Sentences with phrase «in studies published»

In studies published in 2012 and 2014, she asked accomplished violinists to blindly play «old Italian» violins and newer ones and compare their sound.
Adrian Hill, director of the Jenner Institute in Oxford, UK, who was not involved in the studies published in July or in Patterson's work, also criticised the failure of the researchers to analyse data from vaccinated people.
Reported June 24 in PLOS ONE, these brain structures had gone unrecognized in studies published over the last 34 years.
In a study published in 2014, researchers asked people of both sexes to watch pitch videos.
In a study published in March 2017, 7,500 men were split into four groups, and given vitamin E, selenium, both, or a placebo for 5 years.
In a study published earlier this month, researchers at Michigan State University monitored the brains of 79 female and 70 male students, who were asked to fill out a survey about their own anxiety levels.
In a study published in the Journal of Consumer Research that examined the impact of mental stress on food choices, a majority of the participants selected an unhealthy food (chocolate cake) over a healthy food (fruit) after completing a complicated memorization task.
In a study published in The European Journal of Social Psychology, students who wrote out self - advice using «you» not only completed more problems but said they would be happier to work on more in the future compared with students who used «I.» The researchers speculated this is because second - person self - talk may trigger memories of receiving support and encouragement from parents and teachers in childhood.
In a study published in the journal Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, researchers found that people were much better at processing information about people they had just met if they had large social groups.
In a study published this year that tracked Best Buy's ROWE program, researchers at the University of Minnesota found that, while it had helped reduce employee turnover, women who took part still spent 10 hours more on child care per week than their male flextime colleagues.
In the study published in the journal Nature Climate Change, researchers at the Stockholm Environment Institute write that widely quoted U.S. State Department findings that the oilsands pipeline wouldn't make a significant difference missed a major source of greenhouse gas emissions.
But in study published in Environmental Research Letters in 2015, researchers projected that the area scorched by wildfires in Southern California will grow by as much as 77 percent by the middle of the century due to warming.
It's the sound of the next generation: in a study published in the Journal of Voice, more than two - thirds of female college students spoke with vocal fry.
In a study published in Clinical Biochemistry, 2004, researchers looked at coconut oil as a component of diet in laboratory animals.
In a study published in the journal Food Chemistry in 2014, a team of researchers analyzed how the bioactive compounds of seven different varieties of apples - Granny Smith, Braeburn, Fuji, Gala, Golden Delicious, McIntosh and Red Delicious - affected the good gut bacteria of diet - induced obese mice.
In fact, in a study published in Nutrition Journal, participants who ate half a fresh avocado with lunch reported a 40 percent decreased desire to eat for hours afterwards.
In a study published in 2002, researchers tested the mineral binding capacity of a variety of bakery products made with coconut f lour.
In a study published today (advance online publication) by the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, approximately 95 percent of the 158 labeled gluten - free free food products tested by Gluten Free Watchdog tested less than 20 ppm gluten with approximately 87 percent testing below 5 ppm gluten.
In a study published in the journal Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, more than 70 percent of mothers report that they played outdoors every day as a child, but just 30 percent say their children do the same.
In a study published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, researchers led by Anita Kozyrskyj found that babies born by C - section harbored a different set of microbes in their digestive tracts than those born vaginally, and that infants who were breast - fed had a different recipe of bacteria in their guts than those who were given formula.
In a study published in the journal Pediatrics, of the children who started training between 22 and 30 months of age, boys were fully trained at an average age of 38 months, while girls were trained slightly earlier, around 36 months.
• Depression: In a study published in Psychological Science, pregnant women were checked for depression before and after birth.
In a study published in BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, researchers looked at the experience of transgender men through pregnancy, childbirth, and feeding their newborns.
In a study published July 19 in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, researchers at the University of Oxford studied 192 families recruited from two maternity units in the UK to see whether there was a link between father - child interactions in the early postnatal period and the child's behaviour.
In a study published in Pediatrics, researchers found that the food a pregnant woman eats changes the flavor of her amniotic fluid and in turn changes the types of foods the babies enjoyed when they started eating solids.
In a study published in Birth, 201 new mothers were surveyed about inducing labor at home.
In a study published in the journal Pediatrics, researchers found that over the course of eight years, nearly 75 % of deaths in babies under four months occurred in a bed - sharing situation.
In a study published in the journal Physiology and Behavior, children who ate oatmeal for breakfast performed 20 percent better on a map - memorization test than their sugary - cereal - munching counterparts.
In a study published in Cancer last year, Phipps and her colleagues found that certain breast cancer types may be rarer among women who breastfeed their babies for at least six months.
In a study published by The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition in 2004, researchers concluded that non-breastfeeding women actually lose body fat faster than nursing mothers.
In a study published in the journal Pediatrics, 44 percent of new moms reported concerns about breastfeeding pain.
In a study published in January, researchers found that 35 percent of ads in parenting magazines that showed cribs or sleeping babies, and half of all crib displays in retail stores and on store websites, depicted unsafe sleep environments.
As Manuela Carneiro, a researcher who took part in the study published in «Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety», informs SINC: «This is due to the type of diet these animals have — strictly carrion from domestic and wild hunting species — because the consumption of hunting species increases the likelihood of ingesting lead.»
In a study published in Neoplasia, researchers at the Washington University School of Medicine created a map showing which genes were switched on and off in different parts of the tumor, providing a «signature» of these switches throughout the genome.
In a study published on Nov. 16, scientists discovered that human brains exhibit more plasticity, propensity to be modeled by the environment, than chimpanzee brains and that this may have accounted for part of human evolution.
Kadouri analyzed rats» gut microbes after a treatment of predatory bacteria, reporting the results in a study published March 6 in Scientific Reports.
In a study published earlier this year, his team, along with scientists at Arcturus Therapeutics, treated hemophilia in mice using mRNA that encodes a clotting protein.
In a study published in the current issue of Neuron, researchers showed mice lacking ErbB4 activity in specific brain regions performed poorly on timed attention tasks.
Researchers at Umeå University, Sweden, report this in a study published in the journal PLOS ONE.
In a study published March 8 in Science, scientists with the University of Chicago and Cornell revealed a technique to «sew» two patches of crystals seamlessly together at the atomic level to create atomically - thin fabrics.
The rest of the industry was no better, he and his co-authors reported in a study published in 2015: Only 17 % of edible cannabis products purchased at licensed dispensaries in San Francisco, California; Los Angeles, California; and Seattle, Washington, had labels accurately stating their chemical contents.
Now, in a study published February 13 in Science Signaling, Lin's team discovered that a chemical compound that activates ATF6 also converts patient - derived stem cells into blood vessels.
In a study published last June in the Journal of Human Genetics, researchers sequenced the mitochondrial DNA of 12 Yamnaya individuals, along with their immediate predecessors and descendants.
To test this, Shelby Putt, an anthropologist at the Stone Age Institute and Indiana University, compared the brains of modern people making Oldowan and Acheulean tools in a study published earlier this year in Nature Human Behavior.
In a study published in Neuron, an interdisciplinary team of University of Pennsylvania researchers has identified a new explanation for this phenomenon.
But in a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, scientists at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill found evidence that these large SOD1 fibrils protect rather than harm neurons.
In a study published in Cell Reports, researchers lead by Cédric Blanpain, MD / PhD, WELBIO investigator and Professor at the Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium, identified a novel lineage - restricted stem cell in the mammary gland.
In a study published online by JAMA Surgery, Hance A. Clarke, M.D., Ph.D., F.R.C.P.C., of Toronto Western Hospital, Toronto, Canada, and colleagues measured rates of ongoing opioid use up to 1 year after major surgery.
In another study published in the Journal of Psychiatric Research in June, a different research team at NYU found raised blood levels of C - reactive protein (CRP) in people who reported being exposed to WTC dust on 9/11.
In a study published in Nature Communications, the investigators report that hyperglycemic mice (or mice with type 2 diabetes) have a 24-fold higher accumulation of succinate, an intermediate metabolite, in the metabolic pathways of their bone marrow stromal cells.
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