Sentences with phrase «recently led a study»

Julie Boergers, Ph.D., a psychologist and sleep expert from the Bradley Hasbro Children's Research Center, recently led a study linking later school start times to improved sleep and mood in teens.
«We're not going to spend the same on students from disadvantaged backgrounds as students in the suburbs,» says Ulrich Boser, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress who recently led a study called Return on Educational Investment, «but when you look across the U.S., we see that some schools are able to do more with less.
NASA scientist Benjamin Cook recently led a study that found California and the Southwest are likely to see droughts of 30 years or longer, thanks to climate change.
Ashley E. Mason of the University of Arizona recently led a study to determine how sexual conduct with an ex-spouse (SWE) and nonsexual conduct with an ex (CWE) affected the psychological adjustment of spouses who were recently separated.

Not exact matches

InsideSales.com recently published a study suggesting companies waste millions in time and resources on ineffective approaches to lead generation.
According to a recent study by The NPD Group, a leading global information company, the value menus recently launched by three major U.S. quick service restaurant chains (QSR) are working.
Recently, I reviewed the interesting findings from the CSO Insights Lead Optimization Study.
A Christian who leads a Bible study for his teammates as well as pregame prayers with the New York Knicks recently raised hackles with his comments about Jews printed in the New York Times Magazine.
Small but growing numbers of Christian theologians in Europe and North America have begun to meet regularly with Buddhists to foster mutual understanding and growth, one result of which is the recently established international Society for Buddhist - Christian Studies.4 In addition, following the lead of the late Trappist monk, Thomas Merton, many Roman Catholic monastics have begun to use meditative practices as an adjunct to their own spiritual disciplines (Walker).
The four - year - long study, led by University College London, and recently published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal,...
In my own studies, I have encountered dozens of leading world class scholars who have written more recently on the subject who disagree (Gordon Johnston, for example).
Reuchlin, the great Hebrew scholar (Luther had studied his Grammar for some years) had recently led a campaign against the burning of valuable Hebrew manuscripts and against a regular anti-semitic programme of the Dominican friars at Cologne, in the name of what they saw to be doctrinal orthodoxy.
This was shown in a new study led by the Research Institute of Organic Agriculture FiBL, which has recently been published in the renowned scientific journal «Nature Communications».
Recently, a study led by Western Sydney University — as well...
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
There, he worked with Annette Karmiloff - Smith, an expert in developmental neurocognition who had recently received a grant to study number processing in children with Williams syndrome, a rare genetic disorder that can lead to a puzzling cognitive profile: a relative strength in language coupled with severe deficiencies in visual - spatial cognition and number processing.
A recently published study, led by researchers at the University of Hawai'i at M?noa's School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST), sheds light on the ways SGD affects coral reef growth.
In the study, recently published in the scientific publication Journal of Quaternary Science, the international team proposes that it was this inflexible diet that led to the Cave Bear's extinction approximately 25,000 years ago.
«Microplastic pollution has been in the news recently, with several governments planning a ban on microbeads used in cosmetics and detergents» says Alina Wieczorek from the National University of Ireland, Galway and lead author of the study.
The study led by San Diego State University researcher Aaron Blashill, was recently published in the journal JAMA Dermatology.
The Fluc family of fluoride ion channels were recently discovered, and studies by a team led by Christopher Miller, PhD, HHMI Investigator and professor of biochemistry at Brandeis University, found that they are among the most selective channels yet identified.
The study, which was led by Akua Asa - Awuku, a researcher at the Center for Environmental Research and Technology (CE - CERT) at UC Riverside's Bourns College of Engineering, was published online recently (March 2) in the journal Environmental Research Letters.
The researchers led by study director Annette Schürmann, Robert Schwenk and Anne Kammel of DIfE recently published their findings in the journal Human Molecular Genetics.
The study, led by the University of Málaga (UMA) researcher Borja Figueirido, was recently published in the journal Scientific Reports.
A climate scientist studying the cooling effects of various environmentally engineered roofing treatments recently led a tour of a large postal facility's green roof
The telling hot spot recently observed in the southeast was discovered when the Indian River Lagoon on Florida's Atlantic coast, known for its algae blooms and blankets of dead fish, became much saltier after 2011, and study lead author Arnoldo Valle - Levinson, professor of civil and coastal engineering sciences in UF's College of Engineering, began to investigate the situation.
«The pocket shark we found was only 5 and a half inches long, and was a recently born male,» said Mark Grace of NOAA Fisheries» Pascagoula, Miss., Laboratory, lead author of the new study, who noted the shark displayed an unhealed umbilical scar.
This work was undertaken in a related UCL study led by Dr James Guggenheim (UCL Medical Physics & Biomedical Engineering) and recently published in Nature Photonics.
The study, published today in the journal Scientific Reports and led by researchers at the American Museum of Natural History, finds that the inner ear of modern cheetahs is unique and likely evolved relatively recently.
As an example, a 2013 study has shown that farmers» poor land - management practices in the case of maize production in the UK has led to increased surface water runoff9 that apparently contributed to the severity of the recent flooding in the UK, as recently reported in the news10.
Researchers studying the effects of general anesthesia recently made a startling discovery: the drugs used to knock out patients during surgery may lead to increased pain when they wake up.
The three Ras genes found in humans — H - Ras, K - Ras and N - Ras — were among the first to be linked to cancer development, and a new study led by VCU Massey Cancer Center researcher Paul Dent, Ph.D., has shown the recently approved breast cancer drug neratinib can block the function of Ras as well as several other oncogenes through an unexpected process.
The study by Li and her co-authors was published online recently and will be in the January issue of the Journal of Consumer Research, one of the leading journals on marketing academic research.
A team led by Prof. Dr. Andreas Hiltbrunner from the Institute of Biology II at the University of Freiburg has recently conducted a study that shows that both proteins PCH1 and PCHL influence this receptors» photosensitivity.
The collaboration between MedUni Vienna and this company has given rise to a study recently published in the leading journal Cephalalgia.
The recently developed field of positive psychology emphasizes the study of factors that enable individuals to lead more fulfilling lives, be it more enjoyable (the pleasant life), more engaged in helping others (the good life), or more purposeful (the meaningful life).
More recently, Ajo - Franklin's group published a follow - up study led by UC Berkeley graduate student Nate Lindsey, «Fiber - Optic Network Observations of Earthquake Wavefields,» in Geophysical Research Letters (GRL), which demonstrates the viability of using fiber - optic cables for earthquake detection.
The need for this approach, hitherto uncommon in medical studies, was recently emphasized in the leading journal Nature.»
University of York archaeologist Geoff Bailey recently led a major study of the ancient Red Sea coastline.
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.
The study, based on insurance claims data from across the United States, was conducted in response to reports of Avastin (bevacizumab)- related endophthalmitis, which led the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently to propose significant restrictions on use of the drug for eye conditions.
As such, warming could increase or decrease the strength of «enemy release» depending on the organisms that exist in a given location,» says the study's lead author Samuel Fey, a visiting scholar at Dartmouth and a postdoctoral fellow at Yale University who recently received a Ph.D. from Dartmouth's Ecology and Evolutionary Biology program.
The study's lead author, Heather Stapleton, a Duke University assistant professor of environmental chemistry, said many of the compounds have been used in foam cushions only recently, replacing another chemical that was banned after 2004 because it was building up rapidly in human bodies.
Binghamton University distinguished professor Ron Miles and graduate student Jian Zhou recently published a study in titled «Sensing fluctuating airflow with spider silk» that should lead to better microphones for hearing aids than traditional pressure - based systems.
The study, published recently in the journal Memory & Cognition, is based on a series of reading - and - recall experiments in which one group of students is told they will be tested on a selection of written material, and another group is led to believe they are preparing to teach the passage to another student.
Parchman, who specializes in evolutionary and ecological genetics in in the University's College of Science, is the lead author on a recently published scientific paper in the journal Molecular Ecology detailing the study, a culmination of several years of work with his colleagues Alex Buerkle and Craig Benkman of the University of Wyoming, and Victor Soria - Carrasco of University of Sheffield, UK.
Led by Alexandra Corning, research associate professor of psychology and director of Notre Dame's Body Image and Eating Disorder Lab, the study was presented recently at the Midwestern Psychological Association annual conference.
A team led by Joseph Ecker of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in California recently made significant progress in discerning how stem cells keep their options open.
Watkins and Dennis Burton, Ph.D., chairman and professor of the Department of Immunology & Microbiology at the Scripps Research Institute, led the collaborative international study, «Neutralizing Human Monoclonal Antibodies Prevents Zika Virus Infection in Macaques,» published recently in Science Translational Medicine.
Dr. Shemtov - Yona conducted this study for her Masters of Science degree, and recently enrolled in a PhD program in the Department of Mechanical Engineering to get an even better understanding of the problem Her current goal is to find what leads to the development of cracks to determine whether the causes lie in manufacturing, use, or both, in order to prolong the service life of implants.
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