Not exact matches
December 2001 (576 kb PDF file): Articles reviewing IMF research on capital controls, currency unions, and environmental
issues; country
study: United States; summary of October 2001 World Economic Outlook; list of IMF working
papers; visiting scholars at the IMF.
September 2003 (188 kb PDF file): Research summaries on sovereign bonds and public debt management and on international trade; country
study: Sweden; summaries of new
study on deflation and recent book: Sweden's Welfare State; contents of latest
issue of IMF Staff
Papers; visiting scholars at the IMF; titles of recent IMF working
papers; list of external publications by IMF staff.
Our group's understanding of the relationship of Deng Xiaoping's government to religion began before we left the U.S., with our
study of a fairly recent position
paper on religion
issued by China's Communist Party.
In this
paper, I want to address some of those
issues: first by indicating the trends in the
study of mass communication; and second by applying these to three areas of religious faith: hermeneutics and proclamation, church practise, and religious experience.
Extracts sourced from ACCC, «Cattle and beef markets — a market
study by the ACCC
Issues Paper (7 April 2016) and reproduced pursuant to Creative Commons By Attribution 3.0 Australia licence as specified on the ACCC website.
The ACCC has today released an
issues paper for its cattle and beef market
study announced Tuesday.
To address the
issues above, this
paper reports on the results of an 18 - year longitudinal
study of the relationships between infant feeding practices and later cognitive ability and academic achievement in a birth cohort of > 1000 New Zealand children
studied from birth to age 18 years.
Also of note, this new peer - reviewed
paper was published not long after another
study found that methane is also an
issue even where no natural gas development is occurring in northeastern Pennsylvania.
The Tories are under a three - line whip to block the call for all Government
papers surrounding the
issue - including case
studies - to be handed to the Home Affairs Select Committee.
According to the Erie County Charter, the Chairman of the Legislature has the authority to
issue the subpoena in order to: «make such
studies and investigations as it deems to be in the best interest of the county, and in connection therewith to obtain professional and technical advice, appoint temporary advisory boards of citizens, subpoena witnesses, administer oaths and require the productions of books,
papers, and other evidence deemed necessary or material to the
study or inquiry.»
The
study, presented in the 16 August
issue of Nature, mirrors a
paper by a group from the Imperial College School of Medicine at St. Mary's in London, published in the 31 July
issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
In a
paper published in the expert journal Nuclear Instruments and Methods A they describe how this Plasma Accelerator Research Station (PARS) would enable unique
studies into the critical
issues for the next generation of plasma accelerators; in particular investigations on high gradient acceleration, two - bunch acceleration, plasma lenses and advanced beam handling techniques.
Although the trend is grim, the
study of protected areas offers some hope that marine ecosystems can rebound, according to the
paper presenting the analysis in the November 3
issue of Science.
Available in Volume 168,
Issue 8 of the American Journal of Medical Genetics: Neuropsychiatric Genetics, the
paper, titled, «Using the Coriell Personalized Medicine Collaborative Data to Conduct a Genome - Wide Association
Study of Sleep Duration,» draws on data collected from Coriell study participants to establish its find
Study of Sleep Duration,» draws on data collected from Coriell
study participants to establish its find
study participants to establish its findings.
«This is the first
study to look at this
issue at this level of detail, and the findings are extremely promising,» says Ann Ross, a professor of anthropology at North Carolina State University and senior author of a
paper describing the work.
Research by Michigan State University, published in the current
issue of Bioscience, explores the paradox that although ecologists share findings via scientific journals, they do not share the data on which the
studies are built, said Patricia Soranno, MSU fisheries and wildlife professor and co-author of the
paper.
They report on their work
studying ancient glass and rock defense walls in a
paper published in the May
issue of American Ceramic Society Bulletin.
In another
paper in the same
issue of Science Express, Grotzinger — who
studies the history of Mars as a habitable environment — and colleagues examined the physical characteristics of the rock layers in and near Yellowknife Bay.
Other
papers in the
issue examine how deep sea sediments may affect seismic wave readings, and evaluate how the Cascadia Initiative's data collection from ocean bottom seismometers has improved over the first three years of the
study.
Carl Turesson, lead author of the
paper, commented that: «to our knowledge, this is the first nested case - control
study to investigate this
issue in men.»
But the findings were enough for the
paper's authors to call for further
study of the
issue in men who have contracted Zika to determine whether the virus affects the male reproductive tract over time.
THE
STUDIES A trilogy of
papers published in the September 28
issue of Nature examine the role of a protein — cyclin - dependent kinase inhibitor p16INK4a — in aging, healing, and cancer.
Dr. Shemtov - Yona is carrying out her doctoral
studies under the supervision of Professor Daniel Rittel of the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering who co-authored a
paper that will be published in the September 2015
issue of the Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials.
«These
studies together show that bacteria have clever antioxidant strategies to counter the oxidative damage generated by antibiotics,» notes James Collins, an investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, who also co-authored an essay about the two new
papers in the same
issue of Science.
In a
paper in the 10 May
issue of Science, geneticists William Sullivan and Uyen Tram at the University of California, Santa Cruz, offer the first good glimpse of how Wolbachia do this, gleaned from
studying the wasp Nasonia vitripennis.
The
paper is one of five landmark
studies borne from the Tara Oceans Expedition featured this week in a special
issue of the journal Science.
Because these networks are based on neuroscientists» current understanding of how the brain performs object recognition, the success of the latest networks suggest that neuroscientists have a fairly accurate grasp of how object recognition works, says James DiCarlo, a professor of neuroscience and head of MIT's Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and the senior author of a
paper describing the
study in the Dec. 11
issue of the journal PLoS Computational Biology.
The authors of the
paper, which appears in the 29 August
issue of PLoS Genetics, work on large genome - wide association
studies.
Snow, with the University's College of Liberal Arts, and her graduate students, Michael Gomez and Rafal Skiba, recently submitted a
paper on the findings of their research
study, «Graspable objects grab attention more than images do» which will be published in an upcoming
issue of Psychological Science, a top - tier psychology journal.
The results are published in 14
papers in a special January
issue of the journal Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution; Alfaro and Lynch Alfaro are senior authors of four of the
studies.
This article is published in a Special
Issue of AHB «Human Biology of Poverty» which is a collection of selected
papers presented at the Society for the
Study of Human Biology (SSHB) Symposium of the same title, held in Portugal in September 2015.
They continued to
study the Galilean satellites Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto, especially secondary / primary cratering of the exceptionally young terrain on Europa (their
paper appeared in the 20 Oct. 2005
issue of Nature).
Paper and Research Team These observational results were published by Takano et al. as «Distributions of molecules in the circumnuclear disk and surrounding starburst ring in the Seyfert galaxy NGC 1068 observed with ALMA» (in the astronomical journal Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan (PASJ),
issued in July 2014) and by Nakajima et al. «A Multi-Transition
Study of Molecules toward NGC 1068 based on High - Resolution Imaging Observations with ALMA» (in PASJ
issued in February 2015).
In a
paper published in the March 25, 2010
issue of Nature, researchers working at the Salk Institute for Biological
Studies and the Center of Regenerative Medicine in Barcelona (CMRB) identified a fish heart cell population that is the source of this astonishing healing feat, a finding that could provide insight into how mammalian hearts might be coaxed into repairing themselves after injury brought on by heart attack.
The findings are reported in two independent
papers: the zebrafish
study was published in the July 26
issue of Current Biology, the mouse
study will be available in the early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science this week.
«Our
study uncovers the first genetic evidence explaining why some people look older for their age,» write the authors of the
paper, in the latest
issue of the journal Current Biology, «and provides new leads for further investigating the biological basis of how old or young people look.»
«We believe members of the astronomical community could greatly benefit in their exoplanet hunting and characterization
studies with this new laser frequency comb instrument,» says Xu Yi, a graduate student in Vahala's lab and the lead author of a
paper describing the work published in the January 27, 2016,
issue of the journal Nature Communications.
2/13/2007
Study Shows Liver an Excellent Target For Cancer Gene Therapy Using Viral Vectors A featured
paper in the February
issue of the research journal Cancer Gene Therapy demonstrates that cancer cells in the liver are excellent targets for gene therapy using adenoviral vectors, based upon a fundamental new understanding of the differen... More...
Future
studies may reveal if any atmosphere contains tell - tale chemicals of biological life, such as methane, according to a
paper published in this week's
issue of the journal Nature.
A new
paper, appearing in an upcoming
issue of Nature Communications, reports unequivocal experimental evidence for tetrahedrally coordinated carbon in high pressure carbonates, obtained by combined experimental and theoretical
studies carried out by a team of scientists including the Geophysical Laboratory's Zhenxian Liu (below).
If the
paper with error has been published, and the error is minor without affecting the overall results and conclusions of the
study, a correction statement will be published in the next available
issue.
[5:01]-- Research
paper; Glycemic variability — assessing glycemia differently and the implications for dietary management of diabetes by Jeannie Tay, Campbell Thompson, and Grant D. Brinkworth [6:47]-- Continuous glucose monitoring [8:29]-- Methods to diagnosis diabetes [9:29]-- Associated health
issues with glucose variability [10:13]-- CSIRO
study; Comparison of low - and high - carbohydrate diets for type 2 diabetes management: a randomized trial [10:43]-- The National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)[14:34]-- The breakdown of macronutrients between the low carb and the high carb arm of the
study [18:47]-- The outcomes of the
study [22:52]-- How to approach reducing medication on a low carb diet [26:44]-- CSIRO announcement based on this
study?
The
study's results were published in a
paper called «Marital Satisfaction and Breakups Differ Across Online and Offline Meeting Venues» in the current
issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
She and the other participants intend to collect the
papers presented at the convening and publish a special journal
issue that highlights lessons learned from no - effects
studies.
This unit revises Relationships from
Paper 1: Religion and Life
Issues for WJEC Spec B. My take on «Cards Against Humanity» - Cards FOR Humanity revises Religious
Studies GCSE (WJEC) through a fun, competitive and interactive card game.
This unit revises Our World from
Paper 1: Religion and Life
Issues for WJEC Spec B. My take on «Cards Against Humanity» - Cards FOR Humanity revises Religious
Studies GCSE (WJEC) through a fun, competitive and interactive card game.
From
Paper 1: Religion and Life
Issues for WJEC Spec B. My take on «Cards Against Humanity» - Cards FOR Humanity revises Religious
Studies GCSE (WJEC) through a fun, competitive and interactive card game.
Revision booklets for all units in WJEC Religious
Studies:
Paper 1: Religion and Life
Issues Full course revision - including differentiating between Christian denominations (RC / CoE).
Suitable for all pupils of GCSE Religious
Studies: WJEC Spec B:
Paper 1: Religion and Life
Issues Knowledge and exam practise in one booklet.
GCSE Religious
Studies Spec B
Paper 1 Test Yourself Complete Revision Guide and Questions For WJEC Spec B: Religion and Life
Issues 1.