Sentences with phrase «published authors state»

In a final startling revelation, 4.6 % of self - published authors state they are «very satisfied» with their sales, but only 8.2 % of traditionally published authors can say the same.

Not exact matches

Dr. Wentz is professor of religious studies at Arizona State University in Tempe, and the author of The Contemplation of Otherness: The Critical Vision of Religion, to be published soon by Mercer University Press.
«Tim LaHaye's history as a published author is intertwined with the entire history of Tyndale House,» stated Mark D. Taylor, chairman and CEO of Tyndale House Publishers.
Since that time, I have incorporated Redeeming Press with the state of Oregon, and published 5 books through the company (3 of my own, and two from other authors).
What's interesting is that though both these reports by independent and secular organisations (NSPCC and JJC) either state or imply that child sex abuse is part of a problem in society as a whole and not a particular problem for the Catholic Church, in other words that Catholic priests are no more likely than anyone else to be involved in it, Dr Pravin Thevathasan, the author of the third document on this subject published around the same time, «The Catholic Church & the Sex Abuse Crisis», published by the CTS, is not inclined to deploy this fact to get the Church off the hook.
Greatest Ever Chocolate is perhaps not the catchiest of titles and it doesn't have an author, only stating it was published by Papplewick Press in 2002 — this could be why I hadn't taken much notice of it up until then.
Carol is a member of the Expecting More team that is creating state - of - the - science maternity care decision aids; co-author of 2010 direction - setting companion reports: «2020 Vision for a High - Quality, High - Value Maternity Care System» and «Blueprint for Action»; lead author of the Milbank Report Evidence - based Maternity Care: What It Is and What It Can Achieve; a co-investigator of three path - breaking national Listening to Mothers surveys; founding author of a quarterly evidence column (2003 - 07) that continues to be published in midwifery and nursing journals; author of an annual column in Birth (2006 --RRB-; and guest editor of special issues on Transforming Maternity Care, The Nature and Management of Labor Pain, and cesarean section overuse.
The mannequins wearing hats experienced an average of 18.9 percent less heat loss than mannequins without hats, states authors of «Head Insulation and Heat Loss in Naked and Clothed Newborns Using a Thermal Mannequin,» published by Medical Physics Online in June 2002.
In two new studies published online this week in the Journal of Athletic Training, lead author Marc Norcross of Oregon State University documents how women who were asked to undergo a series of jumping exercises landed more often than men in a way associated with elevated risk of ACL injuries.
Jose Cibelli, who was first author on the paper and left ACT in 2002 for a faculty position at Michigan State University in East Lansing, says that in an ideal world he would have waited until the team could grow the embryos to the blastocyst stage before publishing the work.
To document your accomplishments in research, your CV should contain a chronological list of books, edited books, book chapters, journal articles, technical reports, and other work, clearly denoting what is published and what is under review (if there are multiple authors, you need to state your role); funding received with you as principal investigator or co-investigator; and proposals submitted but not funded.
Eleven authors contributed to the manuscript that is scheduled to be published in Nature: Dr. Steve Holen, director of research at the Center for American Paleolithic Research; Dr. Tom Deméré, curator of paleontology and director of PaleoServices at the San Diego Natural History Museum; Dr. Daniel Fisher, professor of paleontology and director and curator of the Museum of Paleontology at the University of Michigan; Dr. Richard Fullagar, professorial research fellow at the Centre for Archaeological Science at the University of Wollongong, Australia; Dr. James Paces, research geologist at the U.S. Geological Survey; Kathleen Maule Holen, administrative director at the Center for American Paleolithic Research; Dr. Jared Beeton, professor of physical geography at Adams State University; Dr. Adam Rountrey, collection manager in the Museum of Paleontology at the University of Michigan; George T. Jefferson, district staff paleontologist at
We encourage all authors to state their contribution to the study in the acknowledgments section following the CRediT model; this information will be published in the paper.
But current evidence suggests that plastic pollution is as prevalent in land and freshwater ecosystems as it is in the oceans, where it's found «from the equator to the poles,» says Rochman, author of a separate commentary on the state of plastic pollution research published in the April 6 Science.
In an email to Science, the paper's corresponding author, Toshihiro Nakajima of Tokyo Medical University, defended the work, stating: «Our manuscript was formally published after an intensive scientific review done by reviewers and by the editorial board of Scientific Reports.»
«All of our sampling sites were very close to neighborhoods with manicured lawns,» said Jason Belden, an Oklahoma State University zoologist and author of the study published in the journal Environmental Pollution.
The research, which was led by Yanming Wang, a Penn State University associate professor of biochemistry and molecular biology, and Denisa Wagner, senior author with decades of research on thrombosis at the Boston Children's Hospital and the Harvard University Medical School, will be published in in the Online Early Edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences during the week ending 10 May 2013.
«There's no guarantee that they'll survive this time,» says geneticist Webb Miller of Pennsylvania State University, an author of the study published July 23 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
«We believe the Earth and Venus had similar starts in terms of their atmospheric evolution,» said Kane, an assistant professor of physics and astronomy at SF State and lead author of the study published online today.
When those days do come, however, they come with even greater ferocity, according to James Elsner, a geography professor at Florida State University and lead author on the research, published earlier this month in the journal Climate Dynamics.
In a study published in the journal Neuron, co-first authors Christian Burgess, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow; Rohan Ramesh, a graduate student, and colleagues in Andermann's lab recorded images of brain activity in mice across different states of hunger and satiety.
The paper, «The effects of habitat, climate and barred owls on long - term demography of northern spotted owls,» was published in The Condor: Ornithological Applications and authored by Katie M. Dugger, USGS, Oregon Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Oregon State University Department of Fisheries and Wildlife; Eric D. Forsman, USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station; Alan B. Franklin, USDA APHIS National Wildlife Research Center; Raymond Davis, USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Region, and 33 others.
asks Dr. James Beck, a researcher at Wichita State and the Botanical Research Institute of Texas and lead author of a recently published study in the June issue of Applications in Plant Sciences.
«Almost all of the fruit salads we analyzed contained levels of the tracer organism, which we were representing as being salmonella,» said Randy Phebus, professor of food safety at Kansas State University and one of the authors of the study «Consumer Food Handling Practices Lead to Cross-Contamination,» recently published in the journal Food Protection Trends.
According to Tomokatsu Ikawa, the first and corresponding author of the paper published in Stem Cell Reports, «We decided to look at the possibility that somatic stem cells could be maintained in a stem cell - like state where they could proliferate without undergoing differentiation.»
The authors of the new study — a multicenter effort led by Kent State University anthropologists C. Owen Lovejoy and Mary Ann Raghanti and published January 22 in PNAS — began by measuring neurotransmitter levels in brain samples from humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, baboons and monkeys, all of whom had died of natural causes.
Reijo Pera, who is now a professor of cell biology and neurosciences at Montana State University, is the senior author of a paper describing the research, published May 1 in Cell Reports.
«Although galaxy collisions of this type are not uncommon, only a few galaxies with eye - like, or ocular, structures are known to exist,» said Michele Kaufman, an astronomer formerly with The Ohio State University in Columbus and lead author on a paper published in the Astrophysical Journal.
Lead study author Abigail Evans, a postdoctoral researcher at Ohio State University, and colleagues publish their findings in the journal PLOS One.
Compare it to Hubble looking at the first galaxies at 400 million years old; we're looking at a time roughly half that age,» said Judd Bowman, a cosmologist at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona and lead author of the research, published today in the journal Nature.
Authors: Long Ye, Masoud Ghasemi, Brian A Collins, Joo - Hyun Kim, Joshua H. Carpenter, Terry McAfee and Harald Ade, North Carolina State University; Huawei Hu, Kui Jiang, Zhengke Li, Jingbo Zhao, Joshua Yuk Lin Lai, Tingxuan Ma and He Yan, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology; Tonghui Wang, Xiankai Chen and Jean - Luc Bredas, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology and Georgia Institute of Technology Published: Nature Materials
The findings, published today in the online journal PloS One, open new opportunities for gaining a greater understanding of Alzheimer's disease and other neurological diseases and for developing therapies to halt its progression, according to senior author Karen E. Duff, PhD, professor of pathology (in psychiatry and in the Taub Institute for Research on Alzheimer's Disease and the Aging Brain) at CUMC and at the New York State Psychiatric Institute.
Bergman et al author a report published by WHO and UNEP which purported to challenge the 2002 WHO - UNEP State of the Science report on EDCs, claiming numerous human health effects attributed to EDC exposure.
«We used state - of - the - art models to show that a Vesta - to - Ceres - sized impactor can produce a disk consistent with the formation of Mars» small moons,» said Dr. Julien Salmon, an SwRI research scientist and second author for the newly published paper.
Dr. O'Neill, director of Employment and Disability Research at Kessler Foundation, is the primary author of, «Return to work of disability insurance beneficiaries who do and do not access state vocational rehabilitation agency services,» published in the Journal of Disability Policy Studies.
She is the lead author of Breast Cancer Prevention Partner's State of the Evidence: The Connection Between Breast Cancer and the Environment (2008; 2010) and the recently published «State of the evidence 2017; an update on the connection between breast cancer and the environment.»
Authors: Yanhong Pan, Zhonghe Zhou, Jingmai K. O'Connor and Min Wang, Chinese Academy of Sciences; Mary Schweitzer, Wenxia Zheng and Elena Schroeter, NC State University; Alison Moyer, NC State and Drexel University; Xiaoting Zheng and Xiaoli Wang, Linyi University Published: in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
«This was an effort to try and refine our understanding of the causes, or trends and variations, in the climate of the Eastern Pacific and West Coast states,» said Nate Mantua, now a NOAA fisheries scientist, the other author of the newly published paper.
Responsible authors (residents of an ICPerMed member state) of candidate proposals published and developed during January 1st, 2016 to December 31st, 2017 from ICPerMed partner countries are eligible to apply.
The first author, Mariko Tomita and last author, Naoki Mori, take full responsibility for the duplication and misrepresentation of the figures in this paper, state that none of the co-authors were involved in or aware of these events, and apologizes to the readers, reviewers and editors of Retrovirology for publishing these duplicated images.
«As ice seasons are getting shorter around the world, we are losing ice without a deep understanding of what we are losing,» said Stephanie Hampton, a Washington State University professor and lead author of a study published in the journal Ecology Letters.
Authors: Daniel Wiltsie, Astrid Schnetzer, North Carolina State University; Jason Green, Mark Vander Borgh, Elizabeth Fensin, North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality, Division of Water Resources Published: Toxins
The review, authored by an international team of medical experts from Saudi Arabia, India and the United States and published in Nutrition and Metabolism, credited vitamin D with being an effective treatment and prevention option for liver disease and cancers.
The Phantom Menace: Policies that Protect Districts from Declining or Low Enrollments, Drive Up Spending and Inhibit Adaptation In this paper, part of the Productivity for Results Series published by George W. Bush Institute, authors Jon Fullerton and Marguerite Roza examine the curious practice of states funding school districts for...
Funding Phantom Students In this brief published by Education Next, authors Marguerite Roza and Jon Fullerton describe a common practice that inhibits both efficiency and productivity: funding students who do not actually attend school in funded districts and how this is often overlooked by state leaders.
http://www.rti4success.org/ Implementing Response - To - Intervention at the School, District, and State Levels: Functional Assessment, Data - based Problem Solving, and Evidence - based Academic and Behavioral Interventions Howard M. Knoff, PhD This groundbreaking new resource from national expert Howard M. Knoff, PhD, represents the most comprehensive, up - to - date single - authored volume on RtI and published as an e-book to minimize cost and improve access.
«These results call into question the fixed and formulaic approach to teacher evaluation that's being promoted in a lot of states right now,» said Morgan Polikoff, one of the study's authors, in a video that explains his paper, «Instructional Alignment as a Measure of Teaching Quality,» published online in Education Evaluation and Policy Analysis on May 13, 2014.
Published by Teachers College Press in 2015 with a foreword by the late Peter C. Murrell (and with contributions from additional authors Jon Clausen, Wilfridah Mucherah, and Susan Tancock), this volume highlights the award - winning «Schools Within the Context of Community» partnership between Ball State and the Whitely neighborhood of Muncie, Indiana.
Howie has been a tenured Full professor at two Research I universities (22 years); the Director of the federally - funded State Personnel Development / State Improvement Grant for the Arkansas Department of Education (13 years); and he has authored 18 books, published over 100 articles and book chapters, and delivered over 2,500 papers and workshops internationally.
Additionally, she was a contributing author to the School System Improvement Guide and the Washington State School Improvement Planning Guide, both published by the Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction in Olympia, Wash..
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