Stanford's Tom Dee and the University of Virginia's Jim Wyckoff have just
published an important study on Washington D.C.'s controversial teacher - evaluation system.
Building on this research, in 2015, researchers
published an important study in the Journal of Business Ethics.
Not exact matches
A recent
study titled «The Role of Money Arguments in Marriage,»
published in the Journal of Family and Economic Issues, found that money arguments are an
important indicator of relationship satisfaction — but not divorce!
Indeed, Business Insider previously reported that a 2015
study published in the journal Psychology and Aging found that quantity of relationships was more
important for people in their 20s, but quality of relationships was more
important once people hit their 30s.
For instance, a 2012
study published in Current Directions of Psychological Science suggests that it's best to avoid making
important choices when you're feeling stressed, because you tend to overemphasize the potential positive outcomes of your decision while underemphasizing the negative
A new
study published by JAMA Internal Medicine poses a really
important question to lawmakers and taxpayers alike.
One Yale
study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine states that «the comparative histories of the eugenical sterilization campaigns in the United States and Nazi Germany reveal
important similarities of motivation, intent and strategy.»
A really
important study published in 2015 called the LEAP trial showed that peanut allergies were more common in babies who avoided peanuts opposed to those who ate peanuts early on.
It's also
important to note that a frequently cited 2009
study published in the journal Pediatrics found that healthy newborns sitting in a car seat had significantly decreased blood oxygen levels compared to those laying flat and the researchers concluded that infant car seats should be used for car travel and not as a replacement for a flat sleeping surface.
Though the researchers note that the USDA wasn't involved in the
study design, data collection and analysis, decision to
publish, or preparation of the manuscript, it is always
important to follow the money trail.
This
important new
study has now been
published and shows how baby foods and formulas are disproportionately targeted with nutrition and health - related claims.
All the authors have made substantive intellectual contributions to this
study by contributing to the design, acquisition, analysis and interpretation of data, drafting the article or revising it critically for
important intellectual content, or approving the final version to be
published.
If it's met with critical acclaim, a documentary or
published study becomes that much more
important and recognized.
«A father's role awareness is regarded as an
important variable of parenting participation,» say Youn - Soo Roh and Sonam Yang, authors of a
study published in the Journal of Exercise Rehabilitation.
Preventing SIDS is the most
important reason to put your baby to sleep on her back, but a
study published in 2003 in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine found other benefits, too: Infants who sleep on their back suffer from fewer ear infections, fevers, and stuffy noses than babies who sleep in other positions.
Although there are always parents on the playground who brag they trained their child in a day, the
study —
published in the December 2009 issue of the Journal of Pediatric Urology — found timing was more
important than technique.
«In 2001, the New England Journal of Medicine
published an
important meta - analysis
study that found placebo effects to be insignificant.
In three randomized trials, treatment of chronic low back pain with radiofrequency denervation, a procedure that can be performed with different techniques including the application of an electric current to the pain - conducting nerve, resulted in either no improvement or no clinically
important improvement in chronic low back pain, according to a
study published by JAMA.
Clinically
important findings suggest that targeting the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and the fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) cellular pathways may benefit thousands of patients with this disease, according to the
study published today in the journal PLOS Genetics.
«Our goal here was to understand the molecular underpinnings of an
important evolutionary transition, not to create a «dino - chicken» simply for the sake of it,» said Bhullar, lead author of the
study,
published online May 12 in the journal Evolution.
Researchers at the Veterans Health Administration conducted a systematic review of 67
published studies to determine the effectiveness of strategies to reduce or discontinue long - term opioid therapy prescribed for chronic pain and the effect of dose reduction or discontinuation on
important patient outcomes.
Now a University of Colorado Cancer Center
study published online ahead of print in the journal Oncogene offers compelling evidence explaining this failure and offering a possible strategy for the use of retinoic acid or other retinoids against some breast cancers: Because early clinical trials are often offered to patients who have already tried other more established therapies, breast cancer cells may have been pushed past an
important tipping point that offers retinoic acid resistance.
«It is very
important for fire departments to understand causes and cost of injury in order to ensure their limited budget is being properly distributed,» said Shannon Widman, project manager at FIRST and lead author on the
study published in Injury Prevention.
The
study, to be
published Aug. 22 in the journal Cell Reports, focused on the action of serotonin, an
important neuromodulator in the brain.
A
study,
published in the journal Nano Energy, showed that the new catalyst can efficiently and selectively convert carbon dioxide to ethylene, one of the world's most
important commodity chemicals.
In a new
study now
published in the latest edition of the scientific journal PNAS, Bárbara Parreira and Lounès Chikhi from Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência (IGC; Portugal) show that social structure is
important to maintain the genetic diversity within species.
However, when the current results were included in an updated meta - analysis, the intervention was associated with a clinically
important reduction in complication rates, according to a
study published by JAMA.
What you get is a corannulene (C20H10), a molecule that, according to a just -
published study conducted with SISSA's collaboration, could be an
important component of future «molecular circuits,» that is, circuits miniaturized to the size of molecules, to be used for various kinds of electronic devices (transistors, diodes, etc.).
In a new
study published in the journal Nature Structural and Molecular Biology researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden have shown that a subtle epigenetic change plays an
important role in the correct segregation of chromosomes.
Onsite imaging services play an
important role in the management of Olympic athletes with sports - related injuries and disorders, according to a new
study published online in the journal Radiology.
Now, a
study published online April 27th, in the Journal of Immunology, confirms that the cytokine GM - CSF (Granulocyte macrophage colony - stimulating factor) likely plays an
important role in human disease and offers a new explanation for why the MS treatment interferon - Beta (INF - β) is often effective at reducing MS attacks.
«I believe that this is an extremely
important study and I have no reason whatsoever to question any of the
published data,» he says.
In a new
study published Wednesday in Frontiers in Earth Science, the Savoy researchers applied data assimilation to a volcano model to see if the technique could accurately predict an
important parameter for volcanic eruptions: magma overpressure.
A new
study publishing in the open access journal PLOS Biology on October 7 reveals how fruit fly females make a very
important decision: to either accept or reject male courtship.
The findings, which are
published in Liver Transplantation, a journal of the American Association for the
Study of Liver Diseases, could have
important implications for safeguarding transplant recipients» health.
The results,
published in the «Journal of Child and Family
Studies», show that these two variables in foster carers are
important predictors of children's problems within the family.
The
study that has been
published online in the journal Radiology adds
important information to health policy debates regarding the appropriate use of CT scanning.
The St. Laurent Institute, a non-profit medical research institute focused on the systems biology of disease, today announced in a
study published in the July edition of Genome Biology, that genetic matter, previously ignored by the scientific community, may play an
important role in cancer.
The findings from the University of Bristol
study,
published in the Journal of Medical Genetics, may have
important implications for physical fitness training, and for the treatment of lung function disorders and short stature.
«We thought it might be
important to look instead at the toxic environment outside the cell, where blood proteins accumulate» said Akassoglou, senior investigator at Gladstone, professor of neurology at UC San Francisco (UCSF), and senior author of a
study published by the scientific journal Neuron.
These new findings,
published this week online by the Proceedings of the National Academies of Science, are an
important key to the puzzle of how technology emerged as humans dispersed across the globe, says archaeologist Ofer Bar - Yosef at Harvard University, who, like Straus, did not participate in this
study.
A recent
study published in Agronomy Journal provides information
important to farmers growing oilseed crops.
The
study is a solid confirmation of previous papers that showed B2M's
important role in aging and memory, says biologist Irina Conboy of the University of California, Berkeley, who recently
published a scientific paper showing that targeting a separate molecule can lower levels of B2M and restore brain cell formation.
In a
study recently
published in the journal Neuro - Oncology, a team of scientists led by Luni Emdad, M.B.B.S., Ph.D., and Paul B. Fisher, M.Ph., Ph.D., provided the first evidence of an
important link between a specific microRNA, miR - 184, and a cancer promoting gene, SND1, in the regulation of malignant glioma.
«It is
important to begin mechanistic
studies of these declines,» the team concludes in a paper presenting the finding
published in today's Science, «with habitat alteration, climate change and agricultural chemical usage being potential key drivers of observed shifts.»
In a retrospective case
study involving
published data on p53, an
important tumor suppressor protein, the team showed that this new resource called the Knowledge Integration Toolkit (KnIT) is an
important first step in that direction, accurately predicting the existence of proteins that modify p53 — proteins that were subsequently found to do just that.
«This is by far the largest twin
study of gene expression ever
published, enabling us to make a roadmap of genes versus environment,» Sullivan says, adding that the
study measured relationships with disease more precisely than had been previously possible, and uncovered
important connections to recent human evolution and genetic influence in disease.
The results of this
study have been
published in Scientific Reports and could provide
important information for the chemistry of the atmosphere, evaluation of earth climate and in bioremediation.
The three
studies,
published in tomorrow's issue of Nature, push the limits of structural biology and set an
important precedent for understanding how molecular pumps work, including those in humans, notes Werner Kühlbrandt of the Max Planck Institute of Biophysics in Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
In a recent
study appearing in Nature
Publishing Group's Scientific Reports, the researchers focused on the properties of schreibersite and conducted experiments with the mineral to better understand how — in a chemical reaction with the corrosive effects of water called «phosphorylation» — schreibersite could have provided the phosphate
important to the emergence of early biological life.