Sentences with phrase «issue of science suggest»

Yet capturing and reusing wastewater for municipal and household use, agricultural and industrial production, and recharging depleted aquifers is precisely what researchers writing in the latest issue of Science suggest needs to happen in order to address the world's growing water crisis.
Now a paper in the November 2009 issue of Science suggests that the long - sought cure may come from gene therapy — a famously hyped approach to treatment that tragically caused the death of a teenage experimental subject in 1999.
Research published in the current issue of Science suggests that monitoring the isotopic content of the gases the volcano is emitting now might help predict when — and how explosively — it will erupt.

Not exact matches

While there are certainly many people with serious sleep problems whose account of their suffering shouldn't be doubted and who need medical solutions, science suggests that there are also plenty of folks with milder sleep issues who would benefit from simply chilling out and lowering their expectations.
What I want to propose is that recent progress in science suggests a resolution of the issues Felt raises against Wallack, which allows retention of her main point.
Reactions from the people Science Careers contacted — including professional development and policy experts and early - career scientists — suggest that while the report should help highlight the plight of early - career scientists worldwide, its ambition, methodology, and framing inhibit it from really moving the issues forward.
The robots, described in the April 18 issue of Science Robotics, also showed human - like dexterity to construct the chair, suggesting that these manufacturing machines may soon be ready for use in a wider range of applications, such as aircraft manufacturing, without needing special mechanical modifications or well - organized surroundings.
Levels of a nerve cell signaling molecule called substance P — measured in tear samples — might be a useful marker of diabetes - related nerve damage (neuropathy), suggests a study in the July issue of Optometry and Vision Science, the official journal of the American Academy of Optometry.
A generally pessimistic picture emerged at the 30th annual Forum on Science and Technology of AAAS, but experts examining budgetary, workforce, and globalization issues related to science also suggested some sources oScience and Technology of AAAS, but experts examining budgetary, workforce, and globalization issues related to science also suggested some sources oscience also suggested some sources of hope.
The results, published in the December 8 issue of Science, suggest a direct relationship between increased exposure to guns and the risk of gun - related deaths, said Wellesley College researchers Phillip Levine and Robin McKnight.
But experts examining budgetary, workforce and globalization issues related to science also suggested some sources of hope.
The latest evidence, published in the Jan. 25 issue of the journal Science, suggests that epigenetic changes in mice are usually erased, but not always.
Their results, published in the 12 June issue of Science, suggest that the moth's sight and flight have evolved to perfectly match the movements of flowers — the insect's sole source of food.
«If the authors only suggested meditation or therapy and didn't address the issues they believe to be at the root of the morale problems — funding, bureaucracy and fighting with administrators — then I think faculty would be justified in feeling a little insulted» by the implication that their problems could be solved by meditation or therapy alone, he wrote in an email to Science Careers.
► A Letter in this week's Science, from Brett Favaro of the Centre for Sustainable Aquatic Resources at the Fisheries and Marine Institute of Memorial University of Newfoundland in Canada, considered the issue of carbon emission by scientists in the course of their research and suggested adoption of a «carbon code of conduct» for scientists.
The work, reported in the 29 November issue of Science, shows for the first time that the bugs have a taste for hydrogen, and it suggests new ways to control the misery - inducing critters.
Americans know a lot more about science and health issues than traditional surveys of individuals would suggest, according to a new report from the U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.
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Computer modeling of these dinosaurs» bones, reported in today's issue of Science, suggests that the swanlike neck posture commonly envisioned for these animals would have been impossible.
The two sets of bones were less than a half - meter apart, buried at the same depth and in the same sediment, with the same degree of preservation, strongly suggesting that they were buried together, the team reports in the 9 April issue of Science.
The discovery, published in the May 1 issue of Science, suggests that the Earth's climate doesn't act as a single entity, but can vary from region to region.
In a commentary in the same issue of Science, they agree that the jaw represents a H. sapiens individual, «suggesting that our species had already left Africa by around 180,000 years ago.»
But in today's issue of Science, researchers from the University of California at Santa Barbara and the Pennsylvania State University suggest an alternative to lengthening coherencenamely, speeding up quantum computations.
But a mathematical model published in the 18 November issue of Science Translational Medicine suggests that herpes never slumbers.
The genetic mug shot, described in today's issue of Science, * could help health officials spot a reemergence of the deadly virus and suggests that pig populations — the source of the virus — be closely monitored.
Kerie Hammerton of the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation argued that ionising radiation can usefully prevent spoilage and food - borne disease, and that many overseas studies suggest there are no safety issues.
He suggests that science is the only issue that unites Boris Yeltsin, the Russian President, and Ruslan Khasbulatov, his adversary in parliament: «Yeltsin supports science and Khasbulatov is a member of our academy.»
Results of the study by Janet Yang, a University at Buffalo expert on the communication of risk information related to science, health and environmental issues, suggest that holding a collective, communitarian belief system contributed to altruistic behavior, while those who hold more individualistic values are less likely to be altruistic regardless of how much risk is triggered.
The finding suggests that the mice really had relived an old, bland memory when first introduced to the electric shocks, says Mayford, whose team reports its findings in the 23 March issue of Science.
But with the chicken pathogens beaten back, levels of the antibodies that fight all three strains have fallen in the birds, allowing S. enteritidis, which elicits little or no immune response, a greater foothold, the researchers suggest in the 7 January issue of Science.
Now that issue has been put to rest: In last week's issue of Science (13 December, pp. 2211 and 2213), researchers showed that mice that lack melanopsin do not normally reset their circadian clocks in response to light, suggesting that melanopsin is capturing and relaying the light signal.
That challenges Wilson's theory by suggesting that blood ties are indeed what get eusocial groups started, the team concludes in tomorrow's issue of Science.
A new study, published in this week's issue of Current Biology and partly funded by the National Science Foundation, suggests that salmon find their home rivers by sensing the rivers» unique magnetic signature.
«The deep grooves lacking any apparent artistic design on the pebble suggests it was used to harvest red pigment powder,» the researchers wrote in their study, which was published in the February 2018 issue of the Journal of Archaeological Science.
The results, published in the current issue of the journal Science Advances, suggest that the ecological niche for calcifying algae will become narrower in the future.
In the April 13, 2007, issue of Science, the research team — led by James C. Lo, an MD, PhD student, in the laboratory of Yang - Xin Fu, MD, PhD, professor of pathology at the University of Chicago — suggest that an engineered protein could keep mice, and possibly humans, from developing high cholesterol and triglyceride levels, a key risk factor for coronary heart disease.
The study results, which appeared in the May 29 issue of Science, also suggest improved agricultural technology will be as important as new energy technology in a carbon - limited future.
The new study, detailed in the March 13 issue of the journal Science, suggests that the persistent patterns that drove this and other prolonged heat waves in recent years may have their roots in the the rapid warming of the Arctic.
Setting aside for the moment Cuomo's (apparently) poor grasp of the relevant science, one wonders: if, as he suggests, spay / neuter services aimed at low - income residents are sufficient to control «feral cat» populations, then why is this issue even a topic of conversation — much less the focus of a controversial piece of legislation?
I would suggest that the judge's need to ask some of the questions posed might to his credit reveal a willingness to learn, but I think also reveals a considerable misunderstanding of global warming science, and even a rather primitive thinking, that for instance human breathing might be an issue.
One idea suggested has been to associate the social science studies with the products and assessments of the physical sciences research (e.g., having an area like sea level rise extend from issues pertaining to glaciers to issues concerning dislocation of people on coastlines), so social sciences becomes a small part of all physical science programs.
I was at a dinner a couple weeks back at which several journalists spoke on just this issue, and Shankar Vedantam and Chris Mooney made a good case for what I have also suggested (including in my reply to you on April 6); What's really irrational is for smart people, in support of the myth of perfect rationality and frustrated by the public's «ignorance» about risk, to ignore the mountains of evidence from neuroscience and social sciences about how human perception and decision - making actually works, about risk or anything else.
On the issue of «post-normal science» suggest scientists (especially Climeatologists) everywhere treat this as a matter of socioreligious faith and ignore it for a hundred years.
I don't think, however, that this result suggests the advent of geoengineering as subject of research and as an issue for public discussion will be a zero sum game for public engagement with climate science.
I find it hard to separate the current debate from the policy issues, as suggested in this post, because the fuel of the debate is exactly the implications of the science, namely what policy should be adapted.
The frontpage implies that climate science to date has not been «real,» while the many errors made by the speakers as well as their serious credibility issues (Willie Soon's infamous paper, another paper more recently with Noah Robinson that made up data, Spencer's flawed book on climate sensitivity, Singer's history since about 1990, Schmitt's uncorrected error in a NASA paper, Bast and Taylor's lies in defense of Schmitt, and so on) suggest the opposite — the speakers at the ICCC are the ones attempting to falsify the science.
In this paper, af - ter a brief tutorial on the basics of climate nonlinearity, we provide a number of illustrative examples and highlight key mechanisms that give rise to nonlinear behavior, address scale and methodological issues, suggest a robust alternative to prediction that is based on using integrated assessments within the framework of vulnerability studies and, lastly, recommend a number of research priorities and the establishment of education programs in Earth Systems Science.
They instead suggest that the understanding of the emissions - temperatures - nature linkages is being revised and that the level of urgency or seriousness of the issue is being revisited by science as well as policymakers.
The research, published in Friday's issue of the journal Science, casts doubt on the argument that deforestation is a critical step towards development and suggests that mechanisms to compensate communities for keeping forests standing may be a better approach to improving human welfare, while simultaneously sustaining biodiversity and ecosystem services, in rainforest areas.
A quick look suggests that the case that Greenpeace builds at those sites is somewhat indirect; however, there is no doubt that there are corporate entities that support rightwing think tanks and research institutes that definitively have an advocacy stance on this issue (as well as others) and which have a history of supporting propaganda rooted in bad science.
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