Sentences with phrase «little study published»

For an odd little study published in the Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, researchers in the U.K. surveyed 77 12 - year - olds about their relationships with their pets and their relationships with their siblings.

Not exact matches

Previous studies have shown a little bit of anxiety helps you avoid danger and reach peak motivation, now new research out of Canada's University of Waterloo that was recently published in Brain Sciences is adding another item to the growing list of anxiety's benefits: improved memory.
The Danforth Study of Campus Ministries, published ten years ago under the audaciously inclusive title The Church, the University, and Social Policy, has probably had little measurable impact on any of the three communities addressed — which focus respectively on goodness, truth and power — much less on strengthening their linkage with one another.
A study published Thursday by the American Psychological Association suggests that believing may be a little of both.
The USDA study of minerals published back in 1997 even declared there are little to no minerals in the soil.
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.
In a 1990 study by SJ Astley and RE Little published in Neurotoxicol Teratol, they studied 136 babies breastfeeding until 1 year old.
By: Ed BruskeA little sugar with that calcium?A landmark study on calcium and vitamin D nutrition recently published by the Institute of Medicine poses a serious challenge to a dairy industry campaign to sell chocolate milk to the nation's school children, finding that only girls aged 9 to... Read more
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.
So the fact that they've been read the study and then published it with such a headline like that I feel is a little irresponsible which isn't surprising.
A 2012 study published in the Journal of Nutrition found that even a little dehydration can alter a person's mood, energy levels, and mental abilities.
Published medical studies find no evidence that avoiding foods like milk and eggs during pregnancy has any effect on a baby's allergy risk, and little evidence that shunning peanuts helps.
Two Shedd Aquarium researchers published a study in the Journal of Great Lakes Research last weekend on a little - known amphibian that resides in the Great Lakes region, the mudpuppy (Necturus maculosus), as part of a multi-year research project in partnership with Southern Illinois University's Department of Zoology, Center for Ecology, and Cooperative Wildlife Research Laboratory.
But a small study published in the journal Pediatrics suggests that giving newborns a little bit of formula actually helps boost breast - feeding rates.
According to a study published by the Istituto Catteneo, a significant share of Five Stars votes come from individuals who supported centre - left parties in the past, if with little enthusiasm.
Middle - aged people who eat protein - heavy diets are four times as likely to die of cancer as those who eat only a little protein, according to the study, which was published in the journal Cell Metabolism.
As for publishing 4 papers in 4 years of PhD study... well I think this encourages too many irrelevant publications with too narrow a scope, and likely of little contribution to science.
The results, published online November 9 in Nature Neuroscience, highlight how little is known about how these drugs actually work, says study coauthor Marc Aurel Busche of Technical University Munich.
The research, published today in the journal Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, provides new insight into the little - studied world of underwater volcanoes.
The study, published in the journal Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, shows little overall association between HPV vaccination and the chances of conceiving for men and women — except among women with a history of sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
«Rare octopus shocks scientists with unusual mating and reproductive strategies: Scientists publish first behavioral study of little - known cephalopod, validating long - dismissed observations.»
Little has been known about the ways in which many diabetes genes work, but a study published in the journal Cell sheds light on a genetic risk component of type 1 diabetes and a new approach for keeping beta cells strong.
A new review of published studies on the effects of long - chain omega - 3 fats — the type found in fish oils — finds «little support» that they «improve depressed mood.»
That result contrasts sharply with a controversial study published just over a year ago in Science that suggested that a mixture of prairie grasses farmed with little fertilizer or other inputs would produce a higher net energy yield than ethanol produced from corn (Science, 8 December 2006, p. 1598).
But a study published in April offers a glimpse of an extreme rarity in the modern world: chimpanzees that have had little or no previous contact with people.
«Very little has been known about recovery from cannabis use problems, and this is the first study to examine that on a national basis,» says John Kelly, PhD, director of the Recovery Research Institute, who led the study published in the March issue of the International Journal of Drug Policy.
The sharp - shooting fishes» ability to spit water to hit food targets have been well documented, but a new study published online in the journal Zoology showed for the first time that there is little difference in the amount of force delivered by their water jets to targets at different distances.
A recent study published in JAMA Internal Medicine found that even those who exercised for fewer than the recommended time (150 minutes of moderate or 75 minutes of vigorous exercise per week) showed a decrease in risk of death, when compared to those who had little to no physical activity each day.
This form of participation in social media may sound like it should have little effect on how humans view themselves, but the study, published online in the Journal of Telematics and Informatics, revealed the exact opposite.
Though that can be a little difficult, Izabela Wierzbowska of Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland, and colleagues note in a study published in the September Biological Conservation.
Mortality in prostate cancer is lower in areas with frequent use of PSA testing compared with areas with little testing shows a study published online today in Journal of the National Cancer Institute by researchers from Umeå University, Sweden and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA.
Both studies in the little skate (Leucoraja erinacea) are published this week by Andrew Gillis and Katharine Criswell of the University of Cambridge, U.K., who conduct research as Whitman Center Scientists at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL), Woods Hole.
In the present study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, the scientists from Mainz and Jena showed that the protective symbiosis between beewolves and their bacterial partners has not only existed since the Cretaceous (see also our press release, «Faithful allies since the Cretaceous,» April 15, 2014); moreover, the antibiotic protection offered by the bacteria against pathogens has changed very little since it evolved about 68 million years ago.
Despite their ubiquity, there's been precious little effort spent evaluating whether these programs actually work, writes Daniel Koehler, director of the German Institute on Radicalization and De-radicalization Studies based in Stuttgart, in a commentary published today in Nature Human Behaviour.
A study published in the recent online journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B set out to test that question with the little West Coast tidepool copepod, Tigriopus californicus, which normally shows an ability to tolerate wide ranges in temperatures.
A study published in February also documented changes in the glacier's flow rate, indicating that little - studied ice shelves are starting to get more attention as scientists» understanding of ice and satellite coverage improves.
Two related studies led by the Pagliarini lab, published consecutively in today's (Aug. 4) issue of the journal Molecular Cell, identify functions for three little - known mitochondrial proteins that play either a direct or potential role in disease.
In the study, published online in Cell, scientists from New York University analyzed the genome of a species of fish called little skates.
But a study published Monday adds to the growing evidence those escaping gases, called «fugitive» emissions, are numerous, especially methane emissions while a well is being drilled, a phase of well development previously thought to emit little if any methane.
The study, published Wednesday in PLOS ONE, couldn't rely on GPS trackers to figure out flight durations for the little bugs — they couldn't support the weight of such devices.
A new study published in the Journal of Human Evolution finds that Homo floresiensis, a teensy little hominin species first discovered only a little more than a decade ago in a cave on the indonesian island of Flores, probably doesn't fit into the human family tree the way we thought.
A recent study published in the Journal of Applied Physiology found that a little caffeine post-exercise may also be beneficial, particularly for endurance athletes who perform day after day.
But we just did a little study here, which we haven't fully analyzed yet or published, and what we discovered in our group was this: In almost 100 patients, about 50 % were non-adherent, and the vast majority of that group was undertreating.
A study published in the November 2003 issue of The Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture found that broccoli «zapped» in the microwave with a little water lost up to 97 % of its beneficial antioxidants.
A new and preliminary study, published in the journalPediatrics, adds to an increasing body of evidence that suggests getting a little dirty does the immune system some good.
And that's what I think we're seeing with this study published in Gut, that the rugby players probably had a healthier environment»cause they were getting good amounts of exercise and we could extrapolate here, we're speculating a little bit, but they were probably getting half a decent sleep, because if you're competing at a high level, you probably can't have a totally awful lifestyle.
While as little as a weekly serving of fish lowers risk of ischemic stroke, enjoying a daily serving omega -3-rich fish, such as scallops, provides significantly greater reduction in the risk of coronary heart disease than eating fish even as frequently as a couple of times a week, show the findings of a study published in the January 17, 2006 issue of Circulation, the journal of the American Heart Association.
However, a study (O'Donnell et al) published by the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), using urine tests of nearly 30,000 people, reports that too little salt, below 3.0 g per day, also significantly raises the risk of cardiovascular (CV) events, meaning heart attack, stroke, and hospitalization for congestive heart failure.
According to a new study published in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, walking or running as little as 15.3 miles per week can reduce your risk of developing Alzheimer's by 40 percent.
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