«This galaxy is remarkably efficient,» said Jim Geach of McGill University in Canada,
lead author of a new study appearing in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Not exact matches
The
study, which
appears today in The
New England Journal
of Medicine, comes with a number
of caveats, says
lead author Susan Stewart, an expert on aging at the National Bureau
of Economic Research in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Few reliable tools exist for detecting neural signals
of awareness in people who
appear unresponsive, says Lorina Naci, a neuroscientist at the University
of Western Ontario in London, Canada, and
lead author of the
new study.
But these beliefs run counter to
new findings which
appear in the journal Addictive Behaviors, says the
study's
lead author, Craig Colder, a professor in UB's Department
of Psychology.
«Imagine trying to view a firefly buzzing around a lighthouse in Canada from Los Angeles,» said Denis Defrère
of the University
of Arizona,
lead author of the
new study that
appears in the Jan. 14 issue
of the Astrophysical Journal.
It lacks an arch and has an opposable, or grasping, big toe, like living apes, says Yohannes Haile - Selassie, a paleoanthropologist at the Cleveland Museum
of Natural History in Ohio and the
lead author of the
new study, which
appears online today in Nature.
«During sleep, maybe specific brain regions have slow waves at the same time because they need to exchange information with each other, whereas other ones don't,» says Laura Lewis, a research affiliate in MIT's Department
of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and one
of the
lead authors of the
new study, which
appears in the journal eLife.
But these beliefs run counter to
new findings which
appear in the journal Addictive Behaviors, according to the
study's
lead author, Craig Colder, a professor in UB's Department
of Psychology.
In a
study in the Journal
of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, Thomas G. Travison, Ph.D,
of the
New England Research Institutes (NERI) in Watertown, Mass., and
lead author of the
study said: «Male serum testosterone levels
appear to vary by generation, even after age is taken into account.»