Hence all the noise and gibbering but a complete absence of a large and growing body of
published studies demonstrating that the scientific consensus (decades in emerging) is wrong.
There is no large and growing body of
published studies demonstrating the existence and efficacy of «mystery forcings» capable of explaining modern warming.
There are thousands of
published studies demonstrating the clinical effectiveness of Laser Therapy.
There are hundreds of
published studies demonstrating the anti-cancer power of curcumin, but because the pharmaceutical industry hasn't figured out how to make a patentable FDA - approved drug out of it, curcumin can not be used in cancer treatment.
In December 2016, the New England Journal of Medicine
published a study demonstrating that a chimeric antigen receptor therapy (CAR - T) caused glioblastoma regression.
Nevertheless, this study is likely to find itself in the groaner column for conservatives who've grown weary of presumed - liberal researchers
publishing studies demonstrating how wonderfully self - actualized and mature their own moral tendencies and preferences are.
Scientists at the Medical Center — University of Freiburg, the Institute of Psychology of the University of Freiburg and the Institute for Frontier Areas of Psychology and Mental Health (IGPP) in Freiburg have now
published a study demonstrating that test subjects almost always perceive Mona Lisa as happy.
Not exact matches
A
study on waiters and tipping
published in the Journal of Applied Social Psychology
demonstrates how even tiny gifts can make a big difference, finding that: «Customers who received a small piece of chocolate along with [their] check tipped more than did customers who received no candy.»
One
study published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology found that participants
demonstrated reduced self - control — less physical stamina, reduced persistence in the face of failure and more procrastination — after making several decisions about what types of goods to buy.
CCGG will from time to time
publish studies in furtherance of our mission or highlight the publication of external
studies that
demonstrate the value of good corporate governance.
Lest common sense fail to convince readers that surgery is not a treatment for a mental disorder, a Swedish
study published in 2011 found that over the long term, 324 people who had undergone sex - reassignment surgery
demonstrated an alarmingly high suicide rate and experienced considerably higher numbers of severe psychiatric problems than were present in the general population.
If a woman with untreated celiac does conceive, the fetus potentially could be at risk: An Italian
study published in 2010
demonstrated that anti-transglutaminase (anti-tTG) antibodies in the blood — a hallmark of untreated celiac disease — can interfere with the function of the placenta, possibly leading to early loss of the pregnancy.
This decision was reinforced by an additional six
studies published since 2005, none of which
demonstrated an advantage from bracing.
In a blog post on his website, Hodges wrote that «numerous
published studies...
demonstrate that virtually all children who have accidents are severely constipated,» and that,
High school athletics coaches in Washington State are now receiving substantial concussion education and are
demonstrating good knowledge about concussions, but little impact is being felt on the proportion of athletes playing with concussive symptoms, according to the two
studies published in the American Journal of Sports Medicine.
High school athletics coaches in Washington State are now receiving substantial concussion education and are
demonstrating good knowledge about concussions, but little impact is being felt on the proportion of athletes playing with concussive symptoms, according to two
studies published this month in the American Journal of Sports Medicine.
They also
demonstrate stronger brain responses when they hear their baby cry, according to a
study published in the May issue of the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.
Published in the British Medical Journal by Johnson and Daviss in 2005, this
study promises to finally
demonstrate what U.S. direct - entry midwives really provide.
«The author...
demonstrates a unique talent in demystifying the medical research and supplying the reader with an armamentarium for critiquing
published studies and applying the conclusions to a safe and humane plan of care for pregnancy and birth.»
«
Published case - control
studies demonstrate a significant reduced risk of SIDS with pacifier use, particularly when placed for sleep.
The peer counseling model was based on
published studies that
demonstrate that, among peer counseling programs for low - income mothers of term infants, in - depth, in - person peer contacts are most effective.13, 15 Emphasis was thus placed on face - to - face contact, with meetings lasting at least 30 minutes.
When I first encountered the Price et al.
study, I remembered a
study this same group of researchers
published 10 years ago in the British Medical Journal
demonstrating that controlled crying lessened the risk of postpartum depression (Hiscock & Wake, 2002).
One
study published in the Journal of Applied Social Psychology
demonstrated that expectant moms who did 45 minutes of water aerobics twice weekly over the course of 6 weeks experienced an increased sense of well - being, and a reduction in stress and fatigue.
A
study published earlier this year of six former CFL players
demonstrated why the unchecked boasts are not only wrong but reckless.
A well conducted
study published in the Italian medical journals in June 2007
demonstrated that the daily intake of Colostrum can be 3x more effective than the flu vaccine for providing protection.
Venneman and colleagues5 recently
demonstrated that infants who are formula fed are twice as likely to die of SIDS than breastfed infants based on a case control
study of 333 SIDS cases compared to 998 aged matched controls in Germany, from 1998 - 2001, consistent with previously
published reports.35 While no
studies show that co-sleeping in the form of bedsharing, specifically, is imperative for breastfeeding enhancement, many
studies have shown that in order to get more sleep and to ease caring for their infants the decision to breastfeed often leads mothers to adopt routine bedsharing for at least part of the night36 - 40 even where they never intended to do so.41, 42 Indeed, nearly 50 % of breastfeeding mothers in the United States and Great Britain adopt bedsharing for some part of the night,38,43 - 45 and breastfeeding women are twice as likely to sleep with their babies in the first month relative to mothers electing to bottle - feed.39
The Ministry of Transport, in an Expression of Interest (EOI)
published in local newspapers, said: «The feasibility
studies [for the establishment of a new national carrier] also
demonstrated the new national airline will require partnership with an experienced strategic airline partner that has a global distribution network to adequately take advantage of opportunities in the market place».
The new research,
published recently as two separate
studies in ACS Central Science and the Journal of the American Chemical Society,
demonstrates that a new class of drugs called small molecule RNA inhibitors can successfully target and kill specific types of cancer.
In their
study, which has just been
published in the journal PNAS, the researchers
demonstrate that the defence protein docks on to a specific target in the nematode: a modified sugar found on the surfaces of the worm's intestinal cells but also on those of molluscs like snails.
One
study that predicted shortages, written by Richard Atkinson and
published in Science in 1990, has been repudiated, and is often passed around by postdocs to
demonstrate this phenomenon of false prediction — and, some argue, the cynicism of those who continue to call for expansion despite evidence that today's scientists are widely underemployed.
A comprehensive and technically sophisticated
study published in the May 7 issue of Science, «A Draft Sequence of the Neandertal Genome,» by Max Planck Institute evolutionary anthropologists Richard E. Green, Svante Pääbo and 54 of their colleagues,
demonstrates that «between 1 and 4 % of the genomes of people in Eurasia are derived from Neandertals» and that «Neandertals are on average closer to individuals in Eurasia than to individuals in Africa.»
Two recently
published studies in the journals Age and the British Journal of Nutrition (BJN)
demonstrate that consuming cocoa flavanols improves cardiovascular function and lessens the burden on the heart that comes with the aging and stiffening of arteries.
To accurately test the hypothesis of a lower risk of recurrence with HRT, a new
study led by investigators at Brigham and Women's Hospital
published in European Urology Focus, performed a systematic review and meta - analysis, pooling available data, to assess whether an improved risk of recurrence could be
demonstrated using HRT compared with CRT, in addition to assessing the relative impact of these two treatments on bladder and rectal function.
Those
studies, including their recent paper
published in the medical journal Expert Review of Clinical Pharmacology, which
demonstrated that the benefits of taking statins have been exaggerated and are misleading.
As early as 2007, in a
study published in the scientific magazine Nature, Hackermüller, together with a number of colleagues, was able to
demonstrate that not only two per cent of the genome is transcribed into RNA — a template which normally serves the production of proteins — but practically the entire genome, even those areas which are completely neglected when looking at blueprints for proteins.
The
study,
published in Nature Materials,
demonstrates that because the molecules were swept along by the movement of strong ripples in the carbon fabric of graphene, they were able to move at an exceedingly fast rate, at least ten times faster than previously observed.
A team of scientists
demonstrated another tangible effect of climate change with a new
study published Thursday in Science.
Their
study published last week in Science Translational Medicine
demonstrated that the fasting - mimicking diet reduced risks for cancer, diabetes, heart disease and other age - related diseases in human
study participants who followed the special diet for five days each month in a three - month span.
A 4 - year
study by professor Leslie Perlow and research associate Jessica Porter, both of the Harvard Business School,
published in the October issue of Harvard Business Review,
demonstrates that time off can have a larger, positive effect on individual and organizational productivity than more hours on the job.
This
study, which has been
published in the journal eLife,
demonstrates that Dpp is necessary for tissue growth but that «its gradient does not direct wing growth,» explains Marco Milán, ICREA research professor and head of the
study.
However, this new
study,
published in Cognitive Psychology,
demonstrates major flaws in this research supporting the existence of this optimism bias.
In a
study published in EBioMedicine, a group of researchers at Uppsala University's Department of Psychology, Sweden, now
demonstrate considerably better effects of the SSRI escitalopram when given with correct as compared to incorrect verbal information.
In a
study recently
published online in the journal Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical, Dr. Shalini Prasad, professor of bioengineering in the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science, and her co-authors
demonstrated the capabilities of a biosensor they designed to reliably detect and quantify glucose in human sweat.
«There are no other cognitive training programs, or «brain games», that have been
demonstrated by
published, peer - reviewed
studies to enhance driving performance,» says Jerri Edwards of the University of South Florida in Tampa, a co-leader of the
study.
The
study,
published online today in Scientific Reports,
demonstrates fast, scalable, high - resolution 3D printing of hydrogels, which remain solid and retain their shape despite containing water.
A team led by Latha Venkataraman, professor of applied physics and chemistry at Columbia Engineering and Xavier Roy, assistant professor of chemistry (Arts & Sciences),
published a
study today in Nature Nanotechnology that is the first to reproducibly
demonstrate current blockade — the ability to switch a device from the insulating to the conducting state where charge is added and removed one electron at a time — using atomically precise molecular clusters at room temperature.
In fact, this year they will
publish another
study in the journal «Food Chemistry» in which they will
demonstrate that consuming strawberries increases the antioxidant function of blood flow, erythrocytes and mononuclear cells.
Psychologist Stephen Lindsay of the University of Victoria in British Columbia
published a
study in Psychological Science in 2004 that
demonstrates how pictures enhance the formation of false memories.
The
study,
published today in Science, uncovers the key role of the protein YME1 in the regulation of the number, type and shape of mitocondria, and
demonstrates that its absence induces a metabolic defect typical of patients with heart disease.
The
study,
published online last week in the Journal of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, is the first to
demonstrate that PQQ can protect offspring of obese mothers from acceleration of obesity - induced liver disease.