Sentences with phrase «same issue of the journal»

In the same issue of the journal there follows a strenuous response by Clark M. Williamson, «Whitehead as Counterrevolutionary?
With her team in Pennsylvania, she repeated her exploit by revealing a similar rarity among cats (she co-authored the article published in the same issue of the Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine).
Morais had predicted the discovery two years earlier, so much so that the article describing observations of the asteroid published in Nature, is noted by Morais in the News & Views section of the same issue of the journal.
Over a year's time, these patients experienced about half as many flare - ups as those taking another commonly prescribed drug, a different research group reported in the same issue of the journal.
An editorial in the same issue of the journal notes that drug - based treatments for liver cancer are limited and that the UT Southwestern study showed «truly remarkable results that should prompt further research under preclinical settings, given its potential to lead to a paradigm shift in treatment.»
The paper is among three on different research areas related to the Amborella genome that will be published in the same issue of the journal.
In a separate article in the same issue of the journal, Synolakis critically assesses the 2011 Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant accident in Japan and concludes it was due to the cumulation of a number of scientific, engineering and management blunders that could and should have been prevented.
The research field is extremely competitive: in the same issue of the journal, two more papers are published, in which very similar results are shown.
Two related studies led by scientists at Harvard and Stanford, also published Aug. 28 in the same issue of the journal Nature, tell a similar story: Even though humans, worms, and flies bear little obvious similarity to each other, evolution used remarkably similar molecular toolkits to shape them.
She and her colleagues published another paper in the same issue of Journal of Heredity about blue macaws, the charismatic and threatened parrots made famous by the animated film Rio.
In the same issue of the journal Science, other scientists reported on research from the opposite end of the world, observing that water around the south pole has become less salty, owing to the melting of the West Antarctic ice sheet.
In the same issue of the journal, researchers of the «HypnoLaus Study» investigated an older population (over the age of 65), with and without cognitive impairment.
Studies from a group at the University of Glasgow, which are published in the same issue of the journal, show the importance of calcineurin through different stages of the malaria life - cycle, implicating the protein as a potential target for blocking malaria transmission.
In the same issue of the journal, neuroscientist Andreas Nieder writes a rebuttal to Nunez.
In their JAMA editorial, Dr. Arterburn and David P. Fisher, MD, a bariatric surgeon at Kaiser Permanente, Northern California, commented on two articles in the same issue of the journal.
Maris's editorial, «Defining Why Cancer Develops in Children,» in today's New England Journal of Medicine, reflects on a major pediatric study of cancer predisposition genes in the same issue of the journal.
The same issue of the journal includes a letter by researchers based in Canada who analyzed how the 1980 letter had been cited, noting:
A second study in the same issue of the journal looked at almost 82,000 high school students in Minnesota in 2016.
«They seem on the whole to be safer than the COX - 2 drugs, and now opiates,» says Dr. Ross, who led a study on Vioxx that appears in the same issue of the journal.
In another study published in the same issue of the journal, researchers from the University of Minnesota found that even parents who recognized their child was overweight did not take «healthy» actions at home such as providing plentiful supplies of fruits and vegetables — to help their child.
The publication provoked an editorial that appeared in the same issue of the journal from one of Dr. Rubin's colleagues, arguing that the disease should not be called Collie Eye Anomaly, but Australian Shepherd Eye Anomaly.
In replies published in the same issue of the journal, Mr. McIntyre and Mr. McKitrick defended their conclusions.
The same issue of this journal has a paper suggesting a model for doing just that: A Persistent Data Tracking Mechanism for User - Centric Identity Governance.
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