A new NASA
study published just yesterday confirms long - held warnings about rising oceans from IPCC and other climate change watch dog bodies.
Kisspeptin, in
a study published just a year later, has also been linked to obesity and metabolic disorders.
A study published just last year found that women who eat a lot of foods high in blood sugar - spiking carbohydrates, such as white bread and rice, double their risk of heart disease.
That result contrasts sharply with a controversial
study published just over a year ago in Science that suggested that a mixture of prairie grasses farmed with little fertilizer or other inputs would produce a higher net energy yield than ethanol produced from corn (Science, 8 December 2006, p. 1598).
One particular
study published just a few years ago decided to delve into how well - adjusted children who came into families via methods other than traditional conception are.
There have been numerous well - designed
studies published just in the last several years which confirmed exactly what we suspected (and much of what Super-Size-Me suggested)
Focusing on
studies published just over the last year in peer - reviewed scientific medical journals, Dr. Greger offers practical advice on how best to feed ourselves and our families to prevent, treat, and even reverse many of the top 15 killers in the United States.
Not exact matches
Earlier this year, for example, Judy Zaichkowsky of Simon Fraser University's Beedie School of Business
published a
study indicating that the presence of
just one woman on a company's board resulted in significantly higher standards of corporate governance (which has an established correlation to better financial performance).
Michael Dillon, a Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory researcher, crunched the numbers and helped figure out
just that in a 2014
study published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical and Physical Sciences.
«The average medical debt in Massachusetts in 2013 was relatively low at
just $ 3,041 (6 percent of total unsecured debt) compared to $ 8,594 (20 percent of total unsecured debt) nationwide,» Austin writes in his 2014
study, portions of which were
published in the Maine Law Review.
Just before the holiday season, Stone Temple Consulting's Eric Enge (whom I know from the digital - marketing - conference speaking circuit)
published a mammoth blog post, «Twitter Engagement Unmasked: A
Study of More than 4M Tweets.»
The
study,
just published in Science, showed that the creation of what the researchers are calling microtumors can help predict drug effectiveness in cancer patients better than the current standard method of testing the drugs on rodents.
Scientists behind a recent
study published in the journal Neurology analyzed 101 late - middle - aged adults (the average age was
just under 63), and collected spinal fluid samples from each participant.
It turns out that this
study by IBM and Digiday is
just one of many recently
published and illustrating
just how disconnected companies have become between what they believe they are doing to attract and retain their customers and how their customers actually feel about them.
A
study published in the Journal of Social Psychology in 2013 found
just that.
In a
study published in the journal Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, researchers found that people were much better at processing information about people they had
just met if they had large social groups.
If you're getting a business off the ground, you may think that pulling all - nighters or always being on call will inspire confidence in your employees, but that lack of sleep really
just makes you less of a charismatic leader, according to a recent
study published in the Journal of Applied Psychology.
Perhaps most convincing of all, a meta - analysis of 99 data sets from 95
studies conducted between 1962 - 2011
published in the Journal of Applied Psychology, similarly found that female leaders were rated by their reports, peers and managers as being
just as or even more effective than male leaders.
A few years ago the publishers of the Myer - Briggs Assessment
published a
study on workplace conflict that attempted to quantify
just how expensive conflict can be.
A colleague of mine, Stephen Zarlenga, has
just published a historical
study, The Lost Science of Money (2002), showing that public - sector fiat money has a much better record than privately created fiat money.
It is rare for a report to hold the potential to change the world, but one
study published last month may do
just that.
In a
study just published in the Financial Analysts Journal, portfolio manager Antti Petajisto of LMR Partners, a London - based hedge fund, looked at approximately 1,800 ETFs between 2007 and 2014.
So says a new
study just published by EY.
Just published in the journal the most careful, rigorous, and methodologically sound
study ever conducted on this issue found numerous and significant differences between these groups — with the outcomes for children of h0m0 rated «suboptimal in almost every category
It had been my intention in recent years to
publish just such a
study, but now I am persuaded this sort of analysis can best be pursued cooperatively.
Marc Hauser, professor of evolutionary biology at Harvard University, has
just published a paper about additional
studies showing that people's moral intuitions do not vary much across different religions all around the world.
Mary Somerville, overcoming, as her daughter says, «obstacles apparently insurmountable, at a time when women were well - nigh totally debarred from education»; Charlotte Bronte, writing in secret and
publishing under a pseudonym because only so could she hope for
just criticism; Harriet Hunt, admitted to the Harvard Medical School in 1850 but forced out by the enraged students; Elizabeth Blackwell, applying to twelve medical schools before she could secure admission, and meeting with insult and contumely in her endeavor to
study and practice medicine; Mary Lyon, treated as a wild fanatic because she wanted American girls to be educated — such figures are typical in woman's struggle for intellectual opportunity.
Two and a half years later, the same social science journal that
published the original
study publishes a «re-analysis» of the very same data set (that's right, no new data collection,
just reinterpretation of the admittedly valid stuff).
[1] For a specific discussion of the anti-Suarez «24» metaphysical «theses» affirmed by the Sacred Congregation for
Studies in 1914 as «not in the category of opinions to be debated one way or another» in Church universities,
published just before Pius X's death, see the introduction to Denzinger, and The Hermeneutic of Continuity blog for August 2007.
Northern Ireland's dairy industry must aim for greater supply chain co-operation, more efficient farms and more added value products, according to a competitiveness
study just published.
A
study just published in the journal Lipids in Health and Disease looked at Malaysian women suffering from breast cancer.
A
study published by supermarket giant Tesco has found that 68 % of produce grown for the supermarket's salad bags,
just under half of baked goods and 40 % of apples are thrown away.
ALEXANDRIA, Va. - In response to a
study just published in the Journal of the American Medical Association concerning the risks associated with bisphenol A (BPA), the Glass Packaging Institute (GPI) encouraged parents to choose glass in order to lessen their children's exposure.
Fitting that Sky Sports
just published a
study of the best premier league managers of all time, and Wenger is 2nd on the list, behind Feeguson, ahead of Mourinho.
In a
study published in the journal Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, more than 70 percent of mothers report that they played outdoors every day as a child, but
just 30 percent say their children do the same.
It seems pretty clear though that 12 weeks should
just be the beginning of what's considered an acceptable amount of leave: a 2013
study published in the Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law found that women who return to work earlier than six months after giving birth are more likely to develop PPD than those who were able to spend more time at home.
Midwifery Today
just published this great response to the
study, including specifics about some of the
studies used in this faulty meta - analysis.
Have you seen the headlines the past few days about a new
study that was
just published?
just the type of parents you can dupe into second guessing themselves and buying school lunch for their kids merely by
publishing a flawed
study???
A small new
study published Friday highlights
just how damaging it can be for mothers» mental health when those breastfeeding goals and realities don't line up, finding that many women who stopped breastfeeding before six months were at greater risk of depressive symptoms in the postpartum period.
In a fascinating new
study published in the journal Obesity, researchers found that cutting sugar in children's diets for
just ten days caused marked improvements in their metabolic health - despite the fact that the sugar was replaced by other... [Continue reading]
A new
study has
just been
published, «Is Breast Truly Best?
According to a new
study published in the journal Development, those bones and joints aren't going to develop by
just sitting there.
Personally, I find it rather ironic that you're lecturing the blog author on the rigor of language, when, faced with the need to support the claims made by a documentary that has faced absolutely no real standards of intellectual rigor or merit (the kind of evidence you apparently find convincing), you have so far managed to produce a
study with a sample size too small to conclude anything, a review paper that basically summarized well known connections between vaginal and amniotic flora and poor outcomes in labor and birth before attempting to rescue what would have been
just another OB review article with a few attention grabbing sentences about long term health implications, and a review article
published in a trash journal.
The
study,
just published in the journal Pediatrics, followed more than 11 - hundred mothers with healthy newborns.
However, a new
study published recently in Science suggests that this capacity to reason logically may not
just depend on language, at least not entirely.
I don't know if MANA has
published their data yet or
just the article, so I haven't looked at it myself (obviously)-- it'll be interesting to see what the findings are on how many women of color contributed to the
study.
The
study was
just recently
published in the Lancet and is good news for women with diabetes in pregnancy who wish to exclusively breastfeed their babies.
A
study published last year in Pediatrics found that
just a quarter of U.S. maternity hospitals have banned formula bags, though that's an increase from 2007 when
just 14 % did.
Anthony Peto QC is co-Head of Blackstone Chambers and co-Author with Andrew Tyrie MP of Neither
Just nor Secure,
published by the Centre for Policy
Studies.