Sentences with phrase «opinion survey published»

BRUSSELS — Only 53 % of Europeans say they are interested in science, and 40 % say that they feel informed about it, according to a public opinion survey published by the European Commission yesterday.
But, and here I am speculating, I guess that any such survey is highly likely to come up with a similar number as Cook, the self - ratings collected by Cook, and the other literature and opinion surveys published to date.

Not exact matches

You could also conduct more qualitative surveys — asking for opinions and recommendations — and publish your findings accordingly.
The North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA) has published a survey for investment adviser representatives (IARs) to collect opinions on the implementation of a continuing education program.
On November 2, 2015, the Federal Reserve published the findings from its latest Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey.
The results of the survey, which will be published today on the Health Affairs Blog, by researchers from the University of Pennsylvania and the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, show a strong divergence from the opinions of many politicians and commentators, as well as the general public.
The VPF figure of # 1.83 million (published in July 2016) emerged from a 20 - year - old small - scale opinion survey of 167 people and its interpretation method has recently been shown to be too flawed to be credible.
In its 11th annual poll, Education Next, a research and opinion magazine published by the conservative - leaning Hoover Institution at Stanford University, surveyed 4,214 adults over 18.
News & Notes is a weekly Saturday post featuring book - and publishing - related news, links to interesting articles and opinion pieces, and other cool stuff Book News Slightly fewer Americans are reading print books, a new Pew survey finds (Pew Research Center) Check the article out; there are more detailed graphs... Read more»
News & Notes is a weekly Saturday post featuring book - and publishing - related news, links to interesting articles and opinion pieces, and other cool stuff Book News Publisher plans no future editions of Cosby bio (AP via Washington Post) New Survey Shows eBook Buyers in the UK Outnumber Pirates By Fourteen... Read more»
I've given you these three points because they relate most immediately to some of the concepts we've touched on so far this week in our survey of opinion and potential in some concepts of agency involvement in client - author publishing.
On November 2, 2015, the Federal Reserve published the findings from its latest Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey.
Of the 32 million dogs in the U.S. circa 1955, according to National Family Opinion survey cofounders Howard and Clara Trumbull, who published their findings as «John Marbanks,» about 30 % were street dogs, who lived much as many dogs still do in the developing world.
The tendency to exaggerate continued even after National Family Opinion Survey founders Howard and Clara Trumbull conducted exhaustive research, published under the pseudonym «John Marbanks,» to put the U.S. population of stray cats at circa 10 million in 1927, 20 million in 1937, and 30 million in 1950.
The work in question takes measurements from one locale, and doesn't publish conclusions, rather Doney's statements are giving his opinion about what he read, «Long - term ocean acidification trends are clearly evident over the past several decades in open - ocean time - series and hydrographic survey data, and the trends are consistent with the growth rate of atmospheric carbon dioxide (Dore et al., 2009).»
For a survey of scientific opinions, rather than the published work, see Doran 2009, whose survey found that among scientists who had more than half of their recent work on climate (i.e., who are actively researching the matter), 97 % agreed that:
Overall, 86 percent of the respondents answered in the affirmative, but the survey's authors arrived at the 97.5 percent figure after deciding to include only the responses of climatologists who actively publish research on climate change — and those are the only ones whose scientific opinions are truly relevant to the matter at hand.
Since 2014, the National Center for State Courts has published an annual public opinion survey — The State of the State Courts — designed to track public attitudes toward our state courts.
Professor Kimble appears to develop his thesis from the survey results published in the article listed in annotation 29, supra: A good summary at the beginning of an opinion is key to a well - written opinion.
While previous studies, including one published in the Harvard Business Review last year, surveyed employees» own opinions on how valuable their time entries were, this study used economic value, rather than opinions, as its yardstick.
On November 2, 2015, the Federal Reserve published the findings from its latest Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey.
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