In 2009, Molina and
a team of researchers published a follow - up study (Molina et al., 2009), and reported on the results of these children / teens (over 400 stayed in the study) after six to eight years.
Majority of Canine Agility Competitors Don't Get Injured In 2009,
a team of researchers published a retrospective study of canine agility - related injuries.
Last year
a team of researchers published a large meta - analysis study that challenged these assumptions.
In January 2012, an international
team of researchers published results from an even more ambitious project.
An international
team of researchers published a study in the Aug. 14, 2007, issue of the New Journal of Physics that indicates that these crystals may be more sophisticated than anyone realized.
(A
team of researchers published the results of California's Regional Earthquake Likelihood Models test of quake forecasts last month in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.)
In 2012,
a team of researchers published a study in the prestigious journal Nature, describing how de novo mutations increase with a father's age.
A team of researchers published a study first of its kind in the Journal of Agriculture and Food Chemistry in 2008 analyzing the phytoestrogen content of eggs among other animal food products and vegetarian substitutes (10).
«Southern Italy: Earthquake hazard due to active plate boundary: International
team of researchers publishes latest seafloor maps.»
In a series of publications today in the British scientific journal Nature, international
teams of researchers published a nearly complete sequence of the genetic instructions of «Black 6,» the most common breed of laboratory mouse, and matched its traits with the recently decoded human genome.
Not exact matches
Last year, a
team of A.I.
researchers, including one from Google's DeepMind,
published a paper outlining the plans for a «big red button» that could stop a dangerous A.I. system in its tracks.
In May 2017, a
team of researchers at the University
of Oxford
published the results
of a survey
of the world's best artificial intelligence experts, who predicted that there was a 50 percent chance
of AI outperforming humans in all tasks within 45 years.
In a study
published in the journal Food Chemistry in 2014, a
team of researchers analyzed how the bioactive compounds
of seven different varieties
of apples - Granny Smith, Braeburn, Fuji, Gala, Golden Delicious, McIntosh and Red Delicious - affected the good gut bacteria
of diet - induced obese mice.
The same UCSF
team of researchers had another paper
published last month (November 2017) by the open access journal PLOS Biology titled, «Sugar industry sponsorship
of germ - free rodent studies linking sucrose to hyperlipidemia and cancer: An historical analysis
of internal documents.»
In 2007, Robert Pianta
of the University
of Virginia
published in Science the results
of a large - scale survey
of American public schools that he and a
team of researchers had undertaken, observing regular instruction over the course
of an entire school day in 737 typical fifth - grade classrooms across the United States, as well as hundreds
of additional first - and third - grade classrooms.
A study conducted by a
team of researchers at Tufts University, which has also been
published in the journal Endocrinology, has revealed chronic stress may release certain hormones that may trigger miscarriage.
Here's an update on a story I shared with you last February: Back then, I told you how a
team of researchers had examined four
published studies by the Cornell Food and Brand Lab and had raised a number
of serious concerns about the studies» data.
I am so grateful to see this research finally
published, thanks to the hard work
of the
researchers, the MANA statistics
team, and the hundreds
of midwives who contributed data.
In a new study
published in Nature, a Yale - led
team of researchers has identified how an altered gut microbiota causes obesity.
Dr. Zhang co-authored the paper that describes this research, which was
published last month in the journal Advanced Optical Materials, with a
team of researchers from Masdar Institute and the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology (MIT).
In a study
published in Neuron, an interdisciplinary
team of University
of Pennsylvania
researchers has identified a new explanation for this phenomenon.
In a newly
published article in the international journal The Science
of Nature the multidisciplinary
team of researchers report their analysis
of the internal structure
of tooth enamel in a fossil walrus from California, Pelagiarctos thomasi, and in teeth
of modern pinnipeds the New Zealand fur seal and sea lion.
The research was carried out by international
team of researchers, led by the Universities
of Manchester and Oxford, and has recently been
published in Nature.
Yesterday, at the annual meeting
of AAAS (which
publishes Science) here, archaeologist Lori Collins
of the University
of South Florida, Tampa, showed how her
team and Mexican
researchers working with Proyecto Arqueológico Chalcatzingo, a
team of Mexican archaeologists working to preserve the Chalcatzingo site, digitally deconstructed the 3D model (pictured)
of the altar into individual rocks.
Now, in a new study
published today, Sept. 8, in the Proceedings
of the National Academy
of Sciences, a
team of researchers from the University
of Wisconsin - Madison has added a new wrinkle to the cell differentiation equation, showing that the stiffness
of the surfaces on which stem cells are grown can exert a profound influence on cell fate.
Now, an international
team led by
researchers from Tianjin University and Nankai University has unraveled the puzzle
of how Zika virus replicates and
published their finding in Springer's journal Protein & Cell.
The study
publishing January 9 in the open access journal PLOS Biology led by
researchers from Uppsala University with an international
team of collaborators, also indicates that the resulting mixed population genetically adapted to the extreme environmental conditions.
In a new study
published in Physiological Genomics, a
team of U.S.
researchers tracked in detail how this extreme makeover is controlled by changes in gene expression.
In February 2015, a
team of researchers, including Thompson,
published a paper in the Proceedings
of the National Academy
of Sciences about new findings from the Quelccaya ice core samples.
Last June, in a paper
published in the journal Tissue Engineering, an international
team of researchers proposed a new kind
of food handmade for sensitive carnivores (and maybe even vegetarians): meat that comes from a laboratory instead
of a farm.
In their paper
published online in Annals
of Internal Medicine, the
team led by
researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and the Yale School
of Public Health describes how a 33 percent cutback in funds earmarked for HIV / AIDS prevention, treatment and research in recent budget proposals would only save $ 900 per year
of life lost in the countries
of South Africa and Côte d'Ivoire.
This is the take - home message from a new study
published online in PLOS ONE by a
team of researchers including Arthur Aron, PhD, a Research Professor in the Department
of Psychology at Stony Brook University.
The
team, which includes lead
researchers at University
of Maryland, College Park (UMD)'s A. James Clark School
of Engineering,
published a peer - reviewed paper based on the research featured on the March 30 cover
of Science.
In a study
published in the journal Environment & Behaviour, a
team of researchers at the Universities
of Plymouth, Exeter and Birmingham worked with Torrington Dental Practice in Devon to find out whether experiences like these could improve the patient's experience during routine dental procedures, such as fillings and tooth extractions.
The new findings are in stark contrast to data
published in 2015 by another
team of researchers.
An international
team of researchers from North American, African and European institutes and museums have now discovered the origin
of this muscle sling: in Eunotosaurus africanus, a fossil reptile which lived in South Africa during the Middle Permian around 260 million years ago, as the study just
published in Nature Communications reveals.
In a study
published in the August issue
of the American Journal
of Physiology, Eric Plaisance, Ph.D., principal investigator
of the study, and a
team of researchers looked at whether high - intensity interval training, or HIIT, could have an even greater effect.
An international
team of researchers, led by Professor Paul Walton and Professor Gideon Davies
of the Department
of Chemistry at York, carried out the research which is
published in Nature Communications.
In a study
published today in the Journal
of Archaeological Science an international
team of Serbian and UK
researchers have developed a Cu - As - Sn (Copper - Arsenic - Tin) colour ternary diagram to uncover the original colours
of archaeological artefacts now patinated through age and exposure.
A
team of researchers led by Rodrigo Lacruz, MSc, PhD, assistant professor in the Department
of Basic Science and Craniofacial Biology at NYU College
of Dentistry, has
published a paper in Scientific Reports (5:15803) titled «Dental enamel cells express functional SOCE channels,» which reports the results
of a study showing for the first time the mechanism
of calcium transport essential in the formation
of dental enamel.
The research,
published in Behavioral Brain Research, was led by Prof. Chagi Pick
of TAU's Sagol School
of Neuroscience and Sackler Faculty
of Medicine and conducted by a
team of researchers from both TAU and TAU - affiliated Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center.
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.
In a recently
published paper in Geophysical Research Letters, a
team of researchers used computer modeling to test the two alternatives.
A
team of nurse -
researchers from Children's Hospital
of Philadelphia (CHOP) and the University
of Pennsylvania School
of Nursing (Penn Nursing)
published a study in the Journal
of Pediatric Nursing in which they gathered perspectives on coping mechanisms from focus groups with 14 mothers
of critically ill infants, and explored the feasibility
of mindfulness as a stress - reduction technique.
The development and implementation
of the DSM - H is detailed in a study
published in Geriatric Nursing, in which
researchers tested the ability
of their program to improve the knowledge, confidence, and attitudes
of the HHC
team members in assessing and managing pain, depression, and other behavioral symptoms in people living with dementia.
Professor Pierre Friedlingstein and Professor Peter Cox, from the University
of Exeter, collaborated with an international
team of researchers from China, Germany, France and the USA, to produce the new study, which is
published in the leading academic journal Nature.
A
team of researchers from the University
of Hawai'i at Mānoa (UHM)
published a study this week that estimated the probability
of a Magnitude 9 + earthquake in the Aleutian Islands — an event with sufficient power to create a mega-tsunami especially threatening to Hawai'i.
Published Dec. 18, 2017 in Nature Genetics, a
team led by
researchers at Joint Genome Institute (JGI) and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) have exploited a catalog
of bacterial genomes to identify and characterize candidate genes that aid bacteria in adapting to plant environments, specifically genes involved in bacterial root colonization.
A
team of researchers from Yale School
of Public Health and Yale Cancer Center recently
published a study in the Journal
of Cancer Survivorship that addresses the needs
of cancer survivors who are at least nine years beyond an initial diagnosis.
Published December 18, 2017 issue in Nature Genetics, a
team led by
researchers at the U.S. Department
of Energy (DOE) Joint Genome Institute (JGI), a DOE Office
of Science User Facility, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) have exploited a catalog
of bacterial genomes to identify and characterize candidate genes that aid bacteria in adapting to plant environments, specifically genes involved in bacterial root colonization.