Sentences with phrase «issue of science found»

But an in - depth analysis of grant data from the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) on page 1015 in this issue of Science finds that the problem goes much deeper than impressions.

Not exact matches

Juno found cyclones as big as 870 miles (1,400 km) in diameter swirling over Jupiter's north and south poles, shows the research published in this week's issue of the journal Science.
The fairly ubiquitous failure of contemporary Catholic thought to respect the findings of modern science as anything more than interesting and handy measurement and mathematics is charted in this issue by Stephen Barr, John Haldane and David Brown.
Anyone who has followed recent critiques of modern science should find in Whitehead a sure guide to the deepest issues involved.
Some good ones are to be found in the latest issue of Perspectives on Political Science....
It seems therefore that critical consciousness itself can not find a point outside of trust, or devoid of trust, whereby it could settle the issue of the justifiability of the trust that motivates science and reason.
Some claim that Christianity and science are not incompatible, yet we find many who continue to ignore science on the issue of homosexuality.
A later study published in a 2006 issue of «Innovative Food Science & Emerging Technologies» confirmed these findings.
On March 16, Mrs. Obama delivers the keynote address at the GMA Science Forum, calling for even greater collaboration between government and the private sector to find lasting solutions to the issue of obesity in America.
Fallon was wise to find this large area of food science on the issue of phytic acid, a substance in the grain that inhibits absorption of minerals.
This two - day event, held in Washington, D.C., challenges an international audience of policymakers, Internet industry leaders, educators, legislators, authors, law enforcement, Internet safety advocates, teachers and technologists to explore the science and health issues related to children and the Internet: How can we find balance in our hyper - connected lives?
Carol is a member of the Expecting More team that is creating state - of - the - science maternity care decision aids; co-author of 2010 direction - setting companion reports: «2020 Vision for a High - Quality, High - Value Maternity Care System» and «Blueprint for Action»; lead author of the Milbank Report Evidence - based Maternity Care: What It Is and What It Can Achieve; a co-investigator of three path - breaking national Listening to Mothers surveys; founding author of a quarterly evidence column (2003 - 07) that continues to be published in midwifery and nursing journals; author of an annual column in Birth (2006 --RRB-; and guest editor of special issues on Transforming Maternity Care, The Nature and Management of Labor Pain, and cesarean section overuse.
Because if this is true then likely every article you can find... misinforms because people will always have different interpretations of the same data and how to use it and what it means, especially THIS issue where ideology and not science abounds.
'» You can find out more about CRISPR and this year's runners - up by reading the special section in this week's issue of Science.
The most effective way for scientists across disciplines to stand up for science is by reaching out to elected officials at the local, state and federal levels to offer evidence and findings to advance understanding of pressing issues from human health to the environment, said Holt and Ornstein.
The workshop was grounded in a recognition that many research ethics issues are relevant to the practice and application of science, from developing hypotheses and designing a protocol, to data management and analysis, to reporting findings and advising others on the uses of the work, and that integrating ethics instruction in the context of performing those various stages of research can be an effective strategy for educating future researchers.
That means finding ways to convey the issues that don't instantly clash with the cherished values of those they are trying to persuade (see «Climate science: Why the world won't listen «-RRB-.
The first dramatic claim came in the 2 October issue of Science (pp. 19 and 80), when researchers said they had found tracks of multicellular animals in 1.1 - billion - year - old Indian rocks.
The finding, reported in today's issue of Science, could someday lead to ultrasensitive methods for screening potential drugs or fragments of pathogens in the blood and other bodily fluids.
The finding, reported in today's issue of Science, * could lead to better ways to arm crops against pests.
The researchers reported their findings in a November 2012 issue of Science.
The team, including nanoengineering professor Jian Luo here at the University of California San Diego as a co-corresponding author together with Professor Martin Harmer at Lehigh University, lays out their findings in the Oct. 6, 2017 issue of Science.
The findings will be published in the 16 January issue of Science; they were released today when news of the discovery began to leak, and the paper is now available online.
The findings by Tarduno and his team have been published in the latest issue of the journal Science.
They published their findings in the Feb. 9 issue of Science Advances.
Because most of Congress's legislative work occurs within committees, we thought it made sense to find out how the top - ranking members of those committees approach issues that have some sort of foundation in science.
The findings are published in the current issue of Science.
Their findings have been accepted for publication in an upcoming issue of the Astrophysical Journal, and will be presented this week at the American Astronomical Society's Division for Planetary Sciences 48th annual meeting, held jointly in Pasadena, California, with the 11th European Planetary Science Congress.
Stevenson is one of the authors on a paper that describes the finding in the current issue of the journal Science.
Boyle's findings were published with economists Matthew Kotchen, of Yale University, and Kerry Smith, of Arizona State University, in the October issue of Science.
The findings are published in the 29 January issue of Science.
This story appears in the June 24, 2017, issue of Science News with the headline, «The opportunity zone: Exoplanets found in a narrow band around M dwarf stars could host a very different kind of life.»
«I found many scientific and engineering issues,» says Donglin Ma, an optics scientist at Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST), in Wuhan, China.
Another possible issue with attribution science, he says, is that the current generation of simulations simply may not be capable of capturing some of the subtle changes in the climate and oceans — a particular danger when it comes to studies that find no link to human activities.
The findings, reported in tomorrow's issue of Science, * could lead to better drugs for helping people sleep.
The goal from the start has been to find ways to improve the science of such attribution, said Stephanie Herring of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Centers for Environmental Information in Boulder, Colo., who was lead editor of the latest issue.
The study «highlights the importance of temperature on evolution — particularly mammal evolution,» says Felisa Smith, a professor of biology at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, who wrote an essay on the findings in the same issue of Science.
The findings are published in the Mar. 7 issue of Science Translational Medicine.
► Economist Heather Boushey's new book Finding Time: The Economics of Work - Life Conflict «offer [s] a thorough, systematic, evidence - based case for a comprehensive package of institutional reforms» to address today's workplace expectations, which «have left millions of working Americans perpetually stressed, conflicted, economically insecure, and time - poor,» wrote Janet Gornick of the Graduate Center of the City University of New York in New York City in a review (subscription required) in this week's issue of Science.
The findings, published in the November issue of Social Science & Medicine, indicate that neighborhood quality has significant and long - term effects on child and adolescent problem behaviors, findings that can help inform national, state, and local housing policy and community investment decisions.
The findings, reported in today's issue of Science, * offer a promising new avenue for testing drugs against EBV, which has also been implicated in sinus and throat cancer.
A new study to be published in a special 2016 election issue of PS: Political Science and Politics finds that reading Harry Potter books leads Americans to take a lower opinion of Donald Trump.
The findings, reported in tomorrow's issue of Science, * hold out the hope of diminishing a malady almost as common as the common cold: UTIs send 1.5 million people — mostly women — to the hospital each year in the United States alone, and 7 million more to their doctors.
Steve: You can hear the original edit of the interview with Alan Weisman on the June 27th episode of Science Talk, which is available free at our Web site, www.SciAm.com/podcast and an edited transcript along with additional audio and video materials about The World without Us can be found free on our Web site in our archive July issue that's www.SciAm.com.
«What's striking about these findings is that politics sometimes is at the center of the story about public attitudes and sometimes politics has very little to do with the way people think about science issues in the public arena.
By replacing early and late eggs in field experiments, the team found that by biasing the sex of the eggs and laying them in a particular order, the mother increased chick survival by 10 % to 20 % over chicks from eggs laid in no particular order, they report in the 11 January issue of Science.
Independent measurements of sea surface temperatures in the last two decades support a recent government analysis that found an increase in sea surface warming, according to a new study in the 4 January issue of the journal Science Advances.
The findings are reported in the Dec. 13 issue of Science.
The findings, to be published in the Jan. 27 issue of the journal Science, could lead to a wide range of applications, such as thermoelectric systems that convert waste heat from engines and appliances into electricity.
Indeed, the researchers found that mice fed the drug produced more ABC1, they report in the 1 September issue of Science.
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