Sentences with phrase «researchers argued»

So the researchers argued that, because we experience these physiological symptoms of arousal in several different settings, sometimes our cognitive interpretation of the symptoms can be incorrect.
The researchers argued that these «positive illusions» allow us to deal with the inevitable doubts and conflicts that surface in a relationship, by building up a store of good will.
For more than 20 years, researchers argued that premarital cohabitation is associated with an elevated risk of divorce.
Other researchers argued that even if average rates of rise seemed to have dropped, the number of extremes of heat had increased or that an increase in the number of volcanic eruptions might be masking solar radiation and lowering the temperatures.
In the 1970s and 1980s, for example, researchers argued that reducing certain whale populations would aid stocks of krill, a ubiquitous crustacean in the Southern Ocean that is a key food source for baleen whales and other marine species.
On top of bringing heavy rainfall and storm surges, the intensity of these recent tempests goes so far beyond what was previously thought to be the peak range of cyclone power that the researchers argued that they require a new level, a category 6, on a widely used rating scale for hurricanes and typhoons.
By attaching flipper bands and monitoring how many banded birds returned to DuDu researchers argued the penguins were less able to survive due to climate change.
The researchers argued that these stress signifiers proved the dogs were upset about being treated unfairly — not just sad about missing out on a treat.
In 1963, researchers argued that «the teaching of formal grammar has a negligible or, because it usually displaces some instruction and practice in actual composition, even a harmful effect on the improvement of writing,» and over 250 studies since that time, as well as a meta - analysis from the Carnegie Corporation in 2011, have widely supported that statement.
Those specs might help a scientist standardize her experiments, but they may also be holding some research back for one type of cancer drug, two St. Louis researchers argued in a recent review.
Writing in the Journal Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience, one group of researchers argued that ««non-invasive» brain stimulation» may sound benign, but it comes with risks as severe as when a body is opened up in surgery.
This study challenged the assumption that ground squirrels were introduced to the islands by historic settlers, and the researchers argued instead that these squirrels arrived on the island much earlier than previously thought.
The ideal development guarantee, the researchers argued, is one that ensures that developers are willing to build in areas in which people would be willing to live.
But other researchers argued that the DNA of living Polynesians showed evidence that their Lapita ancestors had lingered in Melanesia, mixing with the locals and slowly spreading eastward.
In the 1970s and 1980s, for example, researchers argued that reducing certain whale populations would aid stocks of krill, a ubiquitous crustacean in the Southern Ocean that is a key food source for baleen whales and other marine species.
It is not clear why a study of memory in adults would be health - related and yet learning in children would not, several researchers argued in comments.
And some researchers argued that the inscriptions indicating the men had the same mother were misleading.
In 2013, Australian researchers argued that cosplay is motivated by the desire to join the unreal with the real.
But other researchers argued that natural selection would have quickly favored adaptations for efficient walking given the dangers on the ground, even while hominins were still scurrying up trees.
... However, technological capability exists that makes this immediately possible,» researchers argued in a 2006 paper in a journal of the American Heart Association.
Such behavior, the researchers argue, suggests that boards indeed tend to think about grants in terms of the number of options, not their dollar value.
Apparently fear and surprise are more viral than sadness and trust — the researchers argue that «novelty and... emotional reactions» were responsible for the broader appeal of untrue stories.
Researchers argue that this type of work environment creates more disruptions and distractions, increases the spread of illness, generates more stress, decreases creativity and productivity and results in lower employee morale.
If Facebook and Google crack down on «fake news» sites, the Microsoft researcher argues, those who have an interest in generating that kind of content will find ways around the restrictions, as many already have by using visual «memes» instead of links to news stories.
Some researchers argue that it is impossible to determine when a contractor is truly working for a company during the times when the worker is waiting to pick up a ride, because the driver could be using two applications at once or attending to personal business.100 However, as noted in a 2016 report by the Economic Policy Institute, both Uber and Lyft already have guaranteed pay plans that they use in some markets during certain hours that pay workers guaranteed minimum earnings per hour based on their entire time logged into the system, including waiting times.101
The debate is one that has occupied researchers for over a century now, with quantitative researchers arguing that statistical analysis of data generates objective knowledge, while qualitative researchers believe that quantitative methods do not provide rich data about phenomena.
Some researchers argue that the crucial ingredient is emotional availability at bedtime — a characteristic that depends on a variety of behaviors.
But broadly speaking, the researchers argue, these apparently radical differences in parenting make little difference.
Testifying before the House Education and Labor Committee, one researcher argued that such programs have not been properly evaluated to warrant such a big investment.
The researchers argue that the dampened physiological response to a child's anguish results from the «cumulative wear and tear... of living in poverty and dangerous neighborhoods.»
But this is not the case, the researchers argue.
So, the researchers argue, a major decrease in availability of the element would have had catastrophic effects on the ocean's ecosystems — and thus may have caused, or at least played a major role in, the widespread die - offs.
These researchers argue that clumps of matter can alter how the universe expands, when the clumps» influence is tallied up over wide swaths of the cosmos.
Because of the rapidity with which it occurs (less than a tenth of a second) the researchers argue that this influx is caused by micro-tears in cell membranes ripped open by the force of the micro-explosion;
Moreover, the researchers argue that exposure would only have changed vote shares in the order of hundredths of a percentage point.
SO CUTE, SO WRONG No one has a genetic way of getting rid of invasive brushtail possums (shown) in New Zealand, but now is the time to debate whether CRISPR gene drives are too strong to be considered, two researchers argue.
The researchers argue that the care provided was widespread and should be seen as a «compassionate and knowledgeable response to injury and illness.»
Young children who spend a lot of time on the floor could absorb these compounds through their skin, and the researchers argue that this means people should not smoke in homes and cars, and should replace nicotine - laden furniture and carpets.
Two researchers argue that governments need to coordinate a legal framework to allow for geoengineering experiments
Other researchers argue that crime curves level off or even dip in supersweltering situations in ways that can vary with the time of day, the nature of the crime and even the season studied.
The lies, whether big or small, can shape social networks and ultimately society as a whole, researchers argue July 23 in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
But rather than writing off cancer immunotherapy, some researchers argue that the agents have been examined in the wrong way, resulting in erroneous conclusions.
This pattern suggests local bee - to - bee transmission, the researchers argue.
But some researchers argue that another factor — a challenging environment — may also stimulate cognitive evolution.
The results of the early - stage vaccine trial suggest that the preventive treatment should be developed further and that scientists are a step closer to being able to counter a potential H7N9 flu pandemic using a clinically tested vaccine, researchers argue April 30 in Science...
Researchers argue that around 130,000 years ago, hominins used the stones above and below like a blacksmith uses an anvil.
In a paper in the journal Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism, researchers argue that getting fat is the body's way of storing fat correctly, and that metabolic problems kick in when we get so fat that fat infiltrates organs not equipped to deal with it.
But the researchers argue that understanding it is crucial for understanding how life gets by on the sea floor.
Some researchers argue that they are bits of inert mineral; others contend they are among the world's smallest and oldest living organisms.
The researchers argue that adopting such a policy could lead to significant public health risks.
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