Sentences with phrase «similar result in a paper»

An independent group of researchers using the same data recently reported similar results in a paper published in the Journal of Ornithology.
Philip Walther, a physicist at the University of Vienna, and colleagues recently reported a similar result in a paper posted to the arXiv preprint server, as did Roberto Osellame of the Italian National Research Council and the Polytechnic University of Milan, and colleagues.

Not exact matches

Search results are then ranked in order of importance, similar to how Google News search gives a higher rank to highly linked sources, thus making it easier to find the most relevant or authoritative research among the thousands of scientific papers that are published every day.
The second paper, by another group of authors in the United States and Taiwan, arrived at similar results.
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.
Those results, reported in a 2015 New England Journal paper, found similar outcomes for both strategies in terms of the incidence of future cardiovascular events.
The resulting papers published in Nature all tell similar stories of shared evolution between species — for instance, the commonalities of regulatory networks of genes and the transcription factors that control their activation.
Lippman and Cora MacAlister, Ph.D., lead author on the new paper, found that deleting the genes for these enzymes from the flowering mustard plant Arabidopsis thaliana and the moss Physcomitrella patens resulted in similar defects in both species, which are widely separated in evolutionary time.
It is understood that culling badgers spreads the disease further as it forces them to runaway — this paper shows that an increase in the population of badgers seems to have a similar result as culling, increasing badger - induced infection distances.
«What we did is similar to placing sheets of paper between a magnet and a refrigerator,» said Associate Professor Hajime Nakanotani, lead author of the paper reporting these results published online February 26, 2016, in the journal Science Advances.
While the research reported in this paper manipulated pluripotent mouse cells, the researchers have moved ahead in performing similar studies with human stem cells and achieved comparable types of results with the microparticle delivery approaches.
«We believe the experimental and computational results reported here,» they wrote in their paper, «will help advance the fundamental study and exploration of these and similar materials for energy conversion devices.»
«Our results showed a similar trend in the mid-1990s, consistent with the Science paper.
The NIST paper was submitted to PRL with another paper by a team at the University of Vienna in Austria who used a similar high - efficiency single - photon detector provided by NIST to perform a Bell test that achieved similar results.
One commenter described «clear and deliberate» removal of control results in the paper, while others suggested gel bands were duplicated within the paper, and appear similar to those from
March 16, 2011 Rock - paper - scissors tournaments explain ecological diversity The mystery of biodiversity — how thousands of similar species can co-exist in a single ecosystem — might best be understood as the result of a massive rock - paper - scissors tournament, a new study has revealed.
These are additional papers showing similar results for mice fed salmon that had been fed vegetable oils: high fat diet supplemented with oils high in linoleic acid leads to obesity and fatty liver:
Some commentators have questioned those procedures, but similar results are obtained for 1999 - 2000 by Smeeding when poverty rates are calculated as 125 % of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's poverty line in his 2006 paper, «Poor People in Rich Nations: The United States in Comparative Perspective.»
Our results from our analysis of math scores in the fourth and fifth grades, available in the paper, show generally similar patterns, with some differences across grades.
Also, My Thesis Writing Service would like you to keep in mind that computer science thesis, just like all other thesis papers, contains similar chapters and sections (title page, table of contents, thesis abstract, introductory chapter, literature review section, methodology section, results section, analysis and discussion chapter as well as conclusion, bibliography and appendix sections).
Other papers examining the returns over different periods and in different markets written after Oppenheimer's paper have found similar results (one of the papers is by Montier and I will be discussing it in some detail in the near future).
A footnote in the Gray and Vogel paper says that they conducted the same research substituting EBIT for EBITDA and found «nearly identical results,» which is perhaps a little surprising but not inconceivable because they are so similar.
The oldest of the procedures, the extra-capsular repair has been performed on tens of thousands of dogs for the last four decades, and in the hands of an experienced practitioner, according to the research paper noted above, has been shown to provide similar results to the TPLO procedure.
Both of the above papers compare the extracap procedure with the TPLO procedure (TTA was not being performed widely in 2005 so not studied as much) and the results were similar — no significant difference between the two procedures.
I haven't read the papers and don't know what is happening with salinity in the rest of the Atlantic, but looking at your map it occurred to me that if there was increased freshwater in the Northern Ocean due to ice melting and increase salinity in the tropical Atlantic due to increased evaporation, couldn't a mixing effect at the southern edge of the Northern ocean as tropical water is circulated north show similar results?
This paper published in 1974, is similar to previous results from a much simpler model done by Plass in the late 1950's.
Four of the five authors of the paper he cites Viau et al (2002) are also the authors of Viau et al (2006) which considers the Mann «hockey - stick» compatable with its own findings, stating «The results are remarkably similar, in spite of the different methods and proxies employed in these studies (Figure 6).
I know about the two papers in which pre-clinical research findings seemed very difficult to repeat, but a fairly convincing refutation of those studies has been published, and I have considerable personal experience of finding that my own results more often than not agree with those of others who have done similar experiments.
Caron, the paper's lead author, who was an MIT postdoc during most of this research but is now a professor at HEC business school in Montreal, says that all of the different research teams largely found similar results, though there were differences in the details.
The information you have made available in your papers and data, and in the raw data you used from the GHCN and similar groups, has been so thorough that even an amateur like me can follow most of your work and even check for myself the results that you obtain more thoroughly.
On the narrow issues of the «effective equivalence» of the two methods and whether the alternate was «tested in the paper»: in general terms, the two methods are clearly not «effectively equivalent», though this doesn't exclude the possibility that, by coincidence, they yielded similar results in a particular case, but this would have to be demonstrated.
The estimates of temperature change in the paper by Feulner / Rahmstorf and other papers with similar results are surrounded by too much uncertainty to be taken as precise values, but the general range is supported by correlation with historical data.
Also, a recent analysis of Antarctic sea ice trends for 1978 — 1996 by Watkins and Simmonds [2000] found significant increases in both Antarctic sea ice extent and ice area, similar to the results in this paper.
I further assert that if the temperature record at that site is broadly similar to the Moscow record (nonlinear increasing trend), an analysis will yield similar results to what is shown in the paper.
The most unforgiveable unethical behavior surrounding the entire issue of «hiding the decline» and similar biases in published research, is when climate change scientists who know about their — «cherry picking the data», — biased and selective presentation of all data pertinent to published paper conclusions, and — outright errors in their data and peer - reviewed papers, don't speak out loudly in the media outlets that have misled the general public in reporting about their flawed, misleading research, as well as, associated journals and professional societies, to stop politicians and government regulators from using their flawed and misleading research results to pass laws and regulations that have severe effects on the prosperity and quality of life of their fellow citizens of the US and the world.
Also, reliance on paper lends itself to taking a similar stance on other technology — an attitude that I think has resulted in too many lawyers being too technologically behind.
In a recent meta - analysis (a research paper that combines results from similar studies), researchers examined this very question.
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