Sentences with phrase «of study include»

Additional key findings of the study include:
Specific areas of study include:
Areas of study include the licensing of non-lawyers to perform legal tasks, alternative business structures, multijurisdictional practice / reciprocity (internationally as well as in the country), and the uniform bar examination.
Courses of study include Community Arts — focused on «art practice as a means of civic empowerment, community organizing and development, activism, education and more» — as well as filmmaking, graphic design, and a low - residency summer program for Studio Art.
Programs of study include painting, sculpture, and photography, as well as furniture design and glass.
Areas of study include game design, development, art, programming and production.
Highlights of the study include:
A few of this year's funded students and their areas of study include:
Units of study include: The Individual, My Family Community, My School Community, My Town Community, Community Celebrations, Making a Difference in the Community, GCDS Community (Kindergarten Circus) and a Character Education unit that spans the entire school year.
The participants of this study include 15 alternative certification interns and induction year teachers, 11 mentor teachers, and 9 community college faculty members.
Areas of study include: reading, writing, phonics / word study, science, and social studies.
Areas of study include migration, technology, human capital, charter schools, and more.
Catherine Elgin is a philosopher whose areas of study include the theory of knowledge, philosophy of art, and philosophy of science.
The major findings of the study include the following:
Other fascinating findings of the study include that affluent people and college grads are even more likely to know someone who met a partner via online dating:
Limitations of the study include a self - report cross-sectional design with purposive.
Possible limitations of our study include the measurement of our dietary exposures and covariates from FFQs, instead of dietary biomarkers or food records, and the assessment of our outcome of depression from self - reported symptoms as opposed to psychiatric interviews.
Strengths of our study include the repeated measurement of diet using a validated questionnaire over 24 y in over 100,000 adults.
Other potential shortcomings of our study include measurement timing, oil and nutmeat extraction method, and / or nutrient bioavailability.
In order to ensure a strong foundation in Integral Yoga teachings, it is required that your 300 hours of study include either Intermediate or Raja Yoga TT.
The strengths of this study include its population - based sample, high participation rate, and use of a GI - and carbohydrate - validated FFQ to collect dietary information, and detailed questionnaires that permitted careful assessment of potential confounding variables.
Limitations of the study include possible measurement errors because the data was self - reported, although the authors noted that because the study cumulatively measured diet over time, it reduced such errors.
In addition to Salem, other authors of this study include Heinz - Josef Lenz, USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center; Anthony Shields and Philip Philip, Karmanos Cancer Center; Joanne Xiu and Tabari Baker, Caris Life Sciences; and Jimmy Hwang and John Marshall, Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, Georgetown University.
Their fields of study include ecosystems on land, in lakes, in rivers and in the sea — on both regional as well as global levels.
Other authors of this study include Katerina Akassoglou, Kai Liu, Min Xie, Jae Kyu Ryu, Ke Li, Tianhua Ma, Haixia Wang, Saiyong Zhu, Nan Cao, and Yu Zhang from the Gladstone Institutes; Edward M. Driggers, Kelly M. Stewart, and Dongwei Zhu from Agios Pharmaceuticals; and Chen Dong, Xiaohu Wang, and Lu Ni from Tsinghua University in China.
Co-authors of this study include Flavio Cimadamore, Elena Giusto, Ksenia Gnedeva, Giulio Cattarossi, Amber Miller and Laurence M. Brill at Sanford - Burnham, Katherine Fishwick and Marianne Bronner - Fraser at the California Institute of Technology and Stefano Pluchino from the Institute of Experimental Neurology, IRCCS, in Italy.
Additional authors of the study include Harriet de Wit, Roslynn Riley and Dingcai Cao of the University of Chicago; Raymond Niaura of Brown University; and Dorothy Hatsukami of the University of Minnesota.
Additional authors of the study include Reiner Strick, Pamela Strissel, Susanne Borgers and Steve Smith, all of the University of Chicago.
Limitations of this study include that it is an open - label study and the results are from a planned interim analysis of 10 of 17 enrolled infants (7 patients with 2 SMN2 copies and 3 with 3 SMN2 copies) who met the treatment duration criterion at the time of the interim analysis.1
Other authors of the study include: Cynthia A. Stuenkel of the University of California, San Diego in La Jolla, Calif.; Susan R. Davis of the School of Public Health and Preventative Medicine, Monash University in Australia; JoAnn V. Pinkerton of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Va.; Ann Gompel of Paris Descartes University in France; and Mary Ann Lumsden of the University of Glasgow School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Nursing in Scotland.
Limitations of this study include that it was a longitudinal roll - over, re-dose, open - label study of 28 patients who received their fi rst dose in CS2 and then transferred to the second phase, CS12.
Other authors of the study include Rebecca Baer, MPH, of the Department of Pediatrics at UC San Diego; Larry Rand, MD, of the UCSF Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences; and Laura Jelliffe - Pawlowski, PhD, of the UCSF Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics.
Additional authors of the study include Scott Fears and Jian - Jun Chen of the University of Chicago and Lin Zhang of Johns Hopkins.
Other co-authors of the study include: Dr. Gang Zeng, UCLA associate professor in the department of urology and Dr. Zuo - Feng Zhang, professor in the department of epidemiology at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health.
Other authors of the study include Parinaz Fozouni, Sean Thomas, and Hendrik Sy from Gladstone, as well as Qiang Zhang and Ming - Ming Zhou from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
Additional authors of the study include Adam Schmitt, Jun Shi, Alex Wolf, Chin - Chun Lu and Leslie King at the University of Chicago.
Areas of study include healthcare informatics, electronic markets, privacy, security, and social computing.
Other authors of this study include Katerina Akassoglou, Kai Liu, Min Xie, Jae Kyu Ryu, Ke Li, Tianhua Ma, Haixia Wang, Saiyong Zhu, Nan Cao, and Yu Zhang from Gladstone; Edward M. Driggers, Kelly M. Stewart, and Dongwei Zhu from Agios Pharmaceuticals; and Chen Dong, Xiaohu Wang, and Lu Ni from Tsinghua University in China.
However, some limitations of this study include retrospective determination of illness and the possible role of different medications on IQ.
In addition to Janda and Bremer, authors of the study include Lisa M. Eubanks of TSRI; Sabine Pellett, William H. Tepp and Eric A. Johnson of the University of Wisconsin - Madison; and James P. Carolan and Karen N. Allen of Boston University.
Co-authors of this study include: Victor Seguritan, Tao Long, Niels Klitgord, Marcus B. Jones, William Biggs, Human Longevity, Inc.; Weizhong Li, Shibu Yooseph, Human Longevity, Inc. and J. Craig Venter Institute; Archana Bhatt, Parambir Singh Dulai, Richele Bettencourt, Cyrielle Caussy, Claude B. Sirlin, Bernd Schnabl, Chi - Hua Chen, UC San Diego; Sarah K. Highlander, Lauren Brinkac, and Nicholas Schork, J. Craig Venter Institute.
Limitations of the study include that households do not report whether all foods purchased were consumed, so the data do not reflect sodium intake.
Limitations of the study include losing about half of the participants to long - term follow - up during the transition from a randomized clinical trial to a cohort study.
Authors of the study include: Dr. Douglas Fudge of Chapman University, Sarah Boggett and Jean - Luc Stiles of the University of Guelph, and Dr. Adam P. Summers of the University of Washington.
Limitations of the study include that the results may not be generalizable to the first and second trimesters of pregnancy or to the period immediately following the child's birth.
Co-authors of the study include Sangram Sisodia, the Thomas Reynolds Sr..
Limitations of the study include that magnesium levels were measured only once, so they could have changed, and that magnesium levels in the blood do not always represent the total level of magnesium in the body.
Other authors of the study include: Katarzyna Linder, Franziska Schleger, Martin Heni, Hans - Ulrich Häring and Andreas Fritsche of University Hospital Tübingen as well as the German Center for Diabetes Research and the Institute for Diabetes Research and Metabolic Diseases of the Helmholtz Center Munich at the University of Tübingen in Tübingen, Germany; Isabelle Kiefer - Schmidt, Stefanie Kümmel and Magdalen Weiss of the University of Tübingen in Tübingen, Germany; and Louise Fritsche of the German Center for Diabetes Research and the Institute for Diabetes Research and Metabolic Diseases of the Helmholtz Center Munich at the University of Tübingen in Tübingen, Germany.
Limitations of the study include that information was not collected on risk factors that are unique to or more common in women, such as migraine and the use of hormone replacement therapy.
Limitations of the study include that causality of adverse events can not be determined from the data, health outcomes are self - reported and reports from consumers vs. health care professionals can not be distinguished.
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