Sentences with phrase «little studies about»

Not exact matches

«If investors spent less time listening to the talking heads on BNN and CNBC and more time studying history, they would realize that there is little value added by obsessing about economic growth,» Murray Leith, an analyst at Odlum Brown in Vancouver, wrote last fall.
«We make a big deal about the controversial nature of our business and market around it,» explains Biderman, pointing out that the thousands of user profiles on Avid's various international sites represent, in the aggregate, a vast sociological study of human infidelity, an area that has traditionally attracted little in the way of sociological scrutiny.
In his 1994 study on securities lawbreaking for the Justice Department, Schlegel found that while officials were talking tough about locking up insider traders, there was little evidence to suggest that the punishments imposed — either the incarceration rates or the sentences themselves — were more severe.
But great artists through the ages didn't need studies to tell them about the benefits of a little strategic disorder.
You can read about the study in my post, Let Me Tell You a Little Something About Millennabout the study in my post, Let Me Tell You a Little Something About MillennAbout Millennials.
A little swearing might help, suggest some studies, or if that's not appropriate for a given situation, how about simply adding a because statement to your request?
Indeed, there are many studies that show that valuation tells you very little about what the stock market will do in the next year.
But according to a fascinating new study from Pew, all this hype about information overload might amount to much ado about very little.
The crackdown on corporate crime sparked six years ago by accounting scandals at Enron and WorldCom has done little to foster ethical behavior in the workplace, where many employees are still afraid to speak out about misconduct, a new study finds.
Humor That Works at Work Depends on the Type of Humor You Use A study led by Adam Miklosi found that, yet again, dogs can teach us a little something about the effectiveness of humor as a stress - buster.
SUNSET PARK, BROOKLYN — A new study by New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli found that Sunset Park and Windsor Terrace are home to rapid job and population growth — but some local officials and activists say too little is known about what kinds of jobs are being created in the area, and who is benefiting.
Vanessa Martin Studying Anthropology at University of Toronto Tell us a little about yourself!
The «associate professor in the Department of Religious Studies» knows so little about Mormonism comparing it to Scientology (a religion?)
Because I'll see this little group of people on Thursday night for our Bible study, and that is where we'll talk about the real stuff, show up, be disappointed and forgive, love each other a bit more every week.
Highly quantified studies of this sort have, in fact, revealed little about the causes of poverty.
After studying Christian history, she concluded that she knew too little about the Orthodox Church, so I answered her questions as best I could.I also admonished her to discover the Church through its....
One would hardly expect a discussion either of the life or of the significance of Jesus of Nazareth in such philosophically oriented studies of nature and history, or even in what little about human nature they have written.
@Saraswati, Sorry Chad, but I've lived and worked in China and spent a lot of time studying the country and that's just a crock (note I know little about Stalin and am just talking about Mao).
But I studied a little bit about Buddha and he never did black magic.
Even today, when issues of sexual violence receive considerable media attention, surveys and studies indicate that the majority of ministers and seminary students know almost nothing about the dynamics of sexual and family violence and have little or no experience in dealing with it.
In studying the Jesuit tradition, Garfield learned a little more about what it means to live a life beyond service to only yourself.
We know a lot about our own faith, the study found, but little about the faith of others.
catholics are free to believe in universal restoration» You need to go back and do a little more studying because you don't know what you're talking about.
If you are like me, you might be a little tired of hearing about the supernatural realm, but this book was insightful and creative and helped me think through a few issues I have been wanting to study further for quite some time.
More church buildings, more Bible studies, more correct thinking and more correct theology will do very little about that.
I have received a bunch of emails about this little study... and for that I am grateful.
And then, because (as he later wrote) he realized «that Catholicism was the largest force in my life, yet I knew so little about it,» he went on to study theology, philosophy, and canon law at the Catholic University of America, earning a PhD in 1951.
BRC, No, I will admit that haven't studied other religions, I have learned a little about some of them, but very little.
Perhaps in more fundamentalist congregations where so much emphasis is given to the written word and what the preacher makes of it, it make weaken his hold on the largely ignorant, but in the Catholic and Episcopaelian congregations, it is much more about pomp and ceremony — where the scriptural readings take on much more of a musical resonance than a study group — it will have little impact.
«It can be a little bit challenging to learn about all these great products that we have, so it takes some effort to study up,» he says.
Now I can get back to studying what I am passionate about and get outside a little bit;)
Although there are literally hundreds of scientific studies published in recent medical journals describing the amazing health benefits of antioxidant rich Red Palm Fruit Oil, the average health conscious consumer or health professional knows very little about this oil.
I have to first admit that I've been a little reticent to post about this, not because I'm not excited about it, but because homebirth in our culture is not seen as a safe or wise choice (though in reality it is as safe or safer than hospital births in most cases — there are a number of studies that indicate as such).
A lengthy, well - researched, and powerful article in the Spring 2015 issue of the NCAA's Champion magazine, not only reports the belief of many top concussion experts that the media narrative about sports - related concussion trace has been dominated by media reports on the work of Dr. Ann McKee, which was the centerpiece of PBS Frontline's League of Denial, but Dr. McKee's, however belated, mea culpa that «There's no question [that her autopsies finding evidence of CTE in the brains of most of the former athletes were] a very biased study,» that they involved «a certain level of... sensationalism», that there were «times when it's overblown» and went «a little too far.»
In comparison to the amount of research, the number of studies, and the number of books written about motherhood, relatively little has been written about fatherhood.
Now, no one wants to pooh - pooh the prospect of little kids falling ill from food poisoning, but I know I'm not the only parent (and daily packer of school lunches) who heard about this study and, well, scoffed.
But that study didn't pan out, because so many of the white parents in the study dropped out or refused to talk about race with their little kids.
And while letting your child make a decision about whether or not they want to be tickled may not have been the point of that particular study, it's still an example of an area where we should let our little ones voice their own opinions and maybe even more importantly, learn that only they are in control of their own bodies.
Very little is known about the direct effects of drinking on breastfeeding; a 2017 study showed that over half of Australian women who breastfeed drink at low levels, and use strategies, such as timing when they drink and breastfeed, which does not seem to be harmful to babies at 12 months.
There have been some pieces in recent years in Time and the NYT, but overall, I see little about it in the media in contrast with, say autism or vaccines, anyway, where any little study seems to get covered.
But I know this little guy well enough to know that too much instruction will completely turn him off (hmmn... I don't know where he gets that), and that he wouldn't begin to attempt something until he'd studied, watched and thought about it a good deal already.
High school athletics coaches in Washington State are now receiving substantial concussion education and are demonstrating good knowledge about concussions, but little impact is being felt on the proportion of athletes playing with concussive symptoms, according to the two studies published in the American Journal of Sports Medicine.
High school athletics coaches in Washington State are now receiving substantial concussion education and are demonstrating good knowledge about concussions, but little impact is being felt on the proportion of athletes playing with concussive symptoms, according to two studies published this month in the American Journal of Sports Medicine.
However, intervention studies — both primary studies and systematic reviews — rarely assess impacts on socioeconomic inequalities, and thus little is known about which interventions are effective and cost - effective for reducing those inequalities.2 — 4
But with the release of a recent study conducted in the U.S. and the U.K., more women are learning about the benefits of iron supplements, specifically for their little guys or gals.
The author, Rooja Sooben from the Centre for Learning Disability Studies at the University of Hertfordshire, says despite compelling evidence about the health benefits of breastfeeding, little is known about the experiences of mothers of infants with Down's syndrome.
An emerging body of literature in adults has begun to establish clear associations between gut microbiome composition and a wide range of health outcomes.1 - 6 In contrast, comparatively little is known about the gut microbiome in infants and children, the exposures that shape it, and its lifelong health effects.7 Although limited in their size and scope, a number of studies have established associations between intestinal microbiome profiles in infants, delivery mode, and / or breast milk exposure.8 - 15 These factors both have long - term health consequences.
Although awareness has increased about sports concussions, little research has been done on middle school athletes, especially girls, noted study co-author Dr. Melissa Schiff, a professor of epidemiology at the University of Washington School of Public Health in Seattle.
There was very little information about study methods and most of the results in the paper were not reported by randomisation group.
A couple things about this study are worth mentioning: a) they removed cases in which symptoms of cancer occurred in the first nine months or the child died in the first year, which may be where the effects of breastfeeding are strongest (though I certainly don't know this for a fact, but it is reasonable); and b) they did not examine exclusive breastfeeding, but rather any breastfeeding (this is important as the effects of breastfeeding are known to be strongest when breastfeeding is exclusive and it is also difficult to ascertain how little or how much women were breastfeeding when any breastfeeding is the variable of interest).
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