In a new
study published today by Queen Mary University of London (QMUL), in partnership with global law firm White & Case, 90 % of the respondents surveyed prefer international arbitration to resolve cross-border disputes, a finding which has increased significantly from QMUL's first international arbitration survey in 2006, where the figure was 73 %.
A study published today by The Fashion Law examines the social media activity of 115 of the leading IP firms in the United States.
The most striking finding of the Minority Experience
Study published today by The Minority Law Journal and reported by D.M. Osborne on Law.com is that Biglaw satisfaction among midlevel associates correlates more to gender than race.
LONDON / NEW YORK, October 22 — Rapid advances in technology, increasingly cheap renewable energy, slower economic growth and lower than expected population rise could all dampen fossil fuel demand significantly by 2040, a new
study published today by the London - based Carbon Tracker Initiative finds.
London is the only region in the country where the percentage of pupils taking language GCSES has risen over the past three years, according to
a study published today by the British Council.
A study published today by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) surveyed more than 19,000 individuals who married between 2005 — 2012 and found the following results:
In
a study published today by Royal Society Open Science, the international research team revealed that people who show evidence of autistic traits are more likely to suppress coarse (as opposed to fine) visual information when they move their eyes rapidly from one part of the world to another than those without autistic traits.
In response to «Trends in Caffeine Intake Among US Children and Adolescents,»
a study published today by The American Academy of Pediatrics, American Beverage Association consultant Dr. Richard Adamson, former director of the Division of Cancer Etiology and scientific director, National Cancer Institute, issued the following statement:
In response to «Athlete Endorsements in Food Marketing,»
a study published today by The American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Beverage Association issued the following statement:
Not exact matches
And an independent
study by iStrategy Labs
published in January said that 3.3 million fewer teens use Facebook
today than did three years ago.
In 2005, the website Christian
Today published the results of a joint
study by academics from Queen's University, Belfast and the University of Ulster, which found
The Curtin University
study, funded
by the A2 Milk Company, has been
published today in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition,
by the Nature
Publishing Group.
In a
study published today (advance online publication)
by the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, approximately 95 percent of the 158 labeled gluten - free free food products tested
by Gluten Free Watchdog tested less than 20 ppm gluten with approximately 87 percent testing below 5 ppm gluten.
Unnecessarily avoiding gluten could be harming your heart says the authors behind a new
study published online
by the British Medical Journal
today.
Supported
by the Government of Canada through Grand Challenges Canada's «Saving Brains» program, as well as Colombia's Administrative Department of Science, Technology and Innovation (COLCIENCIAS), the
study is
published today in the journal Pediatrics.
A
study published by the group
today says that Britain is among the best performing countries when it comes to the number of road deaths per head of the population.
After 14 years of intense private
study, interrupted
by long strolls along the Scottish coastline, Smith
published the book for which is he known
today, An inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of nations.
Commenting on the research
published today by the Institute for Fiscal
Studies, Christine Blower, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, the largest teachers» union, said: «The independent Institute for Fiscal
Studies has confirmed what the NUT has been saying since the Government announced its cuts programme.
A new
study by the Hansard Society
published today concludes that the public is disillusioned with politics and political parties.
Today's report, which will be followed up
by a full
study published next summer, acknowledges the role poverty, bad housing, unemployment, debt and drug and alcohol addiction play in social breakdown, but argues families are also vital.
This is the key finding from a new report
published today by the Institute of Alcohol
Studies (UK) and the Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education — FARE (Australia).
BREAST cancer screening in East Anglia has reduced deaths from the disease
by nearly half, according to a
study published in the British Journal of Cancer *
today (Tuesday).
Academics, teachers, and parents have
today condemned the exclusion of
study of the non-religious worldview of humanism from new GCSE and AS and A level criteria
published by the Government.
(New York, NY) Jan. 10, 2013 — Those students in New York City who most depend on highly effective teachers are instead the students most likely to be taught
by teachers rated «Unsatisfactory,» according to an eye - opening
study of the City's teacher rating data,
published today by StudentsFirstNY, an education advocacy organization with more than 150,000 members across New York State.
A
study led
by Cincinnati Children's,
published today in Nature Genetics, adds seven diseases to that list.
But
by age 6 to 7, they're 20 % — 30 % less likely to assume this brilliant individual is a woman, according to a
study published today in Science.
The
study, led
by Dr Len Stephens and Dr Phill Hawkins and
published today in the journal Molecular Cell, reveals why loss of the PTEN gene has such an impact on many people with prostate cancer, as well as in some breast cancers.
Kopp is also a co-author of another
study, led
by Tufts University researcher Klaus Bittermann and
published today in Environmental Research Letters, assessing the sea - level rise benefits of achieving the Paris Agreement's more ambitious 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) temperature target rather than its headline 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) target.
Cancer treatment guidelines produced
by the US National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) are often based on low quality evidence or no evidence at all, finds a
study published by The BMJ
today.
In the
study,
published online
today by Science Translational Medicine, researchers removed breast tumors from mice and placed biodegradable gels containing an immune - stimulating drug in the resulting empty space.
Governments could substantially reduce the tragic death toll of infants and mothers
by making postnatal care services more accessible — especially to impoverished and poorly educated women in rural areas, according to a
study published in the Bulletin of the World Health Organization
today.
One
study that predicted shortages, written
by Richard Atkinson and
published in Science in 1990, has been repudiated, and is often passed around
by postdocs to demonstrate this phenomenon of false prediction — and, some argue, the cynicism of those who continue to call for expansion despite evidence that
today's scientists are widely underemployed.
Modern diesel cars emit less pollution generally than cars that run on gasoline, says a new six - nation
study published today in Scientific Reports whose groundwork was laid in part
by an American chemist now working at Université de Montréal.
The
study,
published today in Nature, was supported
by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), a component of the National Institutes of Health, and other organizations.
In a related
study also
published today in PNAS, immunologists led
by Gurumoorthy Krishnamoorthy and Hartmut Wekerle of the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology in Martinsried, Germany, examined the gut microbiomes of 34 sets of identical twins, aged 21 to 63, in which only one twin had MS.. They found that Akkermansia was slightly but significantly more abundant in MS patients than in their healthy twins.
In a first - of - its - kind -
study led
by Suskind,
published today in the Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology, diet alone was shown to bring pediatric patients with active Crohn's and UC into clinical remission.
Essentially, drought years could become the norm for the Amazon
by 2050 if deforestation rates rebound, said Dominick Spracklen, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Leeds School of Earth and Environment, United Kingdom, and lead author of the new
study published today in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.
A
study by a team of archaeologists based at the University of Copenhagen
published today in the Royal Society journal Open Science documents that the region now known as the Black Desert in eastern Jordan could sustain a population of wild sheep.
Today, more than 12,000 of the 9/11 rescue workers continue to have trouble breathing, according to a
study conducted
by the World Trade Center Medical Monitoring Program and
published April 8, 2010, in the New England Journal of Medicine.
AUSTIN — Millions of birds slam into buildings, wind turbines, and other structures every year — a problem that could be lessened
by erecting «acoustic lighthouses» to warn them of their impending doom, according to a
study presented here
today at the annual meeting of AAAS, which
publishes Science.
LONDON, U.K. — Although «gray goo» made of self - replicating nanostuff is unlikely to doom the planet, some kinds of nanomaterials may indeed be hazardous and require a closer look, according to a 12 - month
study on nanotechnology
published today by the U.K. Royal Society and the Royal Academy of Engineering.
That is the finding of a new
study by researchers at the University of Oklahoma and Oklahoma State University,
published today in the journal Environmental Research Letters.
The Lililwan
study,
published today in the Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health, was initiated
by Aboriginal community leaders who, in 2009, invited researchers and clinicians to partner with them to provide data they could use to advocate for people living with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome.
Surprisingly, however, they lose immune cells and develop AIDS just as quickly, according to a new
study by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID),
published in
todays New England Journal of Medicine.
A team led
by Latha Venkataraman, professor of applied physics and chemistry at Columbia Engineering and Xavier Roy, assistant professor of chemistry (Arts & Sciences),
published a
study today in Nature Nanotechnology that is the first to reproducibly demonstrate current blockade — the ability to switch a device from the insulating to the conducting state where charge is added and removed one electron at a time — using atomically precise molecular clusters at room temperature.
The Kirigami
study was
published today (Sept. 8)
by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
The
study,
published today in PNAS and led
by scientists at Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre (BiK - F), the University of Vienna and UCL, analysed a global database of 45,984 records detailing the first invasions of 16,019 established alien species from 1500 until 2005 to investigate the dynamics of how alien species spread worldwide.
In a
study published in PLOS ONE
today, a team of researchers led
by the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine show for the first time that female mosquitoes infected with malaria parasites are significantly more attracted to human odour than uninfected mosquitoes.
Being a short man or an overweight woman is associated with lower chances in life in areas such as education, occupation, and income, concludes a
study published by The BMJ
today.
The
study,
published today in the journal Scientific Reports and led
by researchers at the American Museum of Natural History, finds that the inner ear of modern cheetahs is unique and likely evolved relatively recently.