What isn't possible is a far more ancient migration — 20,000 years ago or more —
suggested by some researchers.
The idea of passing a DNA strand through a small pore and then reading out its chemical letters was first
suggested by researchers in Massachusetts and California in 1996.
It's
suggested by researchers that eating about 2 pounds of broccoli a week could reduce cancer risk by half.
As was mentioned above, due to the fact that most calculations on protein need are based solely on the amount needed to optimize muscle mass, and due to the fact that, in reality, muscle accounts for less than half of the total body protein need, much more dietary protein is needed that what has been typically
suggested by researchers and instructors in the nutritional community.
One possibility
suggested by the researchers is the Olde English Bulldogge, a 1970s attempt by an American breeder to recreate the healthier working bulldog that existed in England during the early 1800s.
Forging alliances with multinational businesses and other countries and creating domestic markets for these technologies are some of the other strategies
suggested by the researchers.
Not exact matches
Despite what the demographic numbers
suggest, the
researchers say that being surrounded
by like - minded, or similarly - looking people may decrease your chances.
A new study
by Harvard University and University of Vermont
researchers suggests that just may be the case, my colleague Aric Jenkins reports.
And some studies
suggest they're right: In a paper called «Environmental Disorder Leads to Self - Regulatory Failure,» a pair of
researchers from UBC and Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business found that «being surrounded
by chaos ultimately impairs the ability to perform tasks requiring «brain» power.»
Another 4 %, or about 14,000 tweets,
suggested a pedestrian was dangerously distracted while playing the game (Though the
researchers» example of this, «almost got hit
by a car playing Pokémon GO,» is a bit ambiguous.)
A new study
by researchers at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
suggests that bondholders still don't believe the government would ever let the firms collapse into bankruptcy — after a decade of efforts
by regulators to convince them otherwise.
An alarming finding, but critics have
suggested the results were skewed
by the
researchers» use of a synthetic vitamin E, which lacks the powerful antioxidants found in the natural kind.
He was also asked why he thinks Facebook lets its employees collaborate with external
researchers — and Kogan
suggested this is «tolerated»
by management as a strategy to keep employees stimulated.
[1] The
researcher suggests that wealth accu - mulation is shaped
by family processes.
I do not mean to
suggest that one group of brain cells mapped out
by researchers and excited
by electrodes will produce visions of God.
Researchers suggest that
by remaining unengaged with the details of an important issue, individuals feel they can maintain dependence on another party to take care of it...
While the research, published in the journal Pediatrics, was unclear about whether drinking milk directly blocked iron absorption or if its impact was less direct, the
researchers did
suggest a two - cup - a-day limit, as recommended
by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
The
researcher suggests many non-coeliac people are not satisfied
by the treatment response from doctors to their gastrointestinal symptoms, leading them to experiment with alternative diets.
[Note: a 2008 study
by researchers at the University of Florida
suggests that blowing cool, dry air under shoulder pads dramatically reduces the risk of heat illness.
The research contradicts the findings of earlier studies, including one
by researchers at Florida Tech in 2003, which
suggested that heading in soccer may result in the short term in weaker mental performance, including a decline in cognitive function, difficulty in verbal learning, planning and maintaining attention and reduced information processing speed.
What continues to be lost, in my view, in much of what the media has reported over the last six years about the results of autopsies conducted
by researchers at the Sports Legacy Institute in Boston on the brains of athletes - autopsies which show the presence of the dark splotches of tau protein which are the tell - tale sign of CTE - which is that they provide, at most, anecdotal evidence
suggesting a possible connection.
The
researcher suggests that the majority of these respondents understood the campaign as intended
by SPRS and
suggests only a minority of 13.3 % saw the campaign as undermining breastfeeding (the figure of ~ 50 out of 352 respondents).
TERESA PITMAN: So the Triple Risk Model has been
suggested by a bunch of
researchers and what they think is that a baby dies of SIDS when three risk factors come together.
Planning to have a baby at home is about as safe as having one in a hospital, but unplanned home births pose a hazard, a study
by federal and state health
researchers in Kentucky
suggests.
She also instinctively bends her legs completing the protective space around the baby, making it impossible for another person to roll onto the baby without first coming into contact with her legs.15, 16 A breastfeeding mother who co-sleeps with her baby (and has not consumed alcohol, illegal or sleep - inducing drugs or extreme fatigue) also tends to be highly responsive to her baby's needs.17, 18 Studies show more frequent arousals in both mothers and babies when they co-sleep, and some
researchers have
suggested that this may be protective against sudden unexpected infant deaths.19 — 21 Babies are checked
by their mother and breastfeed more frequently when co-sleeping than when room - sharing.22, 23
As reported
by Reuters, Dr. William Copeland, a psychiatry
researcher at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, USA, stated that: «This study is about righting a longstanding error and prejudice about the differences between these common childhood adversities,» adding: «It
suggests that whether we are talking about prevention, screening or treatment, our notions of childhood mistreatment need to be broader and more holistic than they have been.
Physical punishment is associated with a range of mental health problems in children, youth and adults, including depression, unhappiness, anxiety, feelings of hopelessness, use of drugs and alcohol, and general psychological maladjustment.26 — 29 These relationships may be mediated
by disruptions in parent — child attachment resulting from pain inflicted
by a caregiver, 30,31
by increased levels of cortisol32 or
by chemical disruption of the brain's mechanism for regulating stress.33
Researchers are also finding that physical punishment is linked to slower cognitive development and adversely affects academic achievement.34 These findings come from large longitudinal studies that control for a wide range of potential confounders.35 Intriguing results are now emerging from neuroimaging studies, which
suggest that physical punishment may reduce the volume of the brain's grey matter in areas associated with performance on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, third edition (WAIS - III).36 In addition, physical punishment can cause alterations in the dopaminergic regions associated with vulnerability to the abuse of drugs and alcohol.37
The
researchers suggested that the higher levels of oxytocin released
by breastfeeding may contribute to both reduction in stress and better mood (Mezzacappa & Katkin 2002).
By Yahoo! Canada Sports (blog) University of Alberta
researcher Dr. Dhiren Naidu's findings
suggest concussion education... Concussions are a key issue facing the CFL, but new research from the University of Alberta
suggests that some of the league's efforts on that front are having... See all stories on this topic»... read more
Some
researchers suggest that parents may gain clarity
by working backward from a longer - term goal.
The object, seen in this artist's representation, may have an icy heart surrounded
by an insulating crust,
researchers suggest.
The newly discovered exposure of ice on steep banks
suggests that the Red Planet's ice sheets are buried
by just a meter or two of soil,
researchers report in Science January 12.
Impressions left
by a large claw on the innermost toe on the dinosaur's front foot (the analog of the human thumb) indicate that the still - unknown species was located near the base of the sauropod family tree, and the sizes of the footprints — in some cases 70 centimeters across —
suggest that the behemoths grew to reach 15 meters in length and weighed up to 10 metric tons, the
researchers report online today in the Scottish Journal of Geology.
The findings
suggest that fenofibrate therapy may be beneficial in the way the
researchers hoped:
by reducing cardiovascular events in patients with type 2 diabetes who take statins but still have especially high triglycerides levels and low HDL cholesterol levels.
New estimates of the makeup of these potentially habitable worlds
suggests that two of them are more than half water,
by mass,
researchers report March 19 in Nature Astronomy.
The Planck data strongly
suggest that dust in the Milky Way galaxy might account for the entire signal interpreted as gravitational waves
by researchers using BICEP2, the Antarctic telescope responsible for the initial...
An epidemiological study conducted
by researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine and Seoul National University
suggests that persons deficient in vitamin D may be at much greater risk of developing diabetes.
By further analyzing a massive object that's so predominantly made of dark matter, the team
suggests,
researchers may be able to figure out what the elusive stuff actually is and where it's most likely to be found.
A new study published
by researchers from the University of Illinois at Chicago
suggests that the drug oseltamivir — commonly known as Tamiflu — does not cause an increased risk of suicide in pediatric patients.
Overall, these results
suggest that the moderate improvements reported
by psychologists in previous studies may be the result of methodological weaknesses and biases, said the
researchers.
«Rather than trying to assess the probability of an extreme event occurring, a group of
researchers suggest viewing the event as a given and assessing to which degree changes in the thermodynamic state (which we know has been influenced
by climate change) altered the severity of the impact of the event,» notes Dorit Hammerling, section leader for statistics and data science at the Institute for Mathematics Applied to Geosciences, National Center for Atmospheric Research.
The new theory
suggests the first of the two explosions reported
by eyewitnesses was a nuclear and not a steam explosion, as is currently widely thought and is presented
by researchers from the Swedish Defence Research Agency, Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute, and Stockholm University.
Their report, published May 10 in the journal Nature Communications,
suggests that among more than a dozen different lines of mice developed around the world to mirror autism caused
by mutations to the SHANK3 gene, Duke
researchers are the first to create a mouse in which that gene has been completely eliminated.
Although artificial sweeteners — among the world's most widely used food additives — are approved
by most food regulation agencies as safe for humans, the
researchers who led the work
suggest that their use should be reassessed.
The study quite reasonably
suggests there is a finite amount of sleep to be had, at least for the 50 Japanese 19 - month - olds tracked
by researchers.
«Taken together, our results
suggest that SCN8A mutations in people with early - infantile epileptic encephalopathy may increase the risk of SUDEP
by creating an environment in which the heart has a higher susceptibility to arrhythmias,» explains author Chad Frasier, Ph.D., a postdoctoral
researcher at the University of Michigan.
«This
suggests substantial nonfood exposure, accumulation in body tissues such as fat, or both,» the
researchers wrote in their paper released today
by Environmental Health Perspectives.
► Last year, we pointed to a ScienceInsider post
by Kelly Servick that detailed the story of Fazlul Sarkar, a
researcher who sued anonymous posters on PubPeer after claiming «that anonymous comments
suggesting misconduct in his research caused [the University of Mississippi] to revoke its [job] offer.»
Now, a team of
researchers from CNRS and Université Blaise Pascal [1]
suggests that, on the contrary, its temperature has fallen
by only 300 °C.
Led
by researchers at the Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center — Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC — James), the retrospective study
suggested that a pattern of molecules called microRNA (miRNA) in tumor cells might predict patients» response to radiation therapy.