Sentences with phrase «latest issue of science»

But now scientists in Switzerland have identified why all that fertilizer use is decreasing biodiversity more broadly: Fast - Growing Plants Overwhelm Grasslands The results of research done at the University of Zurich have been published in the latest issue of Science show that, looking at grasslands, the main reason is that all those extra nutrients allow faster growing plants to overwhelm an area, blocking sunlight from reaching smaller, slower - growing plants.
As Robin Perutz of the University of York explains in the latest issue of Science, fluorocarbons are very difficult to get rid of and can't easily be recycled into other useful compounds.
Finally some «upbeat» news on climate change: According to a new study published in the latest issue of Science, permafrost may be more resistant to warmer temperatures than previously thought — which means we may not yet
Global warming may be the culprit in the waves of tree deaths scientists have observed in the western U.S. in unmanaged, old - growth forests, reported in the latest issue of Science.
Their findings were published in the latest issue of Science Advances, a new sister journal of Science.
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.
But according to a report in the latest issue of Science, Mustapha Meghraoui and his colleagues in Strasbourg, France and at the University of Basel have now pinpointed the quake's exact source.
In the latest issue of Science, researchers reveal how these remarkable threads help the mussels stand the battering of waves: They are a hybrid of the inflexible molecule collagen, which provides strength, and more flexible molecules that provide resilience.
In the most recent of these reports (in the latest issue of Science), Dr. Jennifer Wargo, a surgeon and research scientist at M.D. Anderson, along with several dozen colleagues at other institutions, reveal that the composition of a patient's gut microbiota can significantly influence whether he or she responds to an immune checkpoint inhibitor — the type of cancer immunotherapy that releases the emergency brakes in the car analogy above.

Not exact matches

As our review of the CTS «Science and Religion» pamphlet later in this issue shows, we would have a different angle, particularly concerning the nature of the renewed concept of the «form» to which Fr Selman refers.
As our review of Alister McGrath's latest book in this issue implies, he, along with many other contemporary science and religion writers, fails to make this discernment and thus, whilst making numerous helpful points, despairs of inferring properties of God from looking at nature.
Some good ones are to be found in the latest issue of Perspectives on Political Science....
A later study published in a 2006 issue of «Innovative Food Science & Emerging Technologies» confirmed these findings.
Each issue has exclusive hands - on science explorations for children, a recap of our latest activities, and special resources selected just for you!
The work, whose lead author is the late James Hill, PhD, LSU Health New Orleans Professor and Director of Pharmacology and Infectious Disease at the LSU Eye Center, is published in the December 3, 2014, issue of Science Translational Medicine.
Attending national meetings, including the annual American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting and a variety of ethics meetings, got me out of my somewhat constrained lab - centered world, exposed me to larger policy issues, and allowed me to meet a variety of individuals who later served as mentors.
The findings by Tarduno and his team have been published in the latest issue of the journal Science.
The researchers have reported this in the latest issue of the «Science Advances» journal.
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.
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 results of his study are published in the latest issue of Search, an official publication of the Australian and New Zealand Association for the Advancement of Science.
Whether it is news of a potential new drug for Crohn's disease, an aurora detected on Mars or a science fiction — like 3 - D printer that makes objects from a pool of goo, each issue is chock - full of the latest exciting developments.
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.
Professor Don Levitan, chair of the Department of Biological Science, writes in the latest issue of Marine Ecology Progress Series that bleaching — a process where high water temperatures or UV light stresses the coral to the point where it loses its symbiotic algal partner that provides the coral with color — is also affecting the long - term fertility of the coral.
The current issue of Science magazine features a section dedicated to the latest results from the European Rosetta mission to comet 67P / Churyumov - Gerasimenko.
Two studies in the latest issue of the journal Science say that producing biofuels may actually produce more carbon dioxide than we would with conventional fuel.
But in the latest issue of the journal Science, a team of researchers from Mongolia and the American Museum report on their discovery of a very similar egg containing a tiny Oviraptor skeleton, almost ready to hatch.
Leading the Stanford research team was Jon Krosnick, a professor of communication and political science, who has been looking at public attitudes on environmental issues since the late 1990s.
Soon, the approximately 130 PSM programs will likely be joined by dozens more, as the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) prepares to issue an announcement — expected later this month — of grants for establishing PSM programs with federal stimulus funds.
The study, which will appear in an upcoming issue of the journal Psychological Science, is the first to document two different but related cognitive phenomena simultaneously: so - called «extreme forgetting» — when kids learn two similar things in rapid succession, and the second thing causes them to forget the first — and delayed remembering — when they can recall the previously forgotten information days later.
I think the life sciences have been a little too late to the party on bringing our talents and resources to bear on solving some of the critical issues within a given community.
In this month's issue of Discover, you'll learn how the latest advances in science are bringing answers to these provocative questions into focus.
As I recently revisited the White Paper entitled Realising Our Potential — a Strategy for Science, Engineering and Technology, produced in 1993 by a previous government, I was surprised to see how, 7 years later, most of the issues identified there are of relevance today and still require solutions.
In recognition of this trend, the award - winning magazine Index on Censorship, which explores challenges to freedom of speech, has dedicated its latest issue, «Dark Matter», to science.
The news follows a warning issued late last month by the Australian Academy of Science that the country's strategic position in Antarctica is at risk because of a declining scientific effort there.
Researchers at Vanderbilt University's Peabody College published the update in the December 2014 issue of Psychological Science, writing: «For both males and females, mathematical precocity early in life predicts later creative contributions and leadership in critical occupational roles.»
'' Check out the latest issue of Nature Outlook, which examines the areas of biomedical science that challenge and inspire these pre-eminent investigators.
And most appropriately, in his inaugural column, in the Origins special issue, he is looking at C. P. Snow, the discusser of the unfortunate «Two Cultures,» on the one hand the very literary people, on the other hand the science - educated people, and we are still 50 years later after C. P. Snow's column trying to figure out a bridge between the two, and Dr. Krauss has some interesting things to say about that in this issue.
A study by Hardcastle in the latest issue of the Journal of the Forensic Science Society crystallises these concerns.
The seven select scientists and engineers were the vanguard of a movement that, four decades later, has grown to more than 2500 researchers who provide unmatched expertise to address public science issues.
More recently, an essay by Chapman and Alan Harris in the Sept. / Oct. 2002 issue of «The Skeptical Inquirer,» «A Skeptical Look at September 11th» was selected by Richard Dawkins as one of the best science / nature essays of the year and was published in late 2003 in a compendium by Houghton - Mifflin; it was republished again in 2009 in a collection of S.I. articles ed.
Research by Environomics FSP scientist, Clare Holleley, features in the latest (June 14, 2017) issue of the prestigious journal Science Advances.
Led by Gladstone Investigator Bruce Conklin, MD, the research team describes in the latest issue of Nature Methods how they have solved one of science and medicine's most pressing problems: how to efficiently and accurately capture rare genetic mutations that cause disease — as well as how to fix them.
The 25 experts will bring the latest science to bear on critical issues by contributing both a wealth of knowledge on desertification, land degradation and drought and extensive experience in translating science to inform decision making.
In a study presented in latest issue of the journal Science, the paleontologists Vivi Vajda from the University of Lund, Sweden and Stephen McLoughlin from the Queensland University of Technology, Australia have described what happened to the vegetation month by month.
Recently, Emoryâ $ ™ s Jeff Koplan, MD, vice president for global health and past CDC director, participated in a Breakthroughs panel sponsored by Big Think, Pfizer and Discover to discuss the latest issues in pandemic and genomic science, fields that have not only made big headlines recently but also promise to be two of the most pressing topics in global science and medicine in coming years.
Impact Factor: 21.147 Issues Per Year: 12 issues per year Aims and Scope: Essential reading for those working directly in the cognitive sciences or in related specialist areas, Trends in Cognitive Sciences provides an instant overview of current thinking for scientists, students and teachers who want to keep up with the latest developments in the cognitive sciIssues Per Year: 12 issues per year Aims and Scope: Essential reading for those working directly in the cognitive sciences or in related specialist areas, Trends in Cognitive Sciences provides an instant overview of current thinking for scientists, students and teachers who want to keep up with the latest developments in the cognitive sciissues per year Aims and Scope: Essential reading for those working directly in the cognitive sciences or in related specialist areas, Trends in Cognitive Sciences provides an instant overview of current thinking for scientists, students and teachers who want to keep up with the latest developments in the cognitive sciences.
In the latest issue of Sister2Sister Magazine, Ice T breaks down the science on the out the full quote from S2S below: S2S
In the latest example of ideology trumping facts and science, Greene's department issued a challenge to a recent study by the Wisconsin Department of Education showing, once again, that the Milwaukee school voucher program is a failure, even for the main audience it claims to be serving by offering what conservatives call «choice.»
Not later than 60 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Surface Transportation Board shall provide quarterly reports to the Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee of the Senate and the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee of the House of Representatives on the Surface Transportation Board's progress toward addressing issues raised in unfinished regulatory proceedings, regardless of whether a proceeding is subject to a statutory or regulatory deadline.
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