilized skeleton is thought to represent the first Jurassic ichthyosaur
found in India, according to a
study published October 25, 2017 in the open - access journal PLOS ONE by Guntupalli Prasad from the University
of Delhi, India, and colleagues.
Published in the February 27 issue
of Cell, the
study found that tumor cells that reach the brain — and successfully grow into
new tumors — hug capillaries and express specific proteins that overcome the brain's natural defense against metastatic invasion.
A
new study published today in Sport, Education and Society sheds light upon teens» online habits,
finding that young people are not simply passive recipients
of all the content available online, as commonly thought.
According to a
new study published online today in Science, the tiny differences
found in previous
studies may have resulted from a slight tendency on the part
of political conservatives to «self - enhance,» or view themselves in an unrealistically positive light.
That's the tantalizing
finding from a
new study published today that reveals a way that mice — and potentially humans — can control the makeup and behavior
of their gut microbiome.
That's one
finding of a
new UBC
study published this month in Social Science and Medicine that examined attitudes toward children who haven't received all their vaccinations and their parents.
In a
study published Monday in the journal
New Phytologist, a team led by Louis Santiago, a professor
of Botany & Plant Sciences,
found that tropical trees in Paracou, French Guiana have developed an unusual way to protect themselves from damage caused by drought.
A
new study published in Nature Climate Change looks at the next 10,000 years, and
finds that the catastrophic impact
of another three centuries
of carbon pollution will persist millennia after the carbon dioxide releases cease.