Not exact matches
Some small
studies have
suggested that synbiotics could provide benefits to a range of
other conditions influenced
by the gut microbiome as well, including obesity, diabetes, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, but larger - scale clinical trials focusing on each of those conditions are needed.
Other studies by Kross
suggest that, when people use their first names, they're more likely to see stressful situations (like public speaking) as challenging, rather than threatening.
• A September
study by FierceWireless and P3 found that T - Mobile users consumed more mobile data and spent more time on mobile connections than users of any
other carrier,
suggesting that Binge On may have had an effect.
But the
study also
suggested that some antidepressants were more effective than
others; several older antidepressants were found to be more effectivee than more modern ones, but the modern treatments (such as Prozac) were better tolerated
by patients.
It's topics like this that a lot of thorough
study of original context of the original documents are required, because there are lots of verses that
suggest faith alone is required for salvation and
others that
suggest that faith plus consistent good behavior are required and the bible can't contradict itself if it's inspired
by God.
In a
study of his earlier pictures, Kolker notes that «Scorsese is interested in the psychological manifestations of individuals who are representative either of a class or of a certain ideological grouping; he is concerned with their relationship to each
other or to an antagonistic environment... [and finally] there is no triumph for his characters» (A Cinema of Loneliness [Oxford University Press, 19881, p. 162) The Jesus of the Last Temptation fits this pattern (as do Travis Bickel in Taxi Driver, Jake LaMotta in Raging Bull and Paul Hackett in After Hours)
By eschewing any reference to a resurrection — and, in an interesting theological note, allowing Paul to suggest that his preaching of the risen Christ is more important than the Jesus of history — Scorsese presents the crucifixion as the final willful act of a man driven by a God who makes strange demands on his follower
By eschewing any reference to a resurrection — and, in an interesting theological note, allowing Paul to
suggest that his preaching of the risen Christ is more important than the Jesus of history — Scorsese presents the crucifixion as the final willful act of a man driven
by a God who makes strange demands on his follower
by a God who makes strange demands on his followers.
So we modified our characterization of a theological school: It is, I
suggested, a community of persons trying to understand God more truly
by way of
studying some
other thing or things whose
study is supposed to enhance our understanding of God.
«Interestingly, [our]
study did not find significant clustering of muscle - enhancing behaviors within schools,» said Eisenberg, which
suggests that, «rather than being driven
by a particular sports team coach or
other features of a school social landscape, muscle - enhancing behaviors are widespread and influenced
by factors beyond school, likely encompassing social and cultural variables such as media messages and social norms of behavior more broadly.»
Besides the 2013 University of Washington
study, a number of
other recent
studies have found education ineffective in improving self - reporting
by athletes, adding to a growing body of evidence challenging the conventional wisdom that inadequate athlete concussion knowledge is the principal barrier to increased reporting, and
suggesting that one of the best ways to combat underreporting
by athletes of concussion symptoms may be to shift the focus of educational efforts towards helping coaches facilitate concussion reporting, the theory being that athletes will be more likely to report concussion symptoms if they no longer think that they will be punished
by the coach for reporting, such as
by losing playing time or their starting position, perceived
by their teammates as letting them down, or viewed
by their coach as «weak,» all of which have been documented in numerous
studies over the past decade as reasons athletes are reluctant to report concussion symptoms.
Some of the same
studies suggest that athletes may be more likely to self - report if they feel safe in self - reporting, in
other words, when they don't fear adverse repercussions if they report in terms of decreased playing time, losing their starting positions, or being embarrassed
by the coach in front of their teammates for their lack of toughness, such as, for example,
by being labeled a «wimp» (or worse).
By Andrew M. Seaman NEW YORK (Reuters Health)- Factors
other than medical history and risk may influence women with cancer in one breast to have both breasts removed even if it doesn't improve their odds of survival,
suggests a new
study.
There are no
studies that show a statistically significant increase in the likelihood of CTE simply from playing football or
other contact or collision sport, and none, as far as I know, are even in the research pipeline, but those who say it is too early to connect the dots, well, their voices are being drowned out
by those who
suggest exactly that.
Although each of the teams using the PEP exercise program had a dedicated athletic training staff, the success reported in the earlier
study in reducing ACL injuries among 14 - to 18 - year - old competitive female club soccer players - who ordinarily do not benefit from direct oversight from certified athletic trainers (ATCs) or physical therapists -
suggest that the program may benefit
other age groups and levels of play where direct oversight
by medical professionals is far less common.
Now another group of
studies, led
by Notre Dame psychology professor Darcia Narvaez, confirms earlier work
suggesting that children who get more positive touch and affection during infancy turn out to be kinder, more intelligent and to care more about
others.
Other studies suggest the opposite, though they are much smaller than the ones
by the Mindell group.
Numerous
studies have
suggested a common link in addiction
by showing that people addicted to one substance are more likely to be addicted to
others.
The occasional merger of neutron stars literally shakes the universe
by sending out gravitational waves (illustrated above), but these events may also be the main source of gold and
other heavy elements in the Milky Way, a new
study suggests.
The
study found a relationship between the size of the central object and the speed of the flickering produced
by the disc,
suggesting the physics of the accretion must be very similar around these different astronomical objects despite them being completely different in
other ways, such as size, age, temperature and gravity.
The
studies suggested that most infections resulting from animal bites are «polymicrobial,» caused
by several different bacteria or
other germs.
«In our Northern California
study population, it does not appear that families use complementary and alternative treatments due to the lack of availability of conventional services, as has been
suggested by other research,» Hansen said.
But a recent
study in PNAS
suggested that wind (and
other renewables) will fall short of slashing carbon emissions, because there just isn't enough of it in the U.S. Based on data from a company owned
by one of the
study's authors, this map's white areas show where wind turbines would be most effective — but because wind isn't available all the time, they'd only produce roughly 50 percent of the energy wind turbines could at maximum capacity.
In addition, while our data
suggest that sleep loss impairs working memory in a sex - dependent manner, this does not mean that the sex - differences we observed can be generalised to
other mental or physical measures of how we are affected
by sleep loss,» says Frida Rångtell, PhD student at the Department of Neuroscience and lead author of the
study.
The consortium's call to action is based on IEA's analysis of
studies by engineers at Aston University in Birmingham, England, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and
other organizations, and
suggests that
by 2050 two gigatons of CO2, six billion barrels of oil and $ 600 billion in fuel costs could be saved without radical reengineering, or half of what is consumed and emitted
by cars in the European Union today.
Frank Gilliland, an environmental epidemiologist at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, became intrigued when laboratory
studies suggested that certain pollutants in the environment might function as «obesogens,» contributing to weight gain
by mimicking or disrupting the action of hormones, or having
other effects.
«While these findings need to be confirmed
by other studies, they
suggest that higher testosterone levels in men may offer protection from sudden cardiac arrest and lower levels of estrogen may protect both men and women.»
«Our findings are consistent with
studies of non-human primates which
suggest that vocalizations that are specific to a species are treated preferentially
by the neural system over
other sounds.»
Another alternative has been
suggested by glaciologist Slawek Tulaczyk of the University of California, Santa Cruz, who
studies west Antarctica's Whillans Ice Sheet, among
other glaciers.
Studies by Charles Grob, a psychiatrist at the Harbor - UCLA Medical Center, and
others suggest that ingesting ayahuasca has no adverse neurocognitive effects.
After a concussion, a person can be left with disturbed sleep, memory deficits and
other cognitive problems for years, but a new
study led
by Rebecca Spencer at the University of Massachusetts Amherst
suggests that despite these abnormalities, sleep still helps them to overcome memory deficits, and the benefit is Frontier in Human Neurosciequivalent to that seen in individuals without a history of mild traumatic brain injury (TBI), also known as concussion.
Studies by glaciologist Eric Rignot of the University of California, Irvine and
others suggest that ice sheets could melt faster than scientists initially thought.
A new
study supported
by the Milstein Medical Research Program at The Rockefeller University, however, has uncovered the molecular roots of skin discoloration that is often associated with psoriasis,
suggesting the possibility of new treatments for pigmentation changes seen not only in psoriasis, but also in
other conditions such as eczema and acne.
Now, two
studies, one led
by Fejzo,
suggest that an excess of a blood - borne protein, growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15), is a cause of HG, and perhaps
other cases of nausea and vomiting in pregnancy.
Risk of heart disease and diabetes may be lowered
by a diet higher in a lipid found in grapeseed and
other oils, but not in olive oil, a new
study suggests.
In
other studies, obesity has been associated with a decreased risk of early death; however, follow - up
studies suggest that this «obesity paradox» may be explained
by unintentional weight loss in the few years preceding death, rather than a truly protective effect of obesity.
Among
other tweaks, Novitch's team added a dash of a molecule dubbed LIF, which recent
studies by others had
suggested can spur the oRGs to multiply.
But immigrants from Latin America are less likely to have those requests granted than are immigrants from
other regions, according to a new
study conducted
by scholars at MIT and Brown University — a
study that also
suggests a potential remedy for this problem,
by finding that this regional disparity does not exist when officials examine cases in greater detail.
The three
studies and unpublished estimates
by other groups
suggest that during the quake, the descending ocean plate and the overlying plate carrying Japan slipped past each
other by as much as 50 to 60 meters.
Using just scraps of wood and hot embers, our evolutionary cousins figured out how to make tar, a revolutionary adhesive that they used to make formidable spears, chopping tools and
other implements
by attaching sharp - edged stones to handles, a new
study suggests.
However,
other studies suggest there were originally around 70 amphibian species in this area, of which 50 were hit
by chytrid.
Although this
study is limited
by the lack of data on the effects of clinical interventions and neonatal resuscitation efforts that may have been performed at the time of birth, these findings
suggest that early detection of perinatal asphyxia is particularly relevant among infants of overweight and obese women although more
studies are necessary to confirm these results in
other populations.
New
studies — prompted
by a renewed interest in potential applications of psychedelic drugs for understanding the brain or even treating some psychiatric diseases —
suggest that far - reaching changes in brain connectivity contribute to the altered states of consciousness and
other effects of an acid trip.
The possible beneficial health effects of tea consumption have been
suggested and supported
by some
studies, but
others have not found beneficial effects.
«Although this was a small, preliminary
study, it
suggests that marijuana may affect individuals at high risk for psychosis differently than
other marijuana users,
by briefly inducing psychotic - like experiences and impairing their cognition,» said Nehal Vadhan, PhD, a psychologist and associate professor in Psychiatry and Molecular Medicine at Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine and first author of the paper.
One such possibility is
suggested by first author of the
study Laura D. Lewis, Ph.D. «This technique now gives us a method for obtaining much more detailed information about the complex brain activity that takes place during sleep, as well as
other dynamic switches in brain states, such as when under anesthesia and during hallucinations.»
Studies by Bausch and
others have also detected live Ebola virus in sexual fluids that can successfully grow in cell culture,
suggesting it could also lead to infections in
other individuals.
This has been supported
by some experimental
studies, whereas
others suggest a lack of benefit.
But a new
study by University of Virginia researchers challenges this idea and
suggests that axons coordinate each
other's destruction, thereby contributing to the degeneration that makes neurological diseases so devastating and permanent.
Our
study suggests that these images could be overlooked
by people who are engaged in
other activities such as using their phones, reading the newspaper, or forwarding their TV recordings to resume the program they were watching.
But a 2001
study led
by atmospheric scientist Mark Jacobson of Stanford University in California
suggested that if soot is coated with
other pollutants, such as sulfuric acid, its effect could be drastically greater.
The BUSM researchers believe the data from this
study and those reported
by others in animal models as well in clinical
studies strongly
suggest that Avodart may have serious adverse side effects that were not obvious several years ago.