Sentences with phrase «impact journals like»

Not exact matches

The Journal of the American Medical Association just released a study that found a county where a person resides can make as much an impact on their heath as other factors, like ethnicity and genetics.
SNA Research on the issues and trends impacting school nutrition like SNA's trends and operations reports, The Journal of Child Nutrition & Management, and the Little Big Fact Book.
The British Journal of Dermatology said that while nothing can fully simulate the emotional impact of receiving a cancer diagnosis, this has been a novel way to help doctors understand what it feels like to have a visible skin disorder and how this can attract unwanted attention from strangers, leaving people feeling self - conscious.
Mechanical Engineering Ph.D. recipient Qi Shen's bio already reads like a seasoned professor's: 15 journal publications — including work in the high - impact Journal of Applied Physics and Nature's Scientific Reports — book chapters, more than a dozen conference papers, and four pjournal publications — including work in the high - impact Journal of Applied Physics and Nature's Scientific Reports — book chapters, more than a dozen conference papers, and four pJournal of Applied Physics and Nature's Scientific Reports — book chapters, more than a dozen conference papers, and four patents.
The paper is Kay et al., «Probability of CME Impact on Exoplanets Orbiting M Dwarfs and Solar - Like Stars,» Astrophysical Journal Vol.
Doctors are releasing the first detailed medical reports about concussion - like symptoms suffered in what the State Department has called health... High impact medical research journal.
Flex Your School's Data Muscles: Leadership Strategies Strengthen Data's Impact This article by Using Data Senior Facilitator Jennifer Unger published in JSD, the Learning Forward Journal, describes what leadership for a high - performing data culture looks like.
(2017) Learning outside the classroom, Issue 302, p38 Frauman, E. (2010) Incorporating the concept of mindfulness in informal outdoor education settings, Journal of Experiential Education, Vol.33, Issue 3, p225 - 238 Humberstone, B; Stan, I. (2009) Well - being and outdoor pedagogies in primary schooling: The nexus of well - being and safety, Australian Journal of Outdoor Education, Vol.13, Issue 2, p24 - 32 Marzano, R., Pickering, D. (2007) The case for and against homework, Educational Leadership, Vol.64, Issue 6, p74 - 79 Moffett, P. (2012) Learning about outdoor education through authentic activity, Mathematics Teaching, p12 - 14 Mudd, A. (2007) Outdoor learning in the school grounds (primary), Environmental Education, Vol.84, p5 - 6 Scott, G., Boyd, M., Colquhoun, D. (2013) Changing spaces, changing relationships: the positive impact of learning out of doors, Australian Journal of Outdoor Education, Vol.17, Issue 1, p47 - 53 Sharpe, D. (2014) Independent thinkers and learners: a critical evaluation of the «Growing Together Schools Programme, Pastoral Care in Education, Vol.32, Issue 3, p197 - 207 Skates, E. (2014) On the up: Learning outside and raising attainment, Primary Geography, Issue 85, p14 - 15 Whawell, G., Tanner, J. (2015) Not like in the classroom, Primary Geography, Vol.
So with the understanding that I sure as hell know what pervasive influence peddling can do to the process of peer review — because the pharma companies do actively recruit their «key opinion leaders» on the basis of things like editorial clout and that prominence within their specialty which gives them to hold responsibilities in peer review for «high impact» medical journals — you might appreciate why, when I got to read those e-mails in the FOI2009.zip archive last November, my immediate desire was for something brutally Sicilian to happen immediately and with spatter marks on the surrounding walls to the C.R.U. correspondents who had been concerting to infest and pervert the peer review process throughout the physical sciences wherever anything critical of the AGW hypothesis might be brought into publication.
In the pharmaceuticals and medical devices industries, Bill, there are highly - paid people who work full - time to no purpose other than «strategic communications planning,» taking the raw material of studies like clinical trials and torturing the data until it is made to say — in «high impact» periodicals like The New England Journal of Medicine just exactly what is to the greatest advantage for the manufacturers who had funded the studies.
The British medical journal The Lancet, known for its tobacco Prohibitionist and anti-Israel views, created a commission on Health and Climate Change to promote, as if it were science, the view that «to avoid the risk of potentially catastrophic climate change impacts requires total anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions to be kept below 2900 billion tonnes by the end of the century» — not a calculation that physicians, biologists, and the like are particularly qualified to make.)
last comments for tonight: (1) bound to spark many more such studies (2) may or may not become a «classic» like MBH98 but will be cited many times, even though this journal has a low impact factor (3) required reading for any scientist who uses GCM outputs (raw or downscaled) as inputs in their climate change impact studies (4) anyone researching climate change impacts who does not read this paper and take a stand should be held to account for their negligence
The Wall Street Journal's Zeke Turner writes a long article about the impact of of this on the country, and looks at all the companies that are building data centres, listing companies like BMW who need a lot of processing power to run crash test simulations, banks and life sciences companies.
Thus it seems safe to say that a new journal like PLoS Biology would never have been able to achieve the highest Impact Factor in the field of biology after less than two years of publication, if it had not been open access.
Image source: rothamsted.bbsrc.ac.ukMuch like a falling tree, if research is published in a journal that nobody reads, does it have much of an impact on people's lives?
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