OT:
This interesting new paper (public access) claims to have found evidence for significant atmospheric CO2 fluctuations from 1000 to 1500 CE (and so including the MWP).
But
an interesting new paper creates, to me, the best thoughts: Jin ML, Dickinson RE, Zhang DL 2005.
For those who would like to consider a scientific consideration of the differences in the southern sea ice response versus the northern, here's
an interesting new paper to consider:
«My Presentation on Climate Change Causation and Geoengineering at Moscow Conference on November 8 Very
Interesting New Paper on Astronomical Climatology»
There's
an interesting new paper discussed at Pielke Sr's: http://pielkeclimatesci.wordpress.com/2011/02/08/new-paper-climate-stability-and-sensitivity-in-some-simple-conceptual-models-by-j-bates/
There is (to my mind) a very
interesting new paper on this, linked below.
Not exact matches
But while the world's second - largest economy, which self - identified as a «Near - Arctic State» in its
new white
paper, may have it's own economic and foreign policy
interests in mind, experts cautioned that doesn't mean a geopolitical standoff is coming.
Meanwhile, other big digital newcomers to the media scene, including BuzzFeed and Business Insider, have also been slow to take up the public
interest banner long carried by the likes of the
New York Times and the Press - Enterprise (a small California
paper that, as Liptak explained, took two free speech cases all the way to the Supreme Court in the 1980s).
There are only four important Jewish chains in the field: the Ochs
interests owning the Times and the Chattanooga Times, J. David Stern owning the
New York Post, the Philadelphia Record, and the Camden (
New Jersey) Courier and Post, Paul Block owning the Newark Star - Eagle, the Toledo Blade and Times, and the Duluth Herald and News - Tribune, and Emanuel P. Adler of Davenport, Iowa, owning a string of
papers in towns such as Davenport and Ottumwa, Iowa: Madison, Wisconsin; Hannibal, Missouri; Lincoln, Nebraska, etc..
A Federal Reserve working
paper from last year found that at least three - quarters of the decline in
new charters is attributable to the weak economy and low
interest rates.
In April, The
New York Times» Amy Chozick, in an article titled «Conservative Koch Brothers Turning Focus to Newspapers,» reported that the billionaire industrialists» expressed
interest in the Tribune Co.
papers was part of a «three - pronged, 10 - year strategy to shift the country toward a smaller government with less regulation and taxes» — with the third prong being controlling media through media investments.
Cliff Asness is out with a
new interesting paper, «Market Timing Is Back In The Hunt For Investors.»
- + * A
new Federal Reserve white
paper reveals that the agency has taken an increased
interest in decentralized digital currencies and has begun to recognize their beneficial characteristics, but stops short of full advocacy due to the technology's lack of maturity.
A
new NBER working
paper by MIT's Christian Catalini and Joshua Gans from the University of Toronto supplies answers to these questions by studying a two - period model of a token offering, covering the ICO stage during which
interested buyers acquire tokens, and a market stage at which the platform goes live.
«The
paper's basic premise is that VC - backed boards are particularly prone to dysfunction, due to: (1) Conflicting
interests; (2) The regular addition of
new board members following financing rounds; and (3) The likely presence of inexperienced members like first - time entrepreneurs, junior VCs or independent directors with strong domain knowledge but no background on VC - backed boards.
My old friend Alistair Milne recently published a very
interesting paper on Cryptocurrencies from an Austrian Perspective (SSRN, 12th April 2017) in which he explores the use of
new technology to reimplement money by taking away money creation from commercial banks and proposes:
As I write in a recent
paper, «Brave
New World: Investing for Longer Retirements,» this rule is likely to prove less effective in today's environment of longer lives, fewer traditional pensions and low
interest rates, where many people haven't saved enough to finance a multi-decade retirement.
It is 25 years since James Watson and Francis Crick published their initial
paper on the structure of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), but the technology to manipulate this genetic key to all of life is very
new — so
new that only during this past year did it become a matter of
interest and concern to the general public.
Bayern Munich will be greatly pleased by the fact that French playmaker Franck Ribery put pen to
paper on a
new five year deal to stay at the Allianz Arena, one could imagine that had the former Marseille man not done so, then every bit of skill and flair the 27 year old displayed would surely have been greeted with concern as the Bundesliga champions readied themselves for yet more
interest in one of their prized assets.
They tend to find
new jackets,
new friends, and
new foods
interesting; and they respond comfortably anywhere you take them because they nap in noisy restaurants, nurse wherever you happen to be, and enjoy looking around, drawing on the
paper you tucked in your bag, or joining in the conversation.
But in the
new paradigm, we can't assume that everyone wants to read the same
paper every day — we have to treat each member like a beautiful unique snowflake and respond to their
interests as expressed by which emails they open, read and act on.
The
paper cited recent reports by the
New York Public
Interest Research Group (NYPIRG) and the state's Joint Commission on Public Ethics (JCOPE) as evidence of the outsized influence that Albany lobbyists currently enjoy.
An 11 - page policy
paper released by the
New York Public
Interest Research Group on Friday takes issue with the state Board of Elections to suspend the aggregate political contribution limits in the wake of the Supreme Court decision, McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission.
The
new paper will be of
interest to tax professionals across the world, including in India itself, who deal with Indian international tax issues.
«There is obvious
interest in obtaining information about the origins of an investigation that led, ultimately, to the resignation of the governor of
New York,» U.S. District Judge Jed S. Rakoff said in ruling for the
paper today.
Meanwhile,
New York's attorney general's office is also going after RD Legal Funding, a lawsuit - cash - advance firm accused of exploiting 9/11 first responders and brain - injured NFL players by ensnaring them in high -
interest contracts with rates that court
papers say reached up to 250 percent.
The
new theoretical work has been recognized by Physical Review D editors as an Editors» Suggestion, a category reserved for «a small fraction of
papers, which we judge to be particularly important,
interesting, and well written.»
The
paper presents «an
interesting new hypothesis regarding the perceived break in the curveball,» says Robert Cormack, a psychologist at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in Socorro and an expert on visual percepti
new hypothesis regarding the perceived break in the curveball,» says Robert Cormack, a psychologist at the
New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in Socorro and an expert on visual percepti
New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in Socorro and an expert on visual perception.
«This is a most
interesting paper,» says evolutionary biologist Douglas Futuyma of Stony Brook University in
New York.
«We were
interested in what maintains brown fat, even when we're not exposed to cold all the time,» says Maryam Ahmadian, a Salk research associate and first author of the
new paper.
In a
new paper published in the invitation - only journal Psychological Science in the Public
Interest, Clark and her team present the challenges in using these manuals from a scientific perspective and offer some recommendations for re-conceptualizing the mental disorders they describe.
The scientific community was showing great
interest in this
new approach to growing organoids even before the
paper's publication.
I'm now far more
interested in following up on recommendations from my
new friend — and going to yoga class — than I am in writing
papers.
«We've been
interested in finding
new ways to combat antibiotic resistance, and these
papers offer two different strategies for doing that.»
A
new kind of electronic
paper could make the readers brighter and more colorful, which is of
interest to conservationists who would like to see the devices replace
paper editions.
But a
new paper in the journal Conservation Biology calls out a troubling side effect: Some tags can be accessed by people who don't have the animals» best
interests at heart, from hunters and poachers to antipredator groups and even nature tourists.
In an
interesting gauge of how fast the ranks of scientists are growing, the authors determined that in 1997, 16,877 scientists entered the scientific literature who would then maintain UCP — would continue publishing at least one
new paper per year — through 2012.
«But this
new paper provides much more information and raises
interesting ideas — instead of just using regular old genome evolution, RNA editing might have been a way to produce molecular diversity, particularly in their nervous systems.
In addition to describing the
new species in the
paper, the co-authors Herreid and Heraty, a professor of entomology, found an
interesting association between the wasps and extrafloral nectaries, which are nectar - secreting glands found on plants independent of their flowers.
In an age where cybersecurity is of foremost
interest for governments and businesses, public and private organizations must deploy risk - intelligence governance to secure their digital communications and resources from eavesdropping, theft or attack, according to a
new paper from Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy.
A
new paper in Heliyon reveals that materialistic people see and treat their Facebook friends as «digital objects,» and have significantly more friends than people who are less
interested in possessions.
In January 2014, they published a
paper in Physical Review Letters (PRL) presenting
new ideas about how to induce a strange but
interesting state in graphene — one where it appears as if particles inside it have a fraction of an electron's charge.
Indeed, some of the most
interesting papers presented at the conference, which brought about 20,000 scientists to San Francisco last week, described innovative
new polymers, the generic chemical term, that could help thwart ovarian cancer and infections, and regenerate damaged nerves.
«Our synthesis unlocks a
new class of low - cost and environmentally friendly ternary (three - part) semiconductors that show properties of
interest for applications in energy conversion,» the chemists wrote in their
paper.
«Although sharks are charismatic predators that capture the
interest of many, we still only have a very basic understanding of their ecological roles in nature,» said Doug Rasher, a senior research scientist at Bigelow Laboratory and lead author of the
new paper.
While there was a lot of
interesting science in this
paper (the
new methodology, the range of results etc.) which fully justified its appearance in Nature, we were quite critical of their basic conclusion — that climate sensitivities significantly higher than the standard range (1.5 — 4.5 ºC) were plausible — because there is significant other data, predominantly from paleo - climate, that pretty much rule those high numbers out (as we discussed again recently).
We weighted diverse factors in choosing the winner, including the
paper's topic, originality, impact, and more generally the extent to which it exemplified the goals of The American Naturalist: «to publish
papers that are of broad
interest to the readership, to pose a
new and significant program or introduce a novel subject to the readership, to develop conceptual unification, and to change the way people think about the topic of the manuscript.»
We thought it might be
interesting if you could have a relatively simple system that could deliver many different compounds,» says Klavs Jensen, the Warren K. Lewis Professor of Chemical Engineering, professor of materials science and engineering, and a senior author of a
paper describing the
new device in this week's issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Nathan Urban, I will be very
interested in your
new paper and I want to thank you very much for your online explanations and patience.
In the
interest of encouraging other investigators to reproduce our results, and to build upon them and find
new discoveries, on this webpage we provide all data and the software used to produce every figure in our
papers.