On the other hand
I recently read a study that Chinese Asians supposedly have perfect pitch (which is how Chinese can be a perfect - pitch language).
I recently read a study, incorporating «advanced statistics» that show today's NHL players now reach their «peak scoring age» around 14.
I have
recently read a study that says that the number one thing that was common in successful people's up bringing was having chores that they did at home.
I recently read a study about the massive positive effects of just spending 15 minutes with a child every day — 15 minutes with 100 % focus on the child.
I didn't think the effects of fat - shaming and body - shaming could be any more awful and harmful than they already are until
I recently read this study about obese mothers.
Recently I read a study of people that ate egg breakfasts compared to those who ate cereal or bagel - based breakfasts.
This is unrelated to the video, but I have a question for Dr. Greger, I have
recently read a study on the effect of eating tofu on Dementia called «Brain Aging and Midlife Tofu Consumption».
I have
recently read studies about iron and its role in insulin sensitivity & aging and believe iron levels is a missing link in nutrition science, probably explaining why eastern cultures were OK despite eating carbs, potential harm in red meat, why women are healthier than men until menopause etc..
I have
recently read a study that demonstrates that the average person is willing to put up with bad fees, horrible customer service, and a bad experience at their bank because it is simply too inconvenient to move.
I recently read a study suggesting that our iPhones have become extensions of ourselves.
Not exact matches
A
recently released NAHB special
study explores the geographic differences in homeownership...
Read More»
... I look at this person's comments and keep thinking about a
study I
read recently that stated that «it is impossible to tell religious zelotism from parody in print, since both sound equally absurd».
BERLYNE»S LAW I
recently read a fascinating
study conducted by psychologist Daniel Berlyne.
Preparing to go to the airport and St. Louis
recently, I looked about my
study for some light flight
reading and settled on Evelyn Waugh's Scoop, which I hadn't returned to for years.
I
recently read an excellent book on how to
study and teach these apocalyptic sections of the Bible.
With a number of fellow pastors who became lifelong friends, Rauschenbusch
studied,
read, talked, debated and plumbed the new social theories of the day, especially those of the non-Marxist socialists whom John C. Cort has
recently traced in Christian Socialism (Orbis, 1988) The pastors wove these theories together with biblical themes to form» «Christian Sociology,» a hermeneutic of social history that allowed them to see the power of God's kingdom being actualized through the democratization of the economic system (see James T. Johnson, editor, The Bible in American Law, Politics and Rhetoric [Scholars Press, 1985]-RRB- They pledged themselves to new efforts to make the spirit of Christianity the core of social renewal at a time when agricultural - village life was breaking down and urban - cosmopolitan patterns were not yet fully formed.
In writing this book, I had, however, not
recently reread his writings, but as this book was nearing completion, I
read Judson B. Trapnell's new
study of Bede Griffiths.
Recently I have been
reading and
studying the five theological orations by St. Gregory the Theologian (also known as St. Gregory of Nazianzus where he was Bishop....
Until relatively
recently (the invention of printing) The Bible was
read and
studied, usually out loud, for the moral lessons within it.
Please
read the
study that has been
recently conducted by the Soccerex Football Finance 100, on my post below.
I
recently read a scientific
study that covered all types of sport and what came out was that home teams are still favourites to win games, and not because of the motivational factor of the players but purely because of the support of the crowd.
I
read recently in a
study that was in the newspaper, that just ONE forest fire in CA makes more greenhouse gas than all of the cars, trucks, trains, factories, pollution, etc combined.
Perri Klass MD, highlights the impact of daytime sleep for young children in her NYT article, «A Child's Nap Is More Complicated Than It Looks» — «Dr. Monique LeBourgeois, a sleep scientist at the University of Colorado at Boulder, and her colleagues
recently conducted the first
study on how napping affects the cortisol awakening response, a burst of hormone secretion known to take place...
Read More
Read more about API's response to the
recently published Pediatrics
study on «behavioral infant sleep intervention» that's garnering headlines that sleep training is safe.
By: Ed BruskeA little sugar with that calcium?A landmark
study on calcium and vitamin D nutrition
recently published by the Institute of Medicine poses a serious challenge to a dairy industry campaign to sell chocolate milk to the nation's school children, finding that only girls aged 9 to...
Read more
A reader
recently sent me a Reuters article describing a
study from Canada which demonstrates (not surprisingly) that adolescents from food insecure households perform better academically and have better behavior in school when the schools provide... [Continue
reading]
In keeping with the rather serious tone infecting The Lunch Tray this week (except for the comic relief provided by the school lunch lady action figure - thank goodness for her), the Wall Street Journal
recently reported on two new
studies showing... [Continue
reading]
I'd love to see a discussion of an article I
read recently in the newspaper about an Australian
study that showed «crying it out» caused no ill effects on infants.
So, I've kind of find it funny that you should ask this because there is just a
study that came out pretty
recently and I was just
reading it the other day about: «The low milk supply — our supply is epidemic in the United States.»
Recently, I spoke at a Pregnancy after Loss
Study Day at the Royal Berkshire Hospital, in
Reading.
On my recent backyard vacation I
read that Ulster County Legislature Minority Leader Dave Donaldson had taken extreme umbrage at the suggestion that the
recently appointed county
study commission on police services could be a vehicle to eliminate the sheriff's road patrol.
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.
I've
read about this very interesting Harvard University
study about exercise multiple times in the past, but I was just
recently reminded about this
study again while
reading the fascinating book called 59 Seconds by Richard Wiseman.
Recently, I have
read several
studies demonstrating that exercise alone is not effective for weight loss.
I
recently read, «Nutrition And Physical Degeneration» by Weston Price, and I am currently
reading «The China
Study».
I
recently read your article called «Why you should train like a powerlifter» where you quote several
studies that suggest that heavy squatting and deadlifting actually improves speed significantly.
Just
recently I was
reading Diaz's classic overfeeding
study (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1414963) and it struk me how people on the same diet could respond so differently — while for some the ratio was 20 % fat - free mass and 80 % fat, for others it was 40 % and 60 %, respectively.
To help bring even more proof that whole eggs are better for you than egg whites, I
recently read a University of Connecticut
study that showed that a group of men in the
study that ate 3 eggs per day for 12 weeks while on a reduced carb, higher fat diet increased their HDL good cholesterol by 20 %, while their LDL bad cholesterol stayed the same during the
study.
I
read a
study recently that compared groups of people that ate egg breakfasts vs groups of people that ate cereal or bagel - based breakfasts.
One
study I
read about
recently showed that 1 - 2 glasses of red wine per day significantly increased good bacteria in the gut and decreased bad bacteria (in addition to benefits to blood pressure, triglycerides, LDL, and C - reactive protein), yet for some reason, hard liquor (gin was tested) didn't have any of the same benefits.
I
recently read that black pepper can help the absorption of antioxidants in green tea, though it seems to be only based on animals
studies.
it's only to point that i
recently read on a book that defends Dukan's diet wrote by a MD that happens to have only one kidney since he was a child, and he links the occurence of kidney stones in those children of the early ketogenic
studies to the prevailing idea of water in those days, ie, that water should be consumed in small amounts because it was thougth to provoque interferences with ketonic bodies production, and that was though to lessen their positive effects
rhsleigh:
Recently I started
reading Dr. T. Colin Campbell's book called «The China
Study».
Just
recently I
read on a (new) blog that
studying and blogging at the same time would be way too stressful.
Zoosk
recently did a
study of an anonymized sample of nearly 4,000 of their users, and... or you can
read the following excerpts Read Mor
read the following excerpts
Read Mor
Read More...
Academy - award winning director William Friedkin discusses his early career — including making documentaries for David L. Wolper, working for Alfred Hitchcock and what he learned from
studying his films, and directing his first movie Good Times (1967), starring Sonny and Cher; how his career path led to making The Exorcist, his initial reaction to
reading the source material, the story's theme of Good versus Evil, and the role his own faith played in his approach to making the movie; the techniques he used to generate suspense and fear in the audience, his use of subliminal imagery, and his reasons for
recently restoring deleted footage to the film.
Reading keeps the brain strong: I
recently read about a
study that showed that the brains of folks who
read and write every day are up to a third healthier in old age than the brains of those who didn't.
Just
recently in 2014 there was a research
study on the importance of
reading done by the University of Edinburgh and King's College London (Ritchie, Bates & Plomin).
For example, my multi-age students
recently studied S.E. Hintons novel The Outsiders as part of their
reading curriculum.
Recently, Education Next released a path - breaking, peer - reviewed
study by Ludger Woessmann which estimated long - term impacts of merit pay arrangements for teachers on student performance in math, science and
reading at age 15.