«Migration routes hold key to bird flu spread,
global study finds.»
Not exact matches
In fact, a recent Nielson
study found that 70 percent of
global consumers trust online reviews, up 15 percent within a four - year period.
A 2016
global fraud
study found that businesses with fewer than 100 employees suffered the same median level of theft — $ 150,000 — as much larger companies.
A recent Geophysical Research Letters
study found that the Arctic permafrost contains 32 million gallons of mercury, which is projected to adversely affect our
global air, food, water and soil supplies as the Earth warms and the permafrost unthaws, releasing the neurotoxin.
A new
study from Wealth - X and UBS
finds that the
global population of billionaires has surged past 2,000.
For example, a
study from
Global X
found that for 87 percent of millennials, also known as Gen Y, their most important expectation of an advisor was protecting their investments during a market downturn.
A
study finds heat related flight disruptions will become more common in the next few decades as temperatures rise due to
global warming.
In 2014, the University of North Carolina's Kenan - Flager Business School, in partnership with Human Capital Institute (HCI), conducted a
study where they
found that 85 percent of
global companies report an urgent need to develop employees with leadership potential.
A two - year
global study conducted by project management software company Redbooth
found that productivity among office workers worldwide is at its highest point at 11 a.m., and plummets completely after 4 p.m.
Generation Z, those born 1997 to present, now represent 27 percent of the U.S. population, a larger group than Millennials, and although only older Gen Zs are entering adulthood, their impact on the food industry is already being felt,
finds a new
study by The NPD Group, a leading
global information company.
A
study conducted earlier this year by FlexJobs and
Global Workplace Analytics
found that telecommuting increased 115 % over the last 10 years.
These are some of the major
findings of a
Global Atlantic Financial Group national
study of U.S....
Other recent
studies, such as the
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) Ontario Report from 2015, indicate similar
findings.
A 2016
study by the
Global Business Travel Association
found for 79 percent of business travelers, the company policy had the most significant impact on their travel decisions, more so than convenience or cost.
In a 1996
study of a
global food and beverage company, McClelland
found that when senior managers had a critical mass of emotional intelligence capabilities, their divisions outperformed yearly earnings goals by 20 %.
A
study from Erasmus Research Institute of Management, a Netherlands - based think tank,
finds China, not Wall Street bankers, was responsible for the
global crisis and resulting recession.
A
study by HSBC, a large British bank,
found an immense threat to
global financial stability from stranding unburned fossil fuels.
Lead by The Centre for Innovation
Studies (THECIS) and authored by University of Calgary professors Cooper Langford and Chad Saunders, this is the first time the
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) methodology has been used to assess a post-secondary institution —
finding a high level of innovation across campus.
Led by The Centre for Innovation
Studies (THECIS) and authored by University of Calgary professors Cooper Langford and Chad Saunders, this is the first time the
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) methodology has been used to assess a post-secondary institution —
finding a high level of innovation across campus.
A new Angus Reid Institute
study finds that, while Canadians say they would like to do more for
global development, just over one - quarter of them (28 %) believe their country should spend more than it currently does.
This will make China a main driver for the
global wine market shift as consumption growth in the next few years will be mainly coming from China - led Asia pacific countries and the US, Guillaume Deglise, CEO of Vinexpo said, citing
findings from a
study conducted by Vinexpo with IWSR for the
global wine and spirits market overview from 2016 to 2020.
Guillaume Deglise, Vinexpo CEO, presenting the latest
findings from a
study conducted by the trade organisation with IWSR for the
global market review from 2016 to 2020.
A Nielsen
study in 2015
found that foods with all natural ingredients and those without genetically modified organisms (GMO) are considered very important to almost half (43 %) of
global respondents.
During a presentation in London yesterday, Deglise released
findings from a biennial
study by Vinexpo and the IWSR into
global wine and spirits trends, which showed, in particular, the expansion of the sparkling wine market worldwide.
A new
study by USC and University of Oxford researchers indicates that large amounts of high fructose corn syrup (HFCS)
found in national food supplies across the world may be one explanation for the rising
global epidemic of Type 2 diabetes and resulting higher health care costs.
According to a
global study by Heineken ®, 77 percent of respondents think there are circumstances where it is acceptable to drink and drive, while 49 percent get «caught up having fun» and
find it hard to plan ahead.
The
findings of this
study contribute accurate and reliable data to the
global estimates, and have important implications for public health programmes to improve maternal and newborn survival.
In a high - flying illustration of how
global warming appears to be changing New York's natural landscape, a new
study by a state researcher and an experienced birdwatcher has
found that more and bird species are being
found higher and higher on a well - known Adirondack mountain.
The resolution states that the House will «create and support economically viable, and broadly supported private and public solutions to
study and address the causes and effects of measured changes to our
global and regional climates, including mitigation efforts and efforts to balance human activities that have been
found to have an impact.»
The model of hospital administration in this publication actually has lots of semblance with contemporary models in the US, UK, Republic of Ireland, Australia and Canada where there is a board of directors / governors with a Chairman (does not have to be a Medical Doctor), a CEO / President / Hospital administrator (does not have to be a Medical Doctor) and a CMD / MD / CMO / Executive director medical services etc (Is ALWAYS a Medical Doctor — different names but similar portfolio — In Nigeria we always look up to these countries for direction with respect to
global best practices so I do not understand what the commentator code - named afam6nr means by «Obviously, this writer has not attended any Business School Training and has no knowledge of Business Administration» — My advice to afam6nr is to do a little
study of the different heath system of the world (specifically regarding corporate governance, organisation and administration of tertiary hospitals) and after this little research come back and comment on his
findings!
A peer - reviewed
study published this month
found 90 companies are responsible for more than half the
global increase in carbon dioxide levels and nearly half the climb in
global temperatures (Climatewire, Sept. 7).
Previous
studies have
found that a few TNCs own large chunks of the world's economy, but they included only a limited number of companies and omitted indirect ownerships, so could not say how this affected the
global economy — whether it made it more or less stable, for instance.
... They have difficulty maintaining their lies when asked follow - up questions,» Talwar said, noting «this is a
global pattern,»
found in
studies in North America, the United Kingdom, West Africa, China and Japan.
«Recent
studies found that scale insect populations increase on oak and maple trees in warmer urban areas, which raises the possibility that these pests may also increase with
global warming,» says Dr. Elsa Youngsteadt, a research associate at NC State and lead author of a paper on the work.
Researchers
found that having a teacher who believed climate change was occurring — as 92 percent of students in the
study did — was a «strong, positive predictor» of students» belief in
global warming.
But the
study, published today in Earth's Future,
finds that scientists won't be able to determine, based on measurements of large - scale phenomena like
global sea level and Antarctic mass changes, which scenario the planet faces until the 2060s.
The
study, sponsored by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation,
found global demand «to strengthen connections between science and policy.»
Previous research has suggested a connection between coal - burning and the Sahel drought, but this was the first
study that used decades of historical observations to
find that this drought was part of a
global shift in tropical rainfall, and then used multiple climate models to determine why.
Based on a unique model that links China's energy system and economy, the
study finds that China's coal use, a major source of
global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, should peak some time around the year 2020, while the country's overall CO2 emissions would peak around 2030, or perhaps sooner.
«Similarly, a number of
studies have
found that telling people about the 97 % scientific consensus on human - caused
global warming has a neutralizing rather than polarizing effect.»
A past
study that Kravitz helped run at GeoMIP
found that the abrupt termination of radiative forcing would cause
global warming to effectively speed up to make up for all the time it lost, cramming five decades of warming into five or 10 years (ClimateWire, Nov. 27).
The
study found that none of the «dismissive» group — those who don't think the climate is changing or want legislation — believe
global warming will harm the United States in 50 years.
Global campaigns such as the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) to bring more transparency to the oil and gas sectors in an effort to alleviate the resource curse have yet to live up to their promises, a new
study finds.
But a new
study conducted by UCLA's Mary Jane Rotheram - Borus, the director of the UCLA
Global Center for Children and Families at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, and her colleagues from Stellenbosch University in South Africa
found that community - based interventions could improve the health of children in those contexts.
The
study, in the May 1
Global Biogeochemical Cycles, also
finds that the North Pacific has seen a 30 percent rise in mercury contamination since the mid-1990s.
«Our
findings mean that nature is not as efficient in slowing
global warming as we previously thought,» said Kees Jan van Groenigen, research fellow at the Center for Ecosystem Science and Society at NAU and lead author of the
study.
«In the broader scheme of things, our
finding should lead us to be modest about the potential utility of
global governance, particularly voluntary «soft» norms, to deliver public goods,» adds Nathan Andrews, one of the
study's co-authors.
A new
study finds that the poor will be disproportionally affected by
global warming, even in the U.S
«The
study was the first to specifically isolate CO2's effect from that of other
global - warming agents and to
find quantitatively that chemical and meteorological changes due to CO2 itself increase mortality due to increased ozone, particles and carcinogens in the air.»
A U.S. Forest Service (USFS)
study found that between 53 and 97 percent of natural trout populations in the Southern Appalachian region of the U.S. could disappear due to warmer temperatures predicted by
global climate change models.