The truth is, there is one
journal study showed greater weight loss with less hunger on HCG versus placebo.
A Nutrition
Journal study showed that after two weeks on a vegetarian diet, participants showed significant mood improvements (versus omnivores).
First off, as I tell every US attorney when I'm dealing with them in a federal case where I have no defenses, that if slavery was legal I would still advise people how to help escaped slaves remain free because I think it's our moral imperative that we do things that are moral, and I think that prohibiting people from using medication which we know works — which we would have more peer view
journal studies showing that it worked — if the federal government didn't make doing the studies so difficult.
Not exact matches
In a new
study published this month in the
journal Allergy & Rhinology, Reisacher and his team
showed that the toothpaste method was safe and effective in treating those respiratory allergies in comparison to traditional sublingual immunotherapy, where drops are given under the tongue.
Follow - up
studies that asked volunteers to find time for 15 minutes of device - free solitude each day for a week and keep a
journal of their experiences
showed the same thing - fewer intense emotions and a greater awareness of subtle ones.
A
study referenced in the Dartmouth Undergraduate
Journal of Science
showed, «
Studies have found that diets low in carbohydrates increased feelings of anger, depression, and tension and diets high in protein and low in carbohydrates increased anger.»
A 2016
study published in the International
Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
showed that hourly five - minute walking breaks boosted energy levels, sharpened focus, and «improved mood throughout the day and reduced feelings of fatigue in the late afternoon.»
A
study published in the
journal Applied Research in Quality of Life
showed that the highest spike in happiness came during the planning stage of a vacation as people enjoy the sense of anticipation:
A recent
study published in Strategic Management
Journal shows that as firms get involved in more socially responsible practices, they also get better at developing credibility with their stakeholders.
Following are a sample of
studies published in peer - reviewed
journals showing that as a result of participating in MOC activities, physicians have:
Several years ago they published a
study in the influential
journal Science that
showed reading literary fiction was linked with an improved ability to better read fine emotional cues on people's faces.
While the
Journal doesn't quote the publishing journal for the new studies, a previous study by both institutions in 2014 showed that those who took notes with a computer performed much worse on answering conceptual questions than those who hand -
Journal doesn't quote the publishing
journal for the new studies, a previous study by both institutions in 2014 showed that those who took notes with a computer performed much worse on answering conceptual questions than those who hand -
journal for the new
studies, a previous
study by both institutions in 2014
showed that those who took notes with a computer performed much worse on answering conceptual questions than those who hand - wrote.
New
studies by researchers at Princeton University and UCLA have reinforced this by
showing that students who took notes by hand in class generally outperformed students who typed their notes via computer, according to The Wall Street
Journal.
«People have a false assumption that they're more productive working as a group than individually, even though all evidence
shows it's the opposite,» explains Nicholas Kohn, co-author of the University of Texas
study, published in the
journal Applied Cognitive Psychology.
Particularly given a 2014
study published in the
Journal of Health and Social Behavior that
showed that men who have the ability to hire and fire are happier than men who don't.
A recent
study published in the
Journal of Consumer Research found that people who were asked to think about the past were willing to pay more for products than those who were asked to think about new or future memories; another experiment
showed an increased willingness to give more money to others after recalling a nostalgic event.
One 2011
study in the
Journal of Consumer Research (full text, PDF) concluded that, even though the researchers started the
study with the assertion that mess was an averse condition that would lead to lower efficiency, their experimentation actually
showed that in some people, some clutter actually made them more efficient, helped them make decisions, and made them feel more creative.
A new
study in the CFA's Financial
Journal showed the underperformance / diminishing alpha of stocks chosen purely based on their quantitative value, and explains why value factors taken alone aren't great indicators.
On April 26, 2012, the results of a
study which tested their subjects» pro-social sentiments were published in the Social Psychological and Personality Science
journal in which non-religious people had higher scores
showing that they were more inclined to
show generosity in random acts of kindness, such as lending their po.sse.ssions and offering a seat on a crowded bus or train.
In that
study - reported in the 18th February issue of The New England
Journal of Medicine - they
showed that some PVS patients were clearly able to interpret spoken instructions and respond to them meaningfully.
In a new
study published on 19 February in the open access
journal PLOS Biology, researchers
show that similar — or even identical — mutations can occur during diversification in completely separate populations of E. coli evolving in different environments over more than 1000 generations.
In a new
study published on 19 February in the open access
journal PLOS Biology, researchers
show that similar - or even identical - mutations can occur during diversification in completely separate populations of E. coli evolving in different environments over more than 1000 generations.
A prospective
study published in the
journal Obesity
shows such fears are groundless.
One small
study in the British
Journal of Nutrition
showed that subjects who ate the «maximum tolerable dose» of red chili peppers at lunch ate less fat — and therefore less calories — for the rest of the day.
In 2009, a
study was conducted in the Division of Dermatology, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, and published in the
Journal of Investigative Dermatology,
showing that lauric acid in coconut oil was effective in treating inflammatory acne.
The
study, published in the prestigious British
Journal of Nutrition, also
shows significantly lower levels of toxic heavy metals in organic crops.
A 1955
study, published in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition,
showed that consumption of buckwheat lowered total cholesterol while improving HDL cholesterol levels.
This was
shown in a new
study led by the Research Institute of Organic Agriculture FiBL, which has recently been published in the renowned scientific
journal «Nature Communications».
A recent
study from India published in the
Journal of Food Science Technology
showed positive results in improving glucose metabolism in high fructose diets in rats.
The
study, published today in the prestigious British
Journal of Nutrition, also
shows significantly lower levels of toxic heavy metals in organic crops.
A comprehensive new
study published this week in the prestigious British
Journal of Nutrition
shows very clearly that how we grow our food has a huge impact.
In 2010, researchers from the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center published a
study in the
journal Clinical Cancer Research
showing that sulforaphane had the ability to kill breast cancer stem cells in mice and in lab cultures, and it also prevented the growth of new tumor cells.
However, newer research has
shown that GHG emissions such as atmospheric methane have risen rapidly since 2007, according to a 2016
study published in the International
Journal of Science.
Research
shows that soups can help you lose weight: in one
study, published in the
journal Physiology & Behavior, people consumed the fewest calories on days when they ate soup rather than the same ingredients in solid form.
A meta - analysis
study published in the British Medical
Journal shows increased sugar intake is significantly associated with weight gain.
A
study shown in the
Journal of Nutrition revealed that almond skins contain twenty potent flavanoid antioxidants, and that eating almonds with the skins significantly increases flavanoids and vitamin E in the body.
The American
Journal of Sports Medicine did a
study in 2009 that
showed that football players were the most likely to get hurt, followed by wrestlers — and then distantly trailing were girls basketball and girls soccer players.
Last week, we posted to the site a group of four articles about a peer - reviewed
study in the
Journal of Neurosurgery
showing that football helmet design affected concussion risk among a large group (or what scientists call a «cohort») of college football players.
One recent
study in the «
Journal of Clinical Epidemiology»
showed that women who nursed babies for at least 25 months total of their own life had a decreased risk compared to mothers who did not nurse.
A recent
study published in the
Journal of the American College of Nutrition
showed that milk consumption does not lead to mucus production or asthma.
A
study published a few years ago in the
journal Frontiers in Psychology
shows that when moms breathe in the smell of their own newborns, it releases a reward - seeking response in the brain.
A Tufts
study published
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics
showed lunches brought from home had lots of packaged food and sugary drinks
A
study completed in 2015 by Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine and published in the American
Journal of Men's Health
showed that men who had children were more likely to continue to gain weight after a child arrives.
In keeping with the rather serious tone infecting The Lunch Tray this week (except for the comic relief provided by the school lunch lady action figure - thank goodness for her), the Wall Street
Journal recently reported on two new
studies showing... [Continue reading]
There are many used mattresses around that you can buy maybe for as low as half the price of a new one, but be very cautious about doing so, because a
study published in the British
Journal shows that there's might be a direct relation between SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome) and used mattresses.
The most recent large scale
study comparing outcomes for mother and baby reported in the British Medical
Journal last month
showed that for women who had previously given birth, adverse outcomes were less common among planned home births (1 per 1,000) than among planned hospital births (2.3 per 1,000).
An analysis of 17
studies published in the American
Journal of Epidemiology
shows that breastfeeding reduces a child's risk of becoming overweight as a teen or adult.
Quoting the
journal Pediatrics: «Although recent research has
shown the negative consequences associated with background television, this
study provides the first nationally representative estimates of that exposure.
A
study published in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition has
shown that lactating mothers who eat coconut oil and other coconut products, have significantly increased levels of lauric acid and capric acid in their breast milk, creating milk rich in health promoting nutrients.
In fact, a recent
study in the
Journal of the American Medical Association, the Association Between Duration of Breastfeeding and Adult Intelligence,
showed an over 6 point increase in IQ between babies that breastfed for less than a month and those that breastfed for at least 7 to 9 months.