Not exact matches
In the latest paper discussed in that post, Severe adverse maternal outcomes among low risk women with planned home versus hospital births in the Netherlands: nationwide cohort study, de Jonge conclude
In the latest paper
discussed in that post, Severe adverse maternal outcomes among low risk women with planned home versus hospital births in the Netherlands: nationwide cohort study, de Jonge conclude
in that
post, Severe adverse maternal outcomes among low risk women with planned home versus hospital births
in the Netherlands: nationwide cohort study, de Jonge conclude
in the Netherlands: nationwide cohort
study, de Jonge concluded:
As
in other blog
posts here, when
discussing potential benefits of Waldorf Education we have strived to limit our description to
studies that are well controlled, scientifically...
A
study discussed in the Washington
Post (and many other news outlets) found an inverse correlation between children's fast food consumption and their test scores, even when factors like socioeconomic status were ruled out.
Also
discussed in that
post is other sources such as the Scientific American article, It's Time to End the War on Salt, The zealous drive by politicians to limit our salt intake has little basis
in science which summarized the research of eleven
studies and showed that sodium does not dramatically alter blood pressure.
Details of these
studies (see
Study links processed table salt to autoimmune disease, Shaking Out Clues to Autoimmune Disease (National Institutes of Health), and [Refined] Salt Linked to Autoimmune Diseases), are
discussed in detail
in the
post, WHOLE FOODS & SALT: HOW MUCH, AUTOIMMUNITY, & IODINE?
-LSB-...] up with my last
post about how your diet is directly related to mental health as well as autoimmune disorders there was a very interesting
study that was
discussed in the -LSB-...]
Both strains and brands have
studies behind them for various health conditions which I'll try to
discuss in this thread of
posts (but not
in this
post today).
The links between these toxic foods and obesity are
discussed in our book and
in several blog
posts (see Why We Get Fat: Food Toxins, Jan 20, 2011, and Wheat and Obesity: More from the China
Study, Sep 4, 2010).
I'm not sure if this is what you're looking for, but with each video
posted on this website, there is a «Sources Cited» button with links to the
studies that support the findings
discussed in each video.
Which brings us to a rat
study [2]
discussed by CarbSane
in her
post «Ketogenic Diet increases Fat Mass and Fat: Total Body Mass Ratio».
I wanted to leave a comment on the Canadian doctor's site saying all that, and sticking up for the very valid possibility that some women don't do well with fasting, so it should be properly
studied and
discussed with an open mind, but I'm not feeling very concise tonight, and I am not sure if Stefani has
posted any updated information on this topic since 2012, etc., so
in the end I haven't written anything there.
In a recent blog
post, Associate Professor Hunter Gehlbach
discussed his findings from his latest research
study, «Creating birds of similar feathers: Leveraging similarity to improve teacher - student relationships and academic achievement.»
This was not
discussed in the
study or the subsequent blog
post.
Last week, Mike Petrilli, President of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, published a series of blog
posts at the Education Gadfly and Education Next critiquing an AEI
study by Dr. Collin Hitt, Dr. Michael McShane, and myself
discussing the surprising disconnect between the achievement and attainment effects from school choice programs
in the US.
Fifth Graders Soar
in the Blogosphere Across the curriculum, Gillian Ryan asks her fifth graders to respond
in writing to the topics they
discuss — whether
in math, science, social
studies, or language arts — and their ideas become
posts to classroom blogs.
The one I'll
discuss here is this blog
post by Matthew Yglesias,
in which he draws broad conclusions about the functioning of education markets from a recent
study of a tiny school choice program
in Milwaukee as well as from some older unspecified research [for the latter, Yglesias linked here, but the body of that page doesn't
discuss school choice].
The first case
study looks at KIPP LA Prep,
discussed in yesterday's
post as one of the best charter schools
in Los Angeles, against it's neighborhood middle school, Hollenbeck.
The Humane Education
Study will be
discussed in a future
post.
There are incredibly talented, accomplished travel bloggers of color who would have added tremendously to this conversation, and who would have have brought many of the challenges I have
discussed in my own
posts about
study and volunteerism volunteerism for people outside «the norm».
Unfortunately, as several recent papers have shown (and I
discuss in my
post), if we are really shooting for 2C then we need to do more than 50 % globally — more like 70 % according to the NatureReports
study.
In the posts, Stephen McIntyre questions sets of tree - ring data used in, or excluded from, prominent studies concluding that recent warming is unusual even when compared with past warm periods in the last several millenniums (including the recent Kaufman et al. paper discussed here
In the
posts, Stephen McIntyre questions sets of tree - ring data used
in, or excluded from, prominent studies concluding that recent warming is unusual even when compared with past warm periods in the last several millenniums (including the recent Kaufman et al. paper discussed here
in, or excluded from, prominent
studies concluding that recent warming is unusual even when compared with past warm periods
in the last several millenniums (including the recent Kaufman et al. paper discussed here
in the last several millenniums (including the recent Kaufman et al. paper
discussed here).
In fact, they may do so more efficiently than more uniform temperature change; warming one hemisphere with respect to the other is an excellent way of pulling monsoonal circulations and oceanic ITCZs towards the warm hemisphere (the last few years have seen numerous studies of this response, relevant for ice ages and aerosol forcing as well as the response to high latitude internal variability; Chiang and Bitz, 2005 is one of the first to discuss this, in the ice age context; I'll try to return to this topic in a future post
In fact, they may do so more efficiently than more uniform temperature change; warming one hemisphere with respect to the other is an excellent way of pulling monsoonal circulations and oceanic ITCZs towards the warm hemisphere (the last few years have seen numerous
studies of this response, relevant for ice ages and aerosol forcing as well as the response to high latitude internal variability; Chiang and Bitz, 2005 is one of the first to
discuss this,
in the ice age context; I'll try to return to this topic in a future post
in the ice age context; I'll try to return to this topic
in a future post
in a future
post.)
Personally I think that recent research (including several
studies discussed in the above
post, published after the IPCC AR5 cutoff date) make a strong case that internal variability (ocean cycles) are responsible for more of the slowdown
in surface warming than changes
in external forcings, but there's not a consensus about that yet.
As
discussed in last week's
post, Laurens M. Bouwer of the Institute for Environmental Research
in the Netherlands analyzed 22 previous
studies attempting to find an anthropogenic warming «signal»
in normalized weather - related loss data.
In the post Alarmism Cranked Up to Absurd Level, we discussed the misleading media reports about the temporary February 2016 El Niño - related uptick in monthly global surface temperature data from the Goddard Institute of Space Studie
In the
post Alarmism Cranked Up to Absurd Level, we
discussed the misleading media reports about the temporary February 2016 El Niño - related uptick
in monthly global surface temperature data from the Goddard Institute of Space Studie
in monthly global surface temperature data from the Goddard Institute of Space
Studies.
I've
discussed one aquaplanet
study of TCs using a slab ocean, Merlis et al 2013,
in post # 42.
Roger A. Pielke Jr., a professor of environmental
studies at the University of Colorado and the author of «The Honest Broker: Making Sense of Science
in Policy and Politics,»
discussed Dr. Holdren's conflation of science and politics
in a
post on the Prometheus blog:
If the HS is wrong, as granted for the sake of the discussion, it may affect other
studies - a point which we insufficiently
discussed in our head
posts.
A
post here last week,
Study Debunks Med - Mal Crisis, discussed a new study conducted by researchers at Suffolk University Law School in Boston and published in the journal Health Affairs that questioned claims of a medical - malpractice premium crisis in Massachus
Study Debunks Med - Mal Crisis,
discussed a new
study conducted by researchers at Suffolk University Law School in Boston and published in the journal Health Affairs that questioned claims of a medical - malpractice premium crisis in Massachus
study conducted by researchers at Suffolk University Law School
in Boston and published
in the journal Health Affairs that questioned claims of a medical - malpractice premium crisis
in Massachusetts.
Harlan Yu at Freedom to Tinker
posted yesterday that the
study has been completed, and while the results have not officially been released, he did find an interview with Bankruptcy Judge J. Rich Leonard,
in which Leonard
discusses some of the findings.
She's the perfect example of an employee who feels completely unappreciated and demoralized because of her employer's actions — just like the employees
discussed in the
study mentioned at the beginning of this
post.
There have been numerous
posts on SLAW
discussing SharePoint;
in addition, Microsoft has an industry page for law firms that provides some useful links to case
studies.
In a prior
post, I
discussed a
study that analyzed distractions due solely to cell phones.
The authors of The Behavior of Federal Judges A Theoretical and Empirical
Study of Rational Choice,
discussed in the last
post, looked at the important question of the behavior of federal district judges when they sentence people.
This
post discusses some of the proposed changes, such as the elimination of Public Service Loan Forgiveness and a 50 percent reduction
in funding for the federal work -
study program.
In a recent
posting on our site we
discussed a Texas A&M Transportation Institute
study that showed that hands free technology may not be the safer alternative that it is made out to be when behind the wheel (Read
post here).
One of the ways
in which we do this is by
posting case
studies to our website and social media, where employees
discuss their career journeys at Hays.