Not exact matches
A recent
study in Sweden titled «The relation between office
type and workplace conflict: A gender and noise perspective» and
published in the Journal
of Environmental Psychology, looked at the data
of 5,229 employees who participated in the Swedish Longitudinal Occupational Survey
of Health.
Sorry to kill your bean buzz, but there are likely dozens
of different
types of nasty microorganisms crawling around in your pod - based communal caffeine machine, specifically inside its exterior drip tray, according to a
study published in Scientific Reports.
One
study published in the Journal
of Personality and Social Psychology found that participants demonstrated reduced self - control — less physical stamina, reduced persistence in the face
of failure and more procrastination — after making several decisions about what
types of goods to buy.
A wealth
of recent research, including a new
study published this month in the Journal
of Alzheimer's Disease, suggests that any
type of exercise that raises your heart rate and gets you moving and sweating for a sustained period
of time — known as aerobic exercise — has a significant, overwhelmingly beneficial impact on the brain.
When the Anglican patristic scholar and Church historian Trevor Jalland concluded his Bampton Lectures at Oxford in 1942 (
published in 1944 as The Church and the Papacy: A Historical
Study), he spoke
of the Roman Church as having «in its long and remarkable history a supernatural grandeur which no mere secular institution has ever attained in equal measure,» and went on to refer to «its strange, almost mystical, faithfulness to
type, its marked degree
of changelessness, its steadfast clinging to tradition and to precedent.»
Wang and colleagues
published their
study in International Journal
of Food Science and Technology («Effect
of Enzyme
Type and Hydrolysis Conditions on the In Vitro Angiotensin I - converting Enzyme Inhibitory Activity and Ash Content
of Hydrolyzed Whey Protein Isolate.»
A January 2015
study of more than 2,000 kids in 4th to 7th grade
published in Pediatrics found that children who sleep near a smartphone or another small - screen device get less sleep than kids who are not allowed to have these
types of devices in their bedrooms.
just the
type of parents you can dupe into second guessing themselves and buying school lunch for their kids merely by
publishing a flawed
study???
In an earlier
study published in the Journal
of Child Nutrition and Management, some
of the same researchers looked at what
types of fruits and vegetables children selected when they were free to choose.
The center's
study,
published in Pediatrics, found that all
of the
types of music slowed the babies» heart rates, but that a parent singing was the most effective.
In a
study published in Pediatrics, researchers found that the food a pregnant woman eats changes the flavor
of her amniotic fluid and in turn changes the
types of foods the babies enjoyed when they started eating solids.
The new research,
published recently as two separate
studies in ACS Central Science and the Journal
of the American Chemical Society, demonstrates that a new class
of drugs called small molecule RNA inhibitors can successfully target and kill specific
types of cancer.
As Manuela Carneiro, a researcher who took part in the
study published in «Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety», informs SINC: «This is due to the
type of diet these animals have — strictly carrion from domestic and wild hunting species — because the consumption
of hunting species increases the likelihood
of ingesting lead.»
An unborn child's gender can affect the mother's risk
of developing gestational diabetes or
Type 2 diabetes later in life, according to a new
study published in the Endocrine Society's Journal
of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
In a new
study published in Cell Reports, scientists at the Gladstone Institutes identified different
types of neurons in a brain region called the reticular thalamus.
The
study,
published in Nature Communications, builds on previous observations from the same team who found that a specific
type of cells regulate antibody production.
Researchers at the University
of Maryland School
of Medicine have identified a mutation in a fat - storage gene that appears to increase the risk for
type 2 diabetes and other metabolic disorders, according to a
study published online in the New England Journal
of Medicine.
In a
study published in Nature Communications, the investigators report that hyperglycemic mice (or mice with
type 2 diabetes) have a 24-fold higher accumulation
of succinate, an intermediate metabolite, in the metabolic pathways
of their bone marrow stromal cells.
In a
study published in 2006, he and other Johns Hopkins researchers tested two compounds similar to CGP3466B to see if they would block GAPDH from triggering cell death under the
types of highly stressful conditions that would normally cause apoptosis.
A one - time intravenous infusion
of the high dose
of gene therapy extended the survival
of patients with spinal muscular atrophy
type 1 (SMA1) in a Phase 1 clinical trial, according to a
study published in the New England Journal
of Medicine.
A single protein building block commonly found in food may hold a key to preventing the spread
of an often - deadly
type of breast cancer, according to a new multicenter
study published today in the medical journal Nature.
The cinnamon
study,
published in DiabetesCare, is the first to look at cinnamon in Americans with
type 2 diabetes.The patients received 1,000 milligrams
of cinnamon a day for three months.
Frequent, low - dose chemotherapy regimens avoid this effect and may therefore be more effective at treating certain
types of breast and pancreatic cancer, according to the murine
study «Metronomic chemotherapy prevents therapy - induced stromal activation and induction
of tumor - initiating cells,» which will be
published online November 23 in The Journal
of Experimental Medicine.
«However, few long - term, high - quality, follow - up
studies on physical activity and cognition have been
published, and it has remained unclear what
type and amount
of exercise is needed to safeguard cognition,» Iso - Markku says.
The
study published in Cancer Cell shows that exosomes from tumor cells
of breast cancer (and other tumor
types such as ovarian and endometrial) are different in size and composition than those
of healthy cells.
With a low level
of food neophobia, the likelihood that this
type of person is willing to eat insects as a meat substitute is estimated more than 75 %, according to a new
study published in Food Quality and Preference.
Higher levels
of leisure - time physical activity were associated with lower risks for 13
types of cancers, according to a new
study published online by JAMA Internal Medicine.
In an earlier
study published in the Journal
of Child Nutrition and Management, Amin and colleagues looked at what
types of fruits and vegetables children selected prior to the new guideline.
Researchers say their findings,
published in Annals
of Neurology, are «surprising» as the results differ from what has been seen in
studies of brain regions that harbor other brain cell -
types.
This is the first
study to show the role that
type I interferon plays in driving the body's immune destruction during HIV infection, said Scott Kitchen, associate professor
of medicine in the division
of hematology / oncology at the David Geffen School
of Medicine at UCLA and senior author
of the
study published in the peer - reviewed Journal
of Clinical Investigation.
A new
study published in the National Communication Association's journal, Communication Education, evaluates how different
types of messaging impact student retention
of classroom material.
The
study, conducted at the University
of Rochester's Mt. Hope Family Center and
published online today in Child Maltreatment, found that mothers who experienced more
types of abuse as children — sexual abuse, physical or emotional abuse, and physical or emotional neglect — have higher levels
of self - criticism, and therefore greater doubt in their ability to be effective parents.
The
study,
published today in Science, uncovers the key role
of the protein YME1 in the regulation
of the number,
type and shape
of mitocondria, and demonstrates that its absence induces a metabolic defect typical
of patients with heart disease.
In a related
study,
published in Cretaceous Research, OSU scientists announced the first fossil record
of Rickettsial - like cells, a bacteria that can cause various
types of spotted fever.
The
study,
published in Scientific Reports, looks at fossilized organelles (called melanosomes) that contain melanin, a
type of pigment that suggests a color scheme for the birdlike dinosaur: gray feathers on its body, a reddish mohawk down the center
of its head, and white feathers with black tips that line the creature's wings and legs.
In a previous related
study published in the Journal
of Materials Science: Materials in Medicine, the same team
of NTU scientists found that fish scale - derived collagen would induce human umbilical vein endothelial cells to express 2.5 times more
of a specific
type of collagen responsible for blood vessel formation, as compared to endothelial cells cultured on bovine collagen.
An unprecedented
study titled, «Lifecycle Assessments
of Railway Bridge Transitions Exposed to Extreme Events,»
published in Frontiers in Built Environment, benchmarks the costs and carbon emissions for the life cycle
of eight mitigation measures and reviews these methods for their effectiveness in three
types of extreme environmental conditions.
People with
Type 2 diabetes who eat a diet high in salt face twice the risk
of developing cardiovascular disease as those who consume less sodium, according to a new
study published in the Endocrine Society's Journal
of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
The
study published in PLOS ONE describes eight different
types of fossil snakes from the Rukwa Rift (five colubroid and three booid), with vertebrae ranging in length from 2.6 mm to just over 5 mm.
This
study is the first
of a new article
type: Telemetry Case Reports, being
published by Animal Biotelemetry, which hopes to highlight small pilot
studies on single individuals or very limited samples.
Getting enough vitamin D during infancy and childhood is associated with a reduced risk
of islet autoimmunity among children at increased genetic risk for
type 1 diabetes, according to a
study published this week in the journal Diabetes.
A new
study published today in the Canadian Journal
of Zoology found that captive bears fed a diet high in saturated fats and low in «healthy» polyunsaturated fats did not show symptoms
of disease typically observed in humans eating foods high in saturated fats such as insulin resistance, a precursor to
type 2 diabetes.
The results
of a
study recently
published by the Journal
of Experimental Child Psychology show that bilingual children are better than monolinguals at a certain
type of mental control, and that those children with more practice switching between languages have even greater skills.
Published online by the journal Developmental Biology, the
study suggests that cardiac regeneration strategies should be based on the
type and severity
of heart injury.
Now they report in a
study published in PLoS ONE on February 16 that this gene interacts with certain
types of estrogen and testosterone found in the brain.
Vaccination with the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine - 7 [PCV7 — a vaccine that covers 7 strains (serotypes)
of Streptococcus pneumoniae] is linked to overall decreases in the rate
of serious infections caused by this bacterium, such as pneumonia and meningitis, referred to as invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD)-RSB-, but small increases in IPD caused by serotypes
of Streptococcus pneumoniae not covered by the vaccine (referred to as non-vaccine
type IPD), according to a
study published in PLOS Medicine this week.
Little has been known about the ways in which many diabetes genes work, but a
study published in the journal Cell sheds light on a genetic risk component
of type 1 diabetes and a new approach for keeping beta cells strong.
In the
study,
published in Cell Reports, the University
of Kentucky's Vivek Rangnekar and his colleagues activated wild
type p53 in normal cells to trigger cell death in the p53 - deficient cancer cells.
Their findings in the
study «Phosphoglycerate mutase 1 regulates dNTP pool and promotes homologous recombination repair in cancer cells,» which has been
published in The Journal
of Cell Biology, suggest that this FDA - approved ovarian cancer medicine has the potential to treat a wider range
of cancer
types than currently indicated.
The
study published in Cell Metabolism reports a mechanism by which two
types of brain cells, neurons and glia, normally support each other's functions.