That post discusses some research that (somewhat surprisingly) points to how high returns on capital are more sustainable than one might think, given the nature of capitalism.
Not exact matches
The
research company published a blog
post discussing the report here.
His
research on the economics of technology has been
discussed in White House reports, Congressional testimony, European Commission documents, the Economist, the Globe and Mail, the National
Post, CBC Radio, National Public Radio, Forbes, Fortune, the Atlantic, the New York Times, the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal, and elsewhere.
Not needed, according to the latest
research, which I'll
discuss in my next
post.
In this
post I'll
discuss what hormones, nutrients, and vitamins are present in your placenta, various
research supporting placenta consumption, and how it can help you heal and find balance during the postpartum transition period.
Other
research, which I
discuss in this blog
post, suggests that babies with «difficult» temperaments may turn into particularly well - adjusted kids if they receive warm, sensitive parenting (Stright et al 2008; Pluess and Belsky 2010).
In today's
post, we
discuss the types of
research that has been done to examine the safety of water birth.
Be sure to read a more recent
post from October 2014 about two randomized controlled trials that clarified several of the issues
discussed in the
post above: New
Research on Gluten Introduction to Infants and Risk of Celiac Disease
An example of this is the recommendations resulting from
research into early labour (
discussed in this
post).
«I think it's important [for journals] to be
discussing this, but I think it's unrealistic to think that journals can and should play the role of the sole enforcer,» says Claire Fraser, director of The Institute for Genomic
Research in Rockville, Maryland, which
posts a range of microbial gene sequences online.
The Science Journals do allow
posting of the submitted version of
research papers on not - for - profit preprint servers, but these should not be
discussed with the media.
Another question asked participants to consider how their supervisor stacked up in that «advancement» category, including whether the supervisors
discuss future career options and allow postdocs to continue
research projects in their next
post.
Earlier this year, Thelwall and Cassidy Sugimoto at Indiana University Bloomington found that
research papers widely
discussed on Twitter, heavily
posted to Facebook, or
discussed on internet forums and blogs are statistically more likely to be cited in scientific papers at a later date.
Since then, 95
research manuscripts have been
posted to the preprint server arXiv
discussing the hypothetical particle, even though the statistical significance of the findings is low.
This new paper by McKitrick & Michaels (henceforth «M&M 2007 «-RRB- is a followup of an earlier paper they wrote in 2004 in Climate
Research (MM2004a), which I
discussed in my first RC
post (Are Temperature Trends Affected by Economic Activity?)
Also
discussed in that
post is other sources such as the Scientific American article, It's Time to End the War on Salt, The zealous drive by politicians to limit our salt intake has little basis in science which summarized the
research of eleven studies and showed that sodium does not dramatically alter blood pressure.
About Blog This subreddit is intended for comparative political scientists to
post and
discuss research or anything else related to the study of comparative politics.
I was going to
discuss kimonos today but then I did a little
research and realized I actually wrote an entire
post dedicated to kimonos in 2014, entitled the 5 reasons why you should add a kimono to your wardrobe.
In a recent blog
post, Associate Professor Hunter Gehlbach
discussed his findings from his latest
research study, «Creating birds of similar feathers: Leveraging similarity to improve teacher - student relationships and academic achievement.»
Findings from the National Center for
Research in Policy and Practice (NCRPP) survey, and how it can help education leaders and researchers create more of an impact, are
discussed in the following HGSE Usable Knowledge blog
post....
As
discussed in the first
post in this series,
research has shown that students with strong reading skills are much more likely to graduate high school on time and enroll in college.
In this blog
post, Kimberly Kendziora
discusses the growing body of
research on the importance of social and emotional skills, such as self - management, social awareness, and relationship skills.
The one I'll
discuss here is this blog
post by Matthew Yglesias, in which he draws broad conclusions about the functioning of education markets from a recent study of a tiny school choice program in Milwaukee as well as from some older unspecified
research [for the latter, Yglesias linked here, but the body of that page doesn't
discuss school choice].
For the final
post of our eight - part «Using
Research Evidence Under ESSA» blog series, Laurie Lee shares resources developed by the Florida Center for Reading
Research, and Steve Fleischman
discusses Evidence4Ed, an online tool currently being developed.
My response was an open offer to
discuss a specific
post and talk about the
research that went into it.
About Blog This subreddit is intended for comparative political scientists to
post and
discuss research or anything else related to the study of comparative politics.
Your
post discusses the proposed correction to the Times Atlas that has resulted from the actions of the international glaciological
research community — which you correctly applaud and hold up as a model for all scientists — «Of course, many scientists can do more, and we encourage all of our colleagues to speak publically about their
research and, as the international glaciological
research community did in this case, to try to correct misconceptions.»
Original
post In 2011, a Cornell
research team led by the environmental scientist Robert Howarth published «Methane and the greenhouse - gas footprint of natural gas from shale formations,» a widely
discussed paper positing that gas escaping from drilling operations using hydraulic fracturing, widely known as fracking, made natural gas a bigger climate threat than the most infamous fossil fuel, coal.
«My view is that a Chinese target of a 40 percent reduction in carbon emissions intensity between 2005 and 2020 would be a continuation of historical trends,» said Jim Watson, from the Tyndall Centre for climate change
research in Britain [and whose report on China's carbon scenarios we've
discussed on this blog; see previous
post «Tyndall Centre Climate Report: High Hopes for Low Carbon»].
Personally I think that recent
research (including several studies
discussed in the above
post, published after the IPCC AR5 cutoff date) make a strong case that internal variability (ocean cycles) are responsible for more of the slowdown in surface warming than changes in external forcings, but there's not a consensus about that yet.
As
discussed in last week's
post, Laurens M. Bouwer of the Institute for Environmental
Research in the Netherlands analyzed 22 previous studies attempting to find an anthropogenic warming «signal» in normalized weather - related loss data.
As
discussed in the
post An Introduction To ENSO, AMO, and PDO — Part 2, the NOAA Earth System
Research Laboratory (ESRL) Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation webpage refers readers to the Wikipedia Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation webpage for further discussion.
The U.S. Office of
Research Integrity discourages this practice, as
discussed in a prior CA
post here [elisions in the following pertain to an inapplicable situation].
However, as
discussed at great length in a realclimate.org
post, the
research which supposedly supports the skeptics» claims has been widely misquoted and misinterpreted, and much of Kilimanjaro's melting can indeed be ascribed to warming of the atmosphere since 1960.
In this
post Data Policy # 1: U.S. Global Change
Research Program, I
discussed a clear policy statement by the U.S. Global Change
Research Program in 1991 requiring public archiving of data after a very limited period of exclusive use by the contract investigator.
The issue
discussed in this
post is essential, perhaps not so much the details of the institutional framework formed by UNFCCC and IPCC, but the direction climate
research has taken.
This is a surprise, because, as is
discussed in a recent
post here, Cox had an opportunity to see how the establishment's own preoccupation with climate change threatened to dominate the
research agenda, and his own field of high energy physics.
Two years ago, I wrote a
post titled, In Litigation and Legal
Research, Judge Analytics is the New Black, in which I
discussed three products — Lex Machina, Ravel Law and ALM Judicial Perspectives — that were extracting data from court dockets and applying analytics to reveal insights about judges, such as how they might rule on a specific type of motion or how long they might take to issue a decision.
In our previous
post, we
discussed a new white paper from FindLaw whose
research shows how a law firm's traffic performance might not be telling the whole truth.
Studies suggest that these feelings of anxiety will rise and fall during the various stages of the information search process (see my SLAW blog
post here from almost 5 years ago
discussing the
research of Professor Carol Kuhlthau on this topic).
Great
posting from an Illinois site
discussing legal
research assignments that is just as relevant here.
Ted and Simon have
discussed link rot here on Slaw, and Ted's 2005
post provides great sources to compare to this recent
research.
A «3 Geeks and a Law Blog»
post earlier this week
discussed the matter of algorithmic accountability in legal
research tools and how human biases skew the machines.
On the previous
post about ICOs, we
discussed the steps and importance of conducting
research before investing.
About Blog This subreddit is intended for comparative political scientists to
post and
discuss research or anything else related to the study of comparative politics.
About Blog Steve writes a daily genealogy
research weblog where he
posts images of the documents important in his family history and
discusses the genealogical
research process.
Posts typically
discuss new
research in empirical legal scholarship and empirical claims in the news and politics in a broadly accessible way.
About Blog An esthetician explores skincare issues and concerns.This is a forum for people to
discuss skincare concerns and questions and get honest, well
researched answers Frequency about 1
post per month Since Jan 2010 Website askanesthetician.wordpress.com + Follow Facebook fans - 979.
(
Posted March 2012) Number 7 In our second interview with Dr Jeff Hall, he
discusses his
research on sense of humour and partner embarrassment for couples in long - term relationships.
In my last
post, I
discussed the
research showing that couples who receive social approval of their relationships from their friends and family are more likely to report greater relationship satisfaction and more enduring relationships.