Not exact matches
Then, a few weeks ago, author and academic Sherry Turkle penned a New York
Times Sunday Review piece highlighting research along the same lines, including one
study that showed simply having your phone out and in view can impede the process of making
deep personal connections.
We're providing 6 - 10 stipends and mentorship to individuals from underrepresented groups to
study deep learning full -
time for 3 months and open - source a project.
All you
deep thinkers who can not believe in a creator have not spent enough
time studying the creations around you.
This could be one of the reasons for why pastors have
deep personal friendships — the spirituality of Protestant ecclesiology largely sees personal / dyadic friendships as preferrential — and for years upon years, spirituality focused on sermons, quiet
times, Bible
studies, etc. in the church.
But as I've prayed and
studied Jesus and talked with Dan and spent some
time alone, I've realized that I cry, not out of conviction that the Calvinists are wrong, but out of the
deep, paralyzing fear that they might be right.
In the afternoons I am usually out visiting with folks, for I have found that most of the good,
deep - down work of cultivating disciples happens where they live and work and spend their
time, and much less often in my
study and in the crisis
times.
Although these essays were written over a span of
time and for different audiences, they are held together by K.Cs
deep and passionate concern for justice, peace and the integrity of creation, This is a book that should be read and
studied by churches, grassroots people, policy makers, theologians and others who are seeking to create a world that is safe for all.
Hence it came about (to cite here an example which has at the same
time a
deeper relation to the whole
study) that the pagans judged self - slaughter so lightly, yea, even praised it, notwithstanding that for the spirit it is the most decisive sin, that to break out of existence in this way is rebellion against God.
Even after fifty years of
studying and sharing I still get thrilled as I see the
deep treasures of meaning about Galatians or Romans uncovered for the
time to me, and then I have the privilege of writing them down to thrill countless others who will read them in the near future.
If you take a little
time and dig a little
deeper into the story, using a concordance to look up the words (all the words) and
studying what is known of the culture of the place and
time, one would find that John is closer to the truth than you would imagine.
Although I had been in the church since I was 16 years old and read and
studied the Bible ever since; even though I had gone to bible college and seminary and university to get my several degrees; even though I have been preaching and teaching in the church for all this
time, I felt
deep down that something was missing.
When a teenager is not in school, there is far more
time for
deeper study or relevant experience than is possible for students at school or sixth - form college.
Led by Dr Sakari Lemola from Warwick's Department of Psychology and Natalie Urfer - Maurer from the University of Basel, the
study reported in Sleep Medicine shows that children of mothers with insomnia symptoms fall asleep later, get less sleep, and spend less
time in
deep sleep.
The cool spot was «surprisingly shallow,» just 5000 kilometers
deep, he adds, but the system's hot roots may extend 30
times deeper — beyond the reach of current
studies.
Our
study also covered a longer
time period, and included more in - situ observations of
deep - sea debris than any previous
study I'm aware of.»
The
study shows that the carbon cycle extends
deep into mantle, possibly all the way down to the core - mantle boundary, with billion year storage
times.
The experiment also serves as a test bed for the 500 -
times - more - sensitive
Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE), which will
study the metamorphoses of neutrinos during an 800 - mile journey through the Earth.
Now, for the first
time, researchers are able to
study the sheer complexity and ruthless hunting techniques of this soft - bodied predator of the
deep.
This research shows how global
studies of our genes can give insight into how our taste for different foods may have been influenced by variation in our ability to smell, and, excitingly, show that it is possible to see back into
deep evolutionary
time and reconstruct the sensory world of our distant ancestors.
«The beauty of the
deep - learning model we use is that it considers emotions and linguistic clues over
time to predict the future,» says computer scientist Svitlana Volkova, who led the
study, which was published last December in PLOS ONE.
Ultrasound technologies make visible what remains hidden from our naked eyes: Physicians
study tissue changes in our bodies with the aid of sonography; submarines equipped use sonar systems to get their bearings in the darkness of the
deep sea; and for materials and components testing, ultrasound provides a non-destructive alternative to costly technologies that are not real -
time capable.
«Every single
time you
study a
deep - sea shark, you make a new discovery,» he says.
The group of Majed Chergui at EPFL, along with national and international colleagues, have shed light on this long - standing question by using a combination of cutting - edge experimental methods: steady - state angle - resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES), which maps the energetics of the electrons along the different axis in the solid; spectroscopic ellipsometry, which determines the optical properties of the solid with high accuracy; and ultrafast two - dimensional
deep - ultraviolet spectroscopy, used for the first
time in the
study of materials, along with state - of - the - art first - principles theoretical tools.
As a cofounder of ORCA, devoted to scientific inquiry about the health of the world's oceans, she recognizes that
time is of the essence for
studying as much of the
deep - sea ecosystem as she can right now.
Although past research already had linked increased TV
time to widening waistlines, this
study dug
deeper.
Most of all, it means that the scientists who
study human development are increasingly looking at
deep time, at events that shape the human embryo well before fertilization.
If a period of
deep quiet is recurring, it «gives us an excellent opportunity to
study that in real
time», says Matt Penn of the National Solar Observatory, who contributed to the
study led by Livingston.
The
study marks the first
time that human influence on the climate has been demonstrated in the water cycle, and outside the bounds of typical physical responses such as warming
deep ocean and sea surface temperatures or diminishing sea ice and snow cover extent.
«We have been able to show that the
deep sea is the largest long -
time archive of DNA, and a major window to
study past biodiversity,» writes Pedro Martinez Arbizu, a
deep - sea biologist of the German Centre for Marine Biodiversity Research in Wilhelmshaven and an author of the paper on South Atlantic DNA in an e-mail.
The beaked whales in the
study made their
deep dives about seven
times a day, foraging for squid and fish; they spent more
time at the surface at night.
While the methane in the Von Damm vent system they
studied was produced through chemical reactions (abiotically), it was produced on geologic
time scales
deep beneath the seafloor and independent of the venting process.
After its 2016 launch Nasa's next mission, InSight, is set to
study the planet's
deep interior for the first
time.
«For the first
time we could obtain images of the
deeper crustal structure in the region where the Walvis Ridge joins the African continent, in order to
study the impact of a mantle plume» explains Trond Ryberg from GFZ.
Moving
deeper through the core is like moving back in
time,
studying older and older communities of microorganisms.
Though the
study included only a small number of sharks monitored over varying lengths of
time, the findings may suggest that fish prey location may influence movements of their shark predators, and that group spawning events may shape ecosystem dynamics in
deeper coral reefs.
The hot rock in the newly discovered,
deeper magma reservoir would fill the 1,000 - cubic - mile Grand Canyon 11.2
times, while the previously known magma chamber would fill the Grand Canyon 2.5
times, says postdoctoral researcher Jamie Farrell, a co-author of the
study published online today in the journal Science.
McGrath, the Butler University professor who
studies religion and science fiction, said Smith's cosmology has to be understood through the prism of his
times, when astronomers, armed with ever bigger telescopes, explored
deeper into the solar system than they ever had before.
Thus, this
study adds to the growing body of evidence that, although the
deep seafloor may look flat and uniform, its animal communities often vary considerably over both space and
time.
The recent
study published in the journal PloS ONE by Susanne Shultz of Manchester University and me statistically links for the first
time the emergence of new hominin species, expanding brain capacity, and the movement out of Africa to the appearance and disappearance of
deep freshwater lakes (confirming the original work by Martin Trauth and myself).
But in a new
study in Nature, researchers show that the
deep Arctic Ocean has been churning briskly for the last 35,000 years, through the chill of the last ice age and warmth of modern
times, suggesting that at least one arm of the system of global ocean currents that move heat around the planet has behaved similarly under vastly different climates.
«Probing
deeper into the solid inner core is like tracing it back in
time, to the beginnings of its formation,» Simon Redfern from the University of Cambridge, who was not involved in the
study, told BBC, adding that if the findings of the
study are confirmed, it would imply that «something very substantial happened to flip the orientation of the core to turn the alignment of crystals in the inner core north - south as is seen today in its outer parts.»
Her
studies include morphological changes across ontogeny and over
deep time, which offer a way to investigate pattern and process in evolution, and help to generate more comprehensive hypotheses about how form and function interact.
NASA scientists say a new
study proves there are seven
times as many big and potentially dangerous comets flying through
deep space than previously thought.
Other useful properties of synchrotron light are: - high energy beams to penetrate
deeper into matter - small wavelengths permit the
studying of tiny features, e.g. bonds in molecules; nanoscale objects - synchrotron beams can be coherent and / or polarised, permitting specific experiments - the synchrotron beam can be made to flash at a very high frequency, giving the light a
time structure.
Decades of weather reports show a strong link between the polar blasts that have plunged the eastern United States in a
deep freeze several
times in the past few winters and the warming of the Arctic, where temperatures have been hitting unusual highs, a new
study reports.
I know many passionate students who are delving
deeper into Yoga on their own volition, using their free
time to read and
study about the many principles and ancient insight the practice has brought our way.
Another published in 2011 found that healthy men 65 and older with normal blood pressure were nearly twice as likely to develop hypertension during the
study if they spent less
time in the
deepest sleep stage (known as slow - wave sleep) compared with those who spent the most
time deeply asleep.
Over
time, too little
deep sleep may also take a toll on your heart by contributing to high blood pressure, a new
study suggests.
Exercise,
deep - breathing,
time - for - self and specific adaptogenic herbs (such as ashwagandha) have all been
studied and shown to reduce cortisol levels in the body.
«
Studies have shown that you can take in and give out seven
times as much air — that means seven
times as much oxygen, seven
times as much prana — in a three - part
deep breath than in a shallow breath.»