The authors instead assume from
other published studies of tide gauge measurements that the ~ 1.5 mm / yr sea level rise over the past 150 + years began at that point in time.
Not exact matches
For the
study,
published this week in the Journal
of the American Medical Association, researchers pitted people assigned to follow a traditional restricted - calorie diet (eating roughly 25 %
of their normal daily calories) against those who were told to fast every
other day (eating 25 %
of their normal calories on fast days and 125 % on the
other days) for a year.
He said that his research should not be called «modeling» because it is based on the combined findings
of thousands
of lab results, as well as several
other studies he has
published.
And the UCLA experiment appears to have popular support among staff and
others, according to a
study published in the American Journal
of Infection Control.
A group
of psychologists from Yale and
other universities tested this in 2009 with a
study published in «Psychological Science».
A
study published in the Journal
of Retailing reports found that when men see prices marked in red, they assume they're about to get a bargain, even if the prices are no different from
others.
A May 2013
study published in Science Magazine found that our society is increasingly relying on the digitized, aggregated opinions
of others to make decisions.
Annual Statement
Studies,
published by Robert Morris Associates
of Philadelphia, lists actual costs and
other financial info for more than 140,000 mostly small and midsized companies in 525 industries.
In a second
study,
published today (June 2) in the Annals
of Neurology, Bak set out to determine if the positive effects
of bilingualism on cognition could actually be the
other way around: that people who have better cognitive functions are more likely to learn foreign languages.
A recent
study published in the Journal
of Consumer Research found that people who were asked to think about the past were willing to pay more for products than those who were asked to think about new or future memories; another experiment showed an increased willingness to give more money to
others after recalling a nostalgic event.
A
study published in The Journal
of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism found that individuals who consume a calorie - restricted diet had lower levels
of T3 thyroid hormone, which Healthline lists as a «hormone that helps maintain body temperature, among
other functions.»
One
of the most recent
published studies and easily to access for free, was conducted by Moro and her colleagues and investigated the effects
of eight weeks
of time - restricted feeding on metabolic factors, body composition, strength and
other markers in resistance - trained males.
According to Living Goods, clients may also be reluctant to buy drugs from
other private providers because
of the risk
of getting a counterfeit medicine.63 Living Goods sent us a
study conducted at the midline
of its RCT that claims that both availability
of counterfeit drugs and drug prices decreased at private retailers in areas where CHPs worked.64 According to the
study, about 37 %
of private drug shops in the areas it
studied sold fake ACT drugs, 65 and availabilty
of fake ACTs was about 50 % lower among non-Living Goods sellers in the areas where Living Goods worked.66 Additional results on these potential effects will be made available when the full RCT is
published.
Unemployment, Marginal Attachment and Labor Force Participation in Canada and the United States Stephen Jones, McMaster University Craig Riddell, University
of British Columbia Jones and Riddell build on two previous papers: one by David Card and Riddell (originally
published in Small Differences that Matter) that
studies the reasons for higher rates
of unemployment in Canada than the U.S. in the 1980s, the
other by Jones and Riddell which uses data from the U.S. Labor Force Survey to
study the differences in rates
of job creation for people who are counted as unemployed versus those who are counted as out
of the labor force.
A new
study published recently by the real estate data company Zillow revealed that renters in California and
other parts
of the country could buy a home without increasing their monthly housing costs.
A recent
study,
published on Market Watch
of over 15,000 consumers found that the average American will run out
of retirement funds,
other than state and occupational pensions, around 14 years into retirement.
And if you like that one blog that does a lot
of research on Safe Withdrawal Rates and
publishes case
studies for fellow FIRE enthusiasts and
other fun personal finance content (wink, wink) please consider nominating it in one (or all?)
Many
other cities across the U.S. boast ultra-affordable home buying, says the National Association
of REALTORS ®, which
publishes a quarterly home affordability
study.
A
study published last year by the European Corporate Governance Institute examined the compensation
of the top five highest paid executives for each company in the S&P 1,500 plus 500
other public companies.
«A
study in the United States,
published in the Social Forces journal and conducted by Sociology researcher Lisa A. Keister while she was at the Ohio State University, found that adherents
of Judaism attained the most wealth, believers
of Catholicism and mainline Protestants were in the middle, while conservative Protestants accu - mulated the least wealth, while in general people who attend religious services achieved more wealth than those who do not (taking into account variations
of education and
other factors).
Even though interest has increased, it has not been the object
of an extensive
study since Stauffer's Christ and the Caesars in 1955 and has only played a significant part in a handful
of other published works.
There is something
of a boom going on these days in Melville
studies, with Kelley's book and at least half a dozen
other major academic monographs appearing from university presses, and with two new full - length biographies
published last year: Laurie Robertson - Lorant's relatively unimportant but informative Melville: A Biography (Potter, 752 pages,, $ 40) and the first volume
of the endlessly detailed Herman Melville (Johns Hopkins University Press, 941 pages,, $ 39.95) by Hershel Parker, the grand old man
of Melville
studies.
Here is the sheer miracle
of it: a literature that long antedated our glorious gains in science and the immense scope
of modern knowledge, which moves in the quiet atmosphere
of the ancient countryside, with camels and flocks and roadside wells and the joyous shout
of the peasant at vintage or in harvest — this literature, after all that has intervened, is still our great literature,
published abroad as no
other in the total
of man's writing, translated into the world's great languages and many minor ones, and cherished and loved and
studied so earnestly as to set it in a class apart.
The report
of the
study published in 1967 under the title, «Church for
Others», points out:
Those whose interest in the religions
of Asia has been aroused to the point that they want to consider some
of the comparative problems raised by the
study of religions
other than one's own will find thoughtful and searching discussions in two books recently
published: World Religions and World Community, by Robert Lawson Slater, and The Meaning and End
of Religion, by Wilfred Cantwell Smith.
As representatives
of the minimalists I will consider Edward Schillebeeckx's Jesus: An Experiment in Christology (Crossroad
Publishing Co., 1979), a long and weighty
study of current New Testament scholarship, and Thomas Sheehan's The First Coming: How the Kingdom
of God Became Christianity (Random House, 1986), a more accessible argument based on the results
of Schillebeeckx and a number
of others.
The Gluten Intolerance Group's Gluten Free Certification Organization (GFCO) has
published a
study titled «The Use
of Visual Examination for Determining the Presence
of Gluten - Containing Grains in Gluten Free Oats and
Other Grains, Seeds, Beans, Pulses and Legumes» in a special section
of the Journal
of AOAC International, focusing on food allergens and gluten.
A Drink Might Boost Cognition and Creativity, and Potentially Fight Off the Flu A
study published in the Journal
of Alzheimer's Disease finds evidence that adults who drink moderately and regularly have a higher chance
of not only living longer, but doing so without developing dementia or
other cognitive impairment...
A team
of researchers
published a
study first
of its kind in the Journal
of Agriculture and Food Chemistry in 2008 analyzing the phytoestrogen content
of eggs among
other animal food products and vegetarian substitutes (10).
In fact, its findings conflict with the results
of several
other published studies that showed no association between consumption
of sugar and risk for endometrial cancer.
In case you missed it, a recent landmark
study published in the peer reviewed International Journal
of Epidemiology found that risk for coronary heart disease, stroke, total cardiovascular disease and death
other than from cancer was reduced with each 200g a day increase in fruit and vegetables up to 800g a day, and 600g a day for cancer.
The Gluten - Free Certification Organization (GFCO), a program
of the Gluten Intolerance Group (GIG), has
published a
study titled «The Use
of Visual Examination for Determining the Presence
of Gluten - Containing Grains in Gluten Free Oats and
Other Grains, Seeds, Beans, Pulses, and Legumes» in a special section
of the Journal
of AOAC International focusing on food allergens and... Continue Reading
A 2013
study published in the Journal
of Child and Family
Studies tells me my hunches are right: «Undergraduates with excessively involved parents are more likely than
others to be depressed or dissatisfied with life, and a high degree
of parental involvement appeared to interfere with the ability
of offspring to feel autonomous and competent.»
But it's clear that Facebook and
other social networking sites has made life more challenging for people in relationships, and a sobering
study recently
published in the Journal
of Marital & Family Therapy indicates how ill - equipped most therapists are in dealing with Internet infidelity:
Actually J. Paul, this
study was conducted via meta - analysis
of other studies published and conducted in developed Western nations.
A new
study published in the Journal
of the American College
of Nutrition found that children who dash out the door without eating breakfast are more likely to miss out on calcium and not make up for it at
other meals.
A
study published last year in the journal Pediatrics estimated that if 90 %
of U.S. families followed guidelines to breastfeed exclusively for 6 months, the U.S. would annually save $ 13 billion from reduced medical and
other costs.
A
study published in the journal Pediatrics estimated that if 90 %
of U.S. families followed guidelines to breastfeed exclusively for 6 months, the U.S. would annually save $ 13 billion from reduced medical and
other costs — that's 13 billion dollars!!!
The Gluten - Free Certification Organization (GFCO), a program
of the Gluten Intolerance Group (GIG), has
published a
study titled «The Use
of Visual Examination for Determining the Presence
of Gluten - Containing Grains in Gluten Free Oats and
Other Grains, Seeds, Beans, Pulses, and Legumes» in a special section
of the Journal
of AOAC International focusing on food allergens and... Continue Reading
A 2015
study published in the journal Muscle & Nerve found that by the time kids enter college, those who've used smartphones for years have already experienced impaired hand function, thumb pain and
other repetitive strains from all
of that texting, swiping and scrolling.
And that
study was
published in the British Medical Journal, and it is absolutely in line with outcomes
of all
other published studies around homebirth, which is...
A
study published in the American Journal
of Clinical Nutrition has shown that lactating mothers who eat coconut oil and
other coconut products, have significantly increased levels
of lauric acid and capric acid in their breast milk, creating milk rich in health promoting nutrients.
According to one
study published in the Archives
of Disease in Childhood found that among babies who had experienced prolonged crying at a very young age (either from colic or
other causes) had an average IQ at five years old that was nine points lower than the control group.
At that time the University
of Toronto and
other research communities began to
study Salba, and have
published their very positive findings.
If you have any doubts about this check out Dr. Lennary Righard, M.D.'s
study published with midwife Margaret Alade in The Lancet (1994) which looked at two groups
of babies, one unmedicated and the
other medicated.
In 2014, researchers at Harvard University and
other institutions
published the results
of a
study in which they followed more than 96,000 men and women for 22 years starting in adolescence.
A couple
of Occupational Therapists completed and
published a research
study that compared two groups
of babies, one group spent 30 minutes minimum
of tummy time per day and the
other group did not, the tummy time group scored higher on developmental assessments, so perhaps 30 minutes in a good goal per day; most helpful if broken up into mini sessions throughout the day.
Preventing SIDS is the most important reason to put your baby to sleep on her back, but a
study published in 2003 in the Archives
of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine found
other benefits, too: Infants who sleep on their back suffer from fewer ear infections, fevers, and stuffy noses than babies who sleep in
other positions.
One recently
published study by Dozier et al. (2013) was able to address several
of the methodological limitations for which some
of the
other research papers in the past have been criticised.
In addition to producing
studies on pension reform and the property tax cap, the Empire Center is also behind the website SeeThroughNY, which
publishes salary, pension information and
other records (the Empire Center and the Manhattan Institute have gone to court to get public disclosure
of the pension data on occasion).