Sentences with phrase «study published yesterday»

According to a study published yesterday, 35 % of owners admitted that they have only used their e-reader device once since purchasing the item while 37 % admit that their e-reader wasn't a smart buy.
In a study published yesterday in the Journal of the American Medical Association, participants who ate canned soup every day for only five days had urine levels of BPA that were 1,221 % higher than those who instead ate soup made with fresh ingredients and homemade broth.
The area now boasts large mammal populations on par with those of other protected areas in the region, according to a study published yesterday in Current Biology.
Right before this shift, there may have been a warning sign that the planet was hitting a tipping point into a warmer state, finds a new study published yesterday in the journal Science.
Reductions in national carbon emissions could prevent more than 3,000 premature deaths per year by cleaning up the air across the nation, finds a new study published yesterday in Nature Climate Change.
For a study published yesterday in Nature Human Behavior, Atran, director of research at Artis International, a research institute based in Scottsdale, Arizona, and his research team personally talked with extremists in the field, whom they'd reached through local leaders.
Now, researchers have found that the same cells fire when rats run on a treadmill in patterns that apparently reflect how far and how long the rat has run, according to a study published yesterday in Cell.
A combination approach In a study published yesterday in the journal Applied Physics Letters, the researchers presented a device that combines the two materials but functions as a single, monolithic cell.
The seven - day rainfall total from Harvey was as much as 40 percent higher than rainfall from a similar storm would have been decades ago, before human activity caused atmospheric carbon dioxide levels to spike, according to a study published yesterday in Geophysical Research Letters.
«People will adapt their behavior until they are comfortable» In a study published yesterday in the journal Nature Climate Change, Kingma presented a model that could better define a thermal sweet spot for homes and offices.
A study published yesterday in Current Biology suggests ocean acidification is driving a cascading set of behavioral and environmental changes that drains oceans» biodiversity.
They found that insects other than bees performed 25 % to 50 % of total flower visits, though they transferred less pollen per visit than bees, according to a study published yesterday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
A study published yesterday in Nature Communications suggests that there's been a 54 percent increase in the number of annual «marine heatwave days» since the 1920s — that is, the total number of days each year that a marine heat wave is occurring somewhere around the world.
It turns out that people who are the furthest apart in their views on a scientific issue are often the most educated and informed, according to a study published yesterday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The oceans near Antarctica that absorb carbon and protect our planet from climate change have been working robustly in the past decade, finds a new study published yesterday in Science.
The study published yesterday in Nature Ecology and Evolution analyzed data on more than 11,000 vertebrate species, including fossil records from the past 270 million years.
A study published yesterday in Nature Climate Change showed that early exposure to high levels of CO2 during the larval stage of development had significant negative effects on the fish's size, metabolism and ability to sense threats in their environment.
A study published yesterday in the journal Pediatrics suggests that later introduction of gluten and breastfeeding beyond 12 months both increase the risk of a child developing celiac disease.
An Australian study published yesterday has found that early puberty is associated with poorer mental health.
But a new study published yesterday in the Annals of Internal Medicine (which, unfortunately, is available only to Annals subscribers), sheds new light on the issue and sounds a loud, clanging alarm bell about the lasting health risks of prolonged sitting.
Too late, say the researchers behind a pair of studies published yesterday in Nature Climate Change.

Not exact matches

So suggests a new study, which was published yesterday in Heart.
But he, too, acknowledges that the evidence is both thin and anecdotal — or at least it was until the study he and his colleagues published yesterday.
Yesterday, I posted the link to an article written by Melissa Bartick (a co-author of the study published in Pediatrics) called «Peaceful Revolution: Motherhood and the $ 13 Billion Guilt» on both my personal Facebook page as well as the SortaCrunchy Facebook page.
The latest study on probiotics was published yesterday (1st April 2014), but sadly it wasn't an April Fools joke.
Yesterday, New York City's Public Advocate, Bill de Blasio, published the results of a citywide study on the state of New York's Freedom of Information Law in the form of a series of report cards.
Published yesterday, the long - awaited study called for US troops to switch from a combat role to that of trainers of Iraqi forces by early 2008.
In an accompanying article published yesterday in Nature Energy, Alice Grønhøj, who researches consumption and the environment at Aarhus University in Denmark, praised the study for its «methodologically robust design» that «attests to the credibility of the central findings.»
In a paper published in Marine Policy yesterday, Tom Polacheck, a senior researcher at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), the Australian national research agency in Hobart, presents a case study of how a paper from CSIRO submitted to a subgroup of the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission had to be pulled owing to political concerns.
Ocean researchers from Kiel and Finland come to this conclusion in a current study, which will be published online yesterday (September 8th) in the journal Global Change Biology.
As BBC reports, the study was published yesterday in Acta Neuropathologica.
«Mating with multiple partners improves the chances that at least one chick will have the genes to cope with the variable conditions to come,» explained Carlos Botero, an evolutionary ecologist and the lead researcher of the study, published yesterday in the journal PLoS ONE.
A new letter, published yesterday in The New England Journal of Medicine, brings together data from the five - year Conflict of Interest Notification Study backed by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, along with broader reports on conflict of interest in medicine released by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) and the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) to examine the practical goals and challenges of presenting this information to possible trial participants.
The study, published yesterday in the journal Nature Geoscience, has the potential to improve forecasts of such extreme events.
The study, published yesterday in Nature Neuroscience, suggests that dreaming in fact occurs in up to 71 % of non-REM sleep.
The work is a synthesis of data from 10 studies conducted by the ACT Consortium in five sub-Saharan countries and Afghanistan between 2007 and 2013, covering 562,368 individual patient visits — an «extraordinary» number, says Patricia Walker, president of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene in Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois, which published the paper online yesterday.
William Schlesinger, a biogeochemist and former president of the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, was among the latest to weigh in with commentary published in Science yesterday.
In their new study, published yesterday in eLife, Hansen's team went beyond the standard approach of counting APs under steady - state conditions.
This is the third year for the «attribution» studies, which were published yesterday in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society.
Blistering heat waves recorded around the globe in 2013 were linked to human - caused global warming, according to a broad survey of studies on extreme weather events published yesterday.
Yesterday, French Prime Minister Jean - Marc Ayrault announced that the High Council for Biotechnology (HCB) and the Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health & Safety have been asked to look into the study, headed by Gilles - Eric Séralini of the University of Caen and published by Food and Chemical Toxicology this week.
In the new study, published yesterday in PLOS Biology, Heitman and colleagues set out to explore whether genetically identical, unisexually reproducing C. neoformans cells were using aneuploidy to generate offspring that differed from themselves.
The research, published yesterday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is the first study to find the signal of climate change in global precipitation shifts across land and ocean.
A new, 15 - year - long study, published online yesterday in PLoS Medicine, followed 6,441 men and women — both with and without the condition — in the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute's large Sleep Heart Health Study to see if there was any correlation between apnea and a higher risk of dstudy, published online yesterday in PLoS Medicine, followed 6,441 men and women — both with and without the condition — in the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute's large Sleep Heart Health Study to see if there was any correlation between apnea and a higher risk of dStudy to see if there was any correlation between apnea and a higher risk of death.
Through recent work by the same team at UCL, this issue was resolved by creating a new tree of life for placental mammals, including these early forms, which was described in a study published in Biological Reviews yesterday.
The work, published yesterday in Science, finds evidence that Earth's climate is more sensitive to the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere than some earlier studies had suggested.
In the study, published yesterday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, women and men acted out a scene in which they played the part of a boss firing an employee.
His study, co-authored with British Antarctic Survey colleagues David Barnes and Huw Griffiths, was published online yesterday by the journal PLoS One.
Published yesterday in the online version of the journal Nature Climate Change, the study depicts how such a shift could put new strains on U.S. infrastructure, as rails and trains replace riverboats as the primary mode of agricultural transportation.
A new study published in Nature yesterday that used the photographs found that the Greenland ice sheet lost about 9,000 gigatons of ice between 1900 and 2010 and that the rate has accelerated in recent years.
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