«We find they're more willing to tell you on
paper than in person what they think they're home is worth,» Sokoler says.
Not exact matches
An explanation for this may be that
people value consistency and predictability
in fair treatment as much or more
than fair treatment itself, according to Brent Scott, co-author of the
paper.
Pierlot wrote a
paper for the CD Howe Institute
in 2011 showing that a
person with a salary of $ 75,000 at the end of a 35 - year career would accumulate more
than $ 1.4 million
in savings through a defined - benefit plan (wherein the pensioner is paid a set income based on past earnings and years of service, mostly confined to the public sector these days) compared to $ 674,711 for someone with no pension but a maxed - out Registered Retirement Savings Plan.
In this modern age, that can be taken quite literally — rather
than lovers giving each other
paper cards that say stuff like «I Choo - Choo - Choose You,»
people today are more prone to express their love electronically through various means including e-mail, text messages and social media.
Faber is one of the most gloomy
people you'll meet
in the investment world, constantly issuing warnings about where you should live if the war comes (rural farmland), and what will happpen to the dollar (it will be worth less
than toilet
paper).
The 2015
paper, published
in the journal PNAS, suggests that Facebook «likes» can reveal more about
people than just interest and music, movie, book, and sports preferences.
In addition to this secular shift in portfolios, a paper published by the Kansas City Fed predicts a gradual overall increase in bond ownership among people older than 65 compared to the same age group in previous year
In addition to this secular shift
in portfolios, a paper published by the Kansas City Fed predicts a gradual overall increase in bond ownership among people older than 65 compared to the same age group in previous year
in portfolios, a
paper published by the Kansas City Fed predicts a gradual overall increase
in bond ownership among people older than 65 compared to the same age group in previous year
in bond ownership among
people older
than 65 compared to the same age group
in previous year
in previous years.
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.
the abundance of purely uneducated Muslim believers, their oppressive existence
in their self created repressive regimes, lifestyles, and governments, their radical inturpitations of their fairy tale book, the fact that their culture and
people have contributed less to man kind
than any other culture and
people of all the earth, their self ritious belief system that empowers them to commit atrocious crimes against humanity, the muslim men prance around
in flip flops and linen moo moo's while they lock their woman
in their household prisons to be abused slave - wife's, are entirely too ignorant to even build sewer systems and even after thousands of years that other cultures have developed running water toilets, toilet
paper, and effective sewerage systems, they still whipe their pood - cracks with one hand (no
paper) and eat with the other, and yiddle to the sky just before detonation of their suicide bombs that murder innocent men, woman, children, and babies.
For many
people nothing better epitomizes the American Dream
than the possibility of making a fortune simply by
paper transactions without ever engaging
in any real labor.
«More so
than for any other religious tradition, a
person can become UU because of what he already believes rather
than believing what he does because of becoming a UU,» said James Casebolt, coauthor of two
papers on the regional survey read at the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion annual meeting
in October.
More often
than not, when you get involved
in the lives of
people, you will find that your
paper theology begins to get a bit muddled.
When it gathers
people to come up with a position
paper on current economic issues, those who come have far fewer credentials
than could be found
in an analogous group gathered under university auspices.
I'm not saying all prayers put out there are as valuable as a Monet (they certainly aren't), but that the idea of prayer is more valuable
than mere materialism,
in that its immediately intangible qualities have the potential to change
people (not just «make them feel better»), whereas recycling a piece of
paper has almost no discernable impact.
there is no doubting that Arsene has helped to provide us with some incredible footballing moments
in the formative years of his managerial career at Arsenal, but that certainly doesn't and shouldn't mean that he has earned the right to decide when and how he should leave this club... there have been numerous managers at each of the biggest clubs
in Europe throughout the last decade who have waged far more successful campaigns
than ours yet somehow and someway each were given their walking
papers because they failed to meet the standards laid out by the hierarchy of their respective clubs... of course that doesn't mean that clubs should simply follow the lead of others, especially if clubs of note have become too reactionary when it comes to issues of termination, for whatever reasons, but there should be some logical discourse when it comes to the setting of parameters for a changing of the guard...
in the case of Arsenal, this sort of discourse was largely stifled when the higher - ups devised their sinister plan on the eve of our move to the Emirates... by giving Wenger a free pass due to supposed financial constraints he, unwittingly or not, set the bar too low... it reminds me of a landlord who says he will only rent to «professional
people» to maintain a certain standard then does a complete about face when the market is lean and vacancies are up... for those who rented under the original mandate they of course feel cheated but there is little they can do, except move on, especially if the landlord clearly cares more about profitability
than keeping their word... unfortunately for the lifelong fans of a football club it's not so easy to switch allegiances and frankly why should they,
in most cases we have been around far longer
than them... so how does one deal with such an untenable situation... do you simply shut - up and hope for the best, do you place the best interests of those with only self - serving agendas above the collective and pray that karma eventually catches up with them, do you run away with your tail between your legs and only return when things have ultimately changed, do you keep trying to find silver linings to justify your very existence, do you lower your expectations by convincing yourself it could be worse or do you stand up for what you believe
in by holding
people accountable for their actions, especially when every fiber of your being tells you that something is rotten
in the state of Denmark
[vi] This «we know best» attitude also permeated the government's White
Paper, culminating
in the statement that «The government is clear that no deal for the U.K. is better
than a bad deal for the U.K.» The government may be clear on this, but it is not at all clear whether the
people would share this view, indeed evidence is emerging that they do not.
While the Catskills town of Prattsville was virtually wiped off the map and more
than 500,000
people lost power on Long Island and
in the Hudson Valley and Catskills regions upstate, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D - N.Y.) and Gov. Andrew Cuomo conducted separate helicopter tours of damaged areas across New York, garnering glowing reviews
in local
papers.
23 (1) of Act 930 states «Except as otherwise provided for
in this Act, a
person, other
than a company holding a banking licence, shall not hold itself out as a bank or use the word «bank» or any of its derivatives
in any language, or any word that sounds like «bank»
in the description or title under which that
person is carrying on financial services business
in Ghana, or make a representation to this effect
in any billhead, letter,
paper, notice, advertisement or
in any other manner.
Explaining the e-borders scheme last night, Mr McNulty said it would allow the electronic swiping of
people in and out of the country, and gauge «far more readily the
people coming
in and out of the country»
than the traditional
paper system of
paper visas.
Kothari says that more
than 50,000
people around the country were involved
in the report, which includes both action plans and background
papers.
People confident that they could keep a snack for a week without eating it were more likely to crack
than self - doubters, they say
in a
paper to appear
in Psychological Science.
In a paper published in Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience in 2011, researchers at Yale described their discovery that people who touched a warm object were more likely to invest money with a stranger than people who touched something col
In a
paper published
in Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience in 2011, researchers at Yale described their discovery that people who touched a warm object were more likely to invest money with a stranger than people who touched something col
in Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
in 2011, researchers at Yale described their discovery that people who touched a warm object were more likely to invest money with a stranger than people who touched something col
in 2011, researchers at Yale described their discovery that
people who touched a warm object were more likely to invest money with a stranger
than people who touched something cold.
In a 2008
paper, they compared the brains of
people who had committed suicide with the brains of
people who had died suddenly of factors other
than suicide.
«The findings of our
paper have relevance to the understanding of ballistic properties affecting hunting success anywhere
in the world
people lived during the 99 percent of human history that falls between the invention of stone tools more
than 3 million years ago
in Africa and the origins of agriculture,» Fitzhugh said.
«There is a longstanding debate over the impact of government spending, and
people who are very smart disagree — one camp holds that a dollar of spending leads to more
than a dollar
in GDP growth, while the other camp holds that spending results
in less
than a dollar
in GDP growth,» says Nora Traum, an associate professor of economics at NC State and co-author of a
paper describing the work.
In a paper published in «Migration Studies», Bartram analyses data from the European Social Survey of more than 42,000 people to try and determine whether happiness can be gained by moving to another countr
In a
paper published
in «Migration Studies», Bartram analyses data from the European Social Survey of more than 42,000 people to try and determine whether happiness can be gained by moving to another countr
in «Migration Studies», Bartram analyses data from the European Social Survey of more
than 42,000
people to try and determine whether happiness can be gained by moving to another country.
In that paper, the authors found that the median smoking rate among people in addiction treatment was 76.3 percent, in contrast with the smoking rate in the general U.S. population, which is now estimated at less than 18 percen
In that
paper, the authors found that the median smoking rate among
people in addiction treatment was 76.3 percent, in contrast with the smoking rate in the general U.S. population, which is now estimated at less than 18 percen
in addiction treatment was 76.3 percent,
in contrast with the smoking rate in the general U.S. population, which is now estimated at less than 18 percen
in contrast with the smoking rate
in the general U.S. population, which is now estimated at less than 18 percen
in the general U.S. population, which is now estimated at less
than 18 percent.
«Other
people knew that Canadians live two to two and a half years longer
than Americans,» says Steffie Woolhandler, an author on the
paper and an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, citing a phenomenon that many attribute to differences
in lifestyle between the two countries.
For whatever reason, Becker's latest
paper — «as spectacular and annoying to some
people as the Alvarez
paper in the 1980s,» she says — has fared no better
than that historical example.
In a 2007 paper published in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology Poland and his colleagues reported that people who have mutations in a gene for a protein called SLAM produce 70 percent fewer antibodies after live measles inoculation than people without the mutatio
In a 2007
paper published
in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology Poland and his colleagues reported that people who have mutations in a gene for a protein called SLAM produce 70 percent fewer antibodies after live measles inoculation than people without the mutatio
in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology Poland and his colleagues reported that
people who have mutations
in a gene for a protein called SLAM produce 70 percent fewer antibodies after live measles inoculation than people without the mutatio
in a gene for a protein called SLAM produce 70 percent fewer antibodies after live measles inoculation
than people without the mutation.
If they disappear, more
than a million additional
people and billions of dollars
in property value will be vulnerable to damage, says a
paper published yesterday
in the journal Nature Climate Change.
The gift accompanies a
paper published online today
in Nature from researchers at Broad and worldwide, which identifies more
than 100 areas of the human genome associated with schizophrenia, based on samples from almost 37,000
people with schizophrenia and about 113,000 without the disease.
In a paper appearing the week of July 6 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the team from the U.S., UK, Israel and New Zealand introduces a panel of 18 biological measures that may be combined to determine whether people are aging faster or slower than their peer
In a
paper appearing the week of July 6
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the team from the U.S., UK, Israel and New Zealand introduces a panel of 18 biological measures that may be combined to determine whether people are aging faster or slower than their peer
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the team from the U.S., UK, Israel and New Zealand introduces a panel of 18 biological measures that may be combined to determine whether
people are aging faster or slower
than their peers.
A
paper on the findings showed, among other things, that the restrictive policies regulating gun shows
in California resulted
in fewer illegal «straw» purchases —
in which someone buys a gun on behalf of a
person legally barred from doing so —
than in other states.
A recent
paper published
in the Journal of Communication found that
people in long - distance relationships often have stronger bonds from more constant, and deeper, communication
than normal relationships.
A new
paper in Heliyon reveals that materialistic
people see and treat their Facebook friends as «digital objects,» and have significantly more friends
than people who are less interested
in possessions.
That's because
people at any level of activity and influence tend to follow others who are more active and influential
than themselves, according to Prof. Michael Rabbat, who teaches
in McGill's Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering and is the senior author on the
paper.
For the vast majority of
papers in the scientific literature as a whole (if not
in Science) the audience is quite small and tightly focussed: Indeed, many are read from start to finish by no more
than 10
people — that's including the authors» colleagues and the referees.
A 1975
paper in the Journal of the American Medical Association, for instance, showed that
people infected with a common cold virus called the rhinovirus shed more virus particles if they were treated with aspirin
than untreated patients.
«If you talk to the
people who work at these plants, they would rather be dealing with bacteria
than with corrosive chemicals,» says Marc Deshusses, a co-author on the
paper, published online this week
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Chickens, originally domesticated
in East Asia, reached Britain by the second half of the last millennium and now outnumber
people by more
than three to one globally, says the
paper.
Closer still — and this is what we get at
in the
paper — is something that it is diffusing mostly
person - to -
person, rather
than through broadcasts such as those from the New York Times or other mainstream popular news outlets.
When your CV reaches them (assuming they are accepting speculative applications or are interested
in seeing them), it is more
than a piece of
paper — it is the representation of a
person they have spoken to, which makes rejecting it much more difficult (although, sadly, not impossible!).
People who carried mostly «tall» versions of these genetic variations were 3.5 to 5 cm taller on average than people carrying mostly short versions, the teams report online this week in three papers in Nature Gen
People who carried mostly «tall» versions of these genetic variations were 3.5 to 5 cm taller on average
than people carrying mostly short versions, the teams report online this week in three papers in Nature Gen
people carrying mostly short versions, the teams report online this week
in three
papers in Nature Genetics.
It is remarkable (and perhaps a novelty
in the history of science) that the
paper takes several graphs straight from climate sceptics PR material produced for lay -
people, rather
than basing its case on peer - reviewed scientific sources.
«Our research suggests that some
people are more genetically susceptible to the impact of the microbiome
than others, and treatments that change the microbiome will make a big difference
in some but not
in others,» says Kahn, who is senior author on the
paper.
However, the real breakthrough is still to be seen, and now researchers at Karolinska Institutet show
in two separate scientific
papers that many more gene variants affect how a
person responds to medication
than previously thought — and thus that today's analytical tools are too coarse.
Not to mention, most of the grains
people eat are
in such a processed form that they resemble wall
paper glue more similarly
than they resemble actual dietary fiber!
«We found that adults consuming calories during regular meals — at similar times from one day to [the] next — were less obese
than people who have irregular meals, despite consuming more calories overall,» says Gerda Pot, PhD, a visiting lecturer
in the Diabetes and Nutritional Sciences Division at King's College London who worked on both
papers.
The other
paper concluded that
people who consistently ate six meals a day had better cholesterol and insulin levels
than those who ate meals with variable frequency —
in this case, anywhere from three to nine meals a day.