Sentences with phrase «much scientific attention»

Indeed, much scientific attention has been paid to the effect of maternal depressive status on early interaction mother - child compromising social, emotional, cognitive and physical development of children.24
This «new» cycle — which Hartmann calls the North Pacific Mode (NPM)-- has been hinted at before, but hasn't received as much scientific attention as its cousin.
«There are few representatives of these early branches in vertebrate evolution that are still around today,» Coates said, which is why so much scientific attention has been paid to lampreys.

Not exact matches

Amongst philosophers and logicians, particularly amongst those who have given special attention to scientific problems, many names could be mentioned, including that great thinker, L. T. Hobhouse, whom I like to mention first because I owe so much to his writings.
The theory of affective continuity never received much attention from the scientific community.
Are there mentors out there who, as we sit for hours pursuing scientific excellence, not knowing how much we don't know, will swat us, when our attention wonders and our eyelids droop, with appropriate firmness and kindness, with the bamboo rod of mentorly advice?
CMV has not drawn the same attention in the medical and scientific community as the much less common Zika virus, despite causing similar neurological complications, says Boger.
Following on the heels of this month's NAS summit on genome editing in humans, the workshop attracted much less attention, even though the work has more immediate regulatory and scientific implications.
The connections between manmade carbon dioxide emissions and climate change are quite worrying and receive much scientific and media attention.
The unveiled human genetic variation has attracted much attention in both scientific and popular press.
Scientific studies have suggested time and again that vegans and vegetarians are largely more - conscious of their diets and, thus, the successful vegans and vegetarians are health - conscious individuals, analogous to meat - heavy dieters who actually pay attention to how much they're eating and get decent exercise.
If we really want to prepare our students for their futures and «build a strong platform for healthy development and effective learning... then we must pay as much attention to children's emotional wellbeing and social capacities as we do to their cognitive abilities and academic skills» (National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, p. 7).
As with many fields, it can often be the quality of the scientific term paper — rather than the relevance of the research — which determines how much attention your work generates.
This research is considered to be a critical step in providing much needed scientific evidence as a basis for fostering more serious attention to human - animal bond dynamics and related issues and policy concerns.
Also, by focusing so much on short - term bursts of spending, we're not paying enough attention to core problems like quality of teaching and the need for scientific research investments that could pay huge dividends in the long term.
Also, you have a much higher chance of getting the attention of the media and the public when you oversimplify complex scientific topics, exaggerate, use shrill language, etc..
Light pollution is one of the most pervasive forms of environmental alteration, but only recently has it been getting much attention from the scientific set.
But what's interesting in the scientific literature in that last few years is that there has been much more attention to imperfections in those assumptions.
Drawing on case studies of past environmental debates such as those over acid rain and ozone depletion, science policy experts Roger Pielke Jr. and Daniel Sarewitz argue that once next generation technologies are available that make meaningful action on climate change lower - cost, then much of the argument politically over scientific uncertainty is likely to diminish.26 Similarly, research by Yale University's Dan Kahan and colleagues suggest that building political consensus on climate change will depend heavily on advocates for action calling attention to a diverse mix of options, with some actions such as tax incentives for nuclear energy, government support for clean energy research, or actions to protect cities and communities against climate risks, more likely to gain support from both Democrats and Republicans.
Over the years he has shown a concern for maintaining a strong scientific research and assessment program on climate change — something to which few members of Congress pay much attention — both in proposed legislation and in calling out political interference with climate science communication.
As Justin Pulliam's article makes clear, much of the debate at Union College — particularly at the counter-meeting that I attended — was with the professor of environmental sciences, who did not seem to have read the scientific literature or the IPCC's reports widely or with close attention.
Bjorn Lomborg's book, The Skeptical Environmentalist attracted much angry attention earlier this decade, prompting an investigation by the Orwellian - sounding Danish Committee on Scientific Dishonesty (DCSD).
If the scientific community has reason to believe that there is a potential problem, then we should consider the problem seriously and not pay too much attention to a book full of grasshopper brained thinking, which often takes two ideas together and then confuses them, like using the existence of black and white swans to demonstrate a scientific point.
-- substantial criticisms are already being made of the IPCC AR5 Reports as well as of the IPCC process itself; IPCC insiders are bemoaning their loss of their scientific and political influence; the mainstream media seems not to be paying much attention to the AR5 SPM; and even IPCC insiders are realizing the need for a radical change
The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study1 has attracted considerable scientific and policy attention in recent years, in part because it suggests that potentially preventable childhood experiences, particularly physical and sexual abuse and neglect, may increase a person's risk for serious health problems and higher mortality rates much later in life.
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