Sentences with phrase «more recent studies suggest»

However, more recent studies suggest that the models may not be doing that bad of a job modeling tropical tropospheric warming after all.
But more recent studies suggest those explanations are incomplete, says Rachel Whitmer, an epidemiologist with Kaiser Permanente's Division of Research in Northern California.
More recent studies suggest that it's more like 80 pounds per hectare per year, but that's still quite impressive.
However, more recent studies suggest an elevated risk still exists among nonsmokers in Western populations (Carpenter et al 2013).

Not exact matches

In hot markets like Toronto, recent studies suggest that more than half of unit sales go to investors — both foreign and domestic.
The anxiety people feel making investment decisions may have more to do with the traffic they dealt with earlier than the potential consequences they face with the investment, but not if the decision - maker has high emotional intelligence a recent study published in Psychological Science suggests.
A recent study suggests that when there are more girls in the classroom, the performance of boys improves.
«Although this «rise of the nones» has increased dramatically over recent decades, the rate of increase slowed last year, suggesting the possibility that there may be a leveling off in this measure in the years ahead,» reports the Gallup study, which is made up of more than 350,000 interviews.
On average 10 of American women are iron deficient with one recent study suggested that more than half (56 %) of recreational joggers and competitive runners suffer from an iron deficiency that may negatively affect performance.
Besides the 2013 University of Washington study, a number of other recent studies have found education ineffective in improving self - reporting by athletes, adding to a growing body of evidence challenging the conventional wisdom that inadequate athlete concussion knowledge is the principal barrier to increased reporting, and suggesting that one of the best ways to combat underreporting by athletes of concussion symptoms may be to shift the focus of educational efforts towards helping coaches facilitate concussion reporting, the theory being that athletes will be more likely to report concussion symptoms if they no longer think that they will be punished by the coach for reporting, such as by losing playing time or their starting position, perceived by their teammates as letting them down, or viewed by their coach as «weak,» all of which have been documented in numerous studies over the past decade as reasons athletes are reluctant to report concussion symptoms.
Recent studies suggest that babies sleep more safely in the same room with mama.
A large body of additional research suggests that a child's early attachment affects the quality of their adult relationships, and a recent longitudinal study of 81 men showed that those who grew up in warm, secure families were more likely to have secure attachments with romantic partners well into their 70s and 80s.
However, a recent study suggests that this connection is false or actually the opposite and that the results are due to the fact that moms with an academic education (and supposedly a higher IQ) tend to breastfeed their babies more.
As recent studies suggest it does more harm than good, the future of homework as we know it is up in the air.
The Michigan study pointed to recent research suggesting that the number of head impacts sustained may play a more important role in putting an athlete at risk of developing CTE than clinically evident concussions.
Indeed, a recent study of more than 2,000 Taiwanese children published in the Journal of Happiness Studies suggests that kids who had more fast food and soft drinks were indeed more likely to be happy — and overweight.
A recent study suggests engaging in relaxation exercises, through a mindfulness - based practice during pregnancy, can help reduce anxiety and facilitate an easier and more satisfying birth experience.
Some recent studies also suggest that skipping breakfast may be associated with an increased prevalence of obesity and can make your child even more susceptible to gaining weight.
A very recent study that suggests that if colostrum, the first milk, is removed frequently, in the first three days, the breast is more likely to produce and maintain a generous supply of mature milk.
Although recent studies suggest that transferring more embryos won't necessarily increase your odds of success, it does increase the odds of multiples when there is a success.
For instance, it has been suggested that the physical restraint associated with swaddling may prevent infants placed supine from rolling to the prone position.299 One study's results suggested a decrease in SIDS rate with swaddling if the infant was supine, 182 but it was notable that there was an increased risk of SIDS if the infant was swaddled and placed in the prone position.182 Although a recent study found a 31-fold increase in SIDS risk with swaddling, the analysis was not stratified according to sleep position.171 Although it may be more likely that parents will initially place a swaddled infant supine, this protective effect may be offset by the 12-fold increased risk of SIDS if the infant is either placed or rolls to the prone position when swaddled.182, 300 Moreover, there is no evidence that swaddling reduces bed - sharing or use of unsafe sleep surfaces, promotes breastfeeding, or reduces maternal cigarette smoking.
A more recent review of 200 studies suggests that a process is emerging in which higher income groups and industrialized countries set the trend, and are then followed gradually by the urban lower income, rural groups and less industrialized countries.
A recent study published in the Journal of Management Information Systems suggests information security managers and supervisors could have greater success in motivating employees to act more securely by avoiding cold, authoritative commands, and instead create security messages that are relatable and provide options for how employees can better protect information and respond to threats.
Teens who are allowed to go to bed later are more likely to suffer from depression — probably for the simple reason that they are not getting enough sleep, a recent study suggests.
The study suggests that, at least in recent years, competition with other marine mammals may be more of a problem for southern residents than competition with human fisheries.
But recent studies on primates and preschool children suggest that the development of mendacity is more subtle than this and may have its roots deep in our evolutionary past.
«This study suggests that methane emissions may be a serious problem in Utah, but we need more data to pinpoint exactly where emissions are coming from and to identify where the opportunities are to reduce them,» said Hamburg, calling this and other recent research on methane emissions «alarm bells ringing in our ears.»
It has long been accepted that exercise cuts the risk of getting heart disease, and recent studies suggest a raft of more general benefits, such as reducing the risk of certain types of cancer and even preventing the onset of type II diabetes.
Recent studies suggest that the total loss in brain volume due to atrophy — a wasting away of tissue caused by cell degeneration — between our teen years and old age is 15 percent or more, which means that by the time we're in our seventies, our brains have shrunk to the size they were when we were between 2 and 3 years old.
These results conflict with a recent study published in BMJ's Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health suggesting that seven or more daily portions of fruits and vegetables were linked to lowest risk of death.
Professor Thomas Higham said: «Other recent studies of Neanderthal and modern human genetic make - up suggest that both groups interbred outside Africa, with 1.5 % -2.1 % or more of the DNA of modern non-African human populations originating from Neanderthals.
Recent studies suggest that energy obtained using the technique would be cheaper than more popular methods of getting low emissions coal power, like so - called Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC), which involves gasifying coal above ground in facilities like the FutureGen project, which the Bush Administration proposed and then killed.
Recent studies suggest that noninvasive brain scans, taken with a functional MRI (fMRI), make the mind more transparent.
But a more recent study, published in 2014, suggested the fault had a «ramp - flat geometry,» with a flat section between two tilting sections, similar to a portion of a staircase.
Other recent studies suggest that our galaxy, the Milky Way, contains more than 100 billion planets.
For instance, as early as the 1960s a number of studies have found that breast - feeding is associated with a lower risk of breast cancer, and more recent work suggests that this may be because breast milk supports the growth of beneficial microorganisms.
A surprising recent rise in atmospheric methane likely stems from wetland emissions, suggesting that much more of the potent greenhouse gas will be pumped into the atmosphere as northern wetlands continue to thaw and tropical ones to warm, according to a new international study led by a University of Guelph researcher.
Other studies have suggested that recent ocean warming of the North Atlantic could also be responsible for more summer rain in northwest Europe.
A recent report from the parliamentary budget officer estimates that a universal, public pharmacare system would save Canadians more than $ 4 billion per year while this study suggests that applying Quebec's private - public model in all provinces would cost Canadians over $ 5 - billion more per year than they currently pay.
A recent study from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center at the University of Washington suggests that these fetal cells may be more than just quiet passengers — they may also protect the mother from breast cancer.
One of many recent studies, which added more than 100 newly observed supernovae to existing studies, suggests that it is a constant with a precision of 7 % (M. Hicken et al..
A recent Carnegie Mellon University study suggests that hybrid plug - in vehicles would be more expensive over a lifetime of use than comparable gas - powered cars due to the battery's hefty cost.
The economic stimulus package that President Obama signed in February includes $ 11 billion to build a bigger and more efficient grid, but a recent study by Oracle Corp. suggests that privately funded smart - grid projects face perception challenges.
Recent studies of human fossils suggest the brain shrank more quickly than the body in near - modern times.
A more recent study based on satellite measurements of gravity over the entire continent suggests that while the ice sheets in the interior of Antarctica are growing thicker, even more ice is being lost from the peripheries.
Previously, scientists had suggested that pelagornithids, as the birds are known, were related to pelicans and albatrosses, but recent studies hint that the group is more closely related to ducks, geese, and swans.
The findings build upon those of several smaller studies also suggesting a more recent emergence of the Devils Hole pupfish.
Whether scientists stay or go turns out, however, to be more complicated than the president suggests, according to a recent study tracking the decisions of foreign - born, U.S. - educated Ph.D. researchers.
That's about 2000 years earlier than suggested by previous studies focusing on a different, more selective set of genes known as the exome, but it's in line with recent archaeological findings that point to distinctly Tibetan permanent settlements appearing between 3600 and 5200 years ago, Yang says.
Meanwhile, other studies have found that language differences restricted gene flow in recent times in Europe, suggesting that cultural barriers might have limited genetic diversity more consistently than occasional local bottlenecks.
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