Sentences with phrase «than in previous studies»

They kept them there for 1,000 bacterial generations, much longer than in previous studies.
The researchers think the noise engaged active sensory processing, which allowed the brain to respond to the light much more quickly than in previous studies when subjects rested while being exposed to light.
This means that any patterns detected in the data are likely to be more reliable than in previous studies.
«In our study, infants with DP who were the product of a multiple - birth pregnancy were disproportionately higher than in the general population and greater than in previous studies,» Oh said.
Bernstein analyst Tim Anderson said the bar was higher for Keytruda in the Keynote - 024 trial than in previous studies, because chemotherapy tends to work better in first - line patients than in those who've failed on previous treatment.
The group also used different methods than in the previous study, which Lamb believes results in a more accurate assessment of the actual emissions.
The analysis included 2,497 extinct and modern marine animal species, a broader range than in previous studies, Payne said.
Since the impact was less than in previous studies that had used more intensive coaching about nasal irrigation, the authors suggest that further research is needed to understand how much coaching of patients is required.
The new protocols of sequencing and analysis allow us to extract quite more information than in previous studies, which were limited to specific regions or surface waters, to an unprecedented level of resolution.»
Today's senior debtors are more likely than in our previous study to be widowed (17 % versus 14 %); divorced (30 % versus 28 %); retired and living on a fixed income (56 % versus 54 %); or on disability (5.5 % versus 4.6 %).
Building on earlier research showing the carbon payback time of biofuel crops grown on certain types of land, the new study uses «a new, geographically detailed database of crop locations and yields, along with updated vegetation and soil biomass estimates, to provide carbon payback estimates that are more regionally specific than those in previous studies,» write the authors.
Because there would be obvious consequences to their partner if they stopped doing the frustrating task (i.e., the partner would have to take over), the sacrifice here was even more meaningful than in the previous study (where stopping the task only meant the partner didn't win anything).
Additionally, our sample size [152 compared with 50 and 28 healthy controls in Nakamura et al. (2007) and Roppongi et al.'s (2010) studies, respectively] should provide a more representative and powerful sample than in previous studies.
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