As a follow up to my post on J. E. McEneaney's Web 3.0, Litbots, and TPWSGWTAU, here is an interesting and brief piece
in Nature on what's lacking in search engines.
This allows the court to determine if the touching was sexual
in nature on a case - by - case basis.
A search of the Science Citation Index, the comprehensive scientific journal database that indexes virtually every citation a journal article gets in the peer - reviewed scientific literature, reveals that this paper, which Dr. Singer calls a «key research publication», has been cited exactly zero times, as of 2004 (for comparison, Dr. Steven Schneider's 1988 publication
in Nature on the same topic, «Simulating the climatic effects of nuclear war», has gotten 16 citations).
See also this article
in Nature on why we can't make useful predictions.
Paper
in Nature on how CO2 could not have been higher in the early geological past w.r.t the «early faint sun paradox»
A new paper published
in Nature on 23 October describes how a newly discovered microbe — Methanoflorens stordalenmirensis — adds another layer to the complicated relationship between the world's permafrost fields and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
«I have co-authored a paper
in Nature on the reduced response to warming as seen in tree - ring densitometric data at high - latitude sites around the Northern Hemisphere, increasingly apparent in the last 30 years or so.
A recent review article
in Nature on this method showed «a warming around 2.2 to 4.8 °C per doubling of atmospheric CO2, which agrees with IPCC estimates».
Read this piece
in Nature on / / www.nature.com/news/2010/100728/full/466542a.html» > the growing debate within Europe about the potential costs to that region in lost innovative capacity in agriculture if its barriers to genetic work persist:
Platypus Ponds Bed & Breakfast is nestled
in nature on 3 acres of private reserve abounding in birdlife on the banks of the
Platypus Ponds Bed & Breakfast is nestled
in nature on 3 acres of private reserve abounding in birdlife on the banks of the Cabbage Tree Creek.
Although previous studies have highlighted the positive impacts of spending time outdoors, Professor Ming Kuo and Assistant Professor Matthew Browning, of the University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign, and Adjunct Professor Milbert Penner believe their study is the first direct exploration of the effects of lessons
in nature on classroom engagement.
There have also been many studies done about the benefits of being
in nature on your stress levels and it's now been scientifically proven that people who spend time in nature (or even outside) each day have lower levels of stress.
Rosanne is happiest viewing the world from the back of a horse... or a bike... or out
in nature on her own two feet.
Dr. Stacey Goldman, ND shares her insights on the impact of time
in nature on mental health.
A few minutes
in nature on a hike or even just sitting outside can be beneficial.
Their work was published
in Nature on January 15.
The findings are published
in Nature on Aug 12, 2015.
Wrong, according to the new research published
in Nature on Wednesday.
Professor Curry, professor of structural biology at Imperial College London, announces the new signatories to the declaration in a column published
in Nature on 8 February.
Paper and research team This research was presented in a paper entitled «Large turbulent reservoirs of cold molecular gas around high redshift starburst galaxies» by E. Falgarone et al., to appear
in Nature on 30 August 2017.
«The contribution of de novo coding mutations to autism spectrum disorder» by Ivan Iossifov et al appears online
in Nature on October 29, 2014.
In a repeat press announcement with more fanfare, two papers on the earliest detected Gamma - Ray Burst (GRB) thus far (on April 23, 2009, and designated GRB 090423) were published
in Nature on October 29, 2009.
* «Cryo - EM structures of tau filaments from Alzheimer's disease» by Fitzpatrick et al. published
in Nature on Wednesday 5th July.
For example; three articles to which the SNP&SEQ technology platform in Uppsala has contributed to were published online
in Nature on February 11.
Their work will be published online
in Nature on August 17.
The study appeared online
in Nature on September 11, 2013.
«Vaccine protection against Zika virus from Brazil» by Rafael A. Larocca et al. published
in Nature on Tuesday 28 June 2016.
«Analysis of the bread wheat genome using whole genome shotgun sequencing» is published online
in Nature on November 29, 2012.
«Metabolic rescue in pluripotent cells from patients with mtDNA disease» by Shoukhrat Mitalipov et al. published
in Nature on Wednesday 15th July.
In correspondence published
in Nature on 10th February 2010, the scientists argue that their case is both politically and culturally significant.
Published
in Nature on 22 June 2017
blaming the results reported
in Nature on a» chain of heat - venting sub-sea islands», which given the continental trend, seems even more bizarre than invoking volcanic activity in the Arctic ocean
The findings were published
in Nature on December 24, 2009.
«Oil palm genome sequence reveals divergence of interfertile species in Old and New worlds» and «The oil palm SHELL gene controls oil yield and encodes a homologue of SEEDSTICK» will be published online ahead of print
in Nature on Wednesday, July 24, 2013.
The scientists report online
in Nature on June 14 that their bioengineered human liver tissues still need additional rounds of molecular fine tuning before they can be tested in clinical trials.
The work was published
in Nature on March 16.
The study, to be published
in Nature on December 18, includes data from 19 different mine sites that were explored by Sherwood Lollar, a geoscientist at U of T's Department of Earth Sciences, U of T senior research associate Georges Lacrampe - Couloume, and colleagues at Oxford and Princeton universities.
«The amount of visible radiation entering the lower atmosphere was increasing, which implies warming at the surface,» says atmospheric physicist Joanna Haigh of Imperial College London, who led the research, published
in Nature on October 7.
They described what they dubbed stimulus - triggered acquisition of pluripotency (STAP) cells in a research article and a research letter published online
in Nature on 29 January.
Chinese researchers contributed just 1 % of data to the global Human Genome Project, but Qin hopes China can play a more significant role in the ongoing Human Proteome Project, a global effort that published a draft map of the human proteome online
in Nature on 28 May.
The details of their study were published
in Nature on October 5.
A claim of an astoundingly easy way to make pluripotent stem cells reported online in two papers
in Nature on 29 January continues to unravel as one of the co-authors called for a temporary retraction of the papers while their data and images are verified.
But in an article and a letter online
in Nature on 29 January, Obokata and her colleagues at the RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology (RIKEN CDB) in Kobe, Japan, and at other institutions in Japan and the United States described an astonishingly simple alternative.
RIKEN launched an investigation after claims of image manipulation and plagiarism surfaced regarding a research article and a letter published online
in Nature on 29 January that described a new, simple way of creating stem cells called STAP, for stimulus - triggered acquisition of pluripotency.
The findings, published
in Nature on July 25, also suggest that agriculture spread in the Near East at least in part because existing groups invented or adopted farming technologies, rather than because one population replaced another.
As early as 1969, he published a paper
in Nature on one of his devices, but his mentor, the Nobel Prize - winning neurophysiologist Ragnar Granit, couldn't understand what he was up to.
The resulting photonic crystals reflect the light in certain colors, a phenomenon observed
in nature on apparently colorful butterfly wings.
The first evidence of this trend came as long ago as 1925, when South African anthropologist Raymond Dart published controversial findings
in Nature on the first known australopithecus, called the Taung child.
The research will be published
in Nature on Thursday 21st September.