This year's Earth Day Doodle comes with a special «message to the citizens of the world» from Jane Goodall,
whose work studying chimpanzees has...
This quality is something McLaughlin has spoken of in relation to the brush paintings of the 15th century Japanese master, Sesshu,
whose work he studied scrupulously while living in Japan.)
Still, underneath the many - layered chip on her shoulder was an admiration for the older abstract artists Arshile Gorky, Willem de Kooning and Franz Kline as well as old masters and Impressionists
whose work she studied in museums.
Not exact matches
But to every rule there is an exception, and glad I was to be called out (and called up) by the founder and CEO of one mobile - health company
whose entire premise is based on scientific research with repeatable results — the exact
study, in fact, I had used as my example of what
works better than a health app.
Tom's
studied hundreds of millionaires over the years
whose habits are the main focus of his blog (RichHabits.net) and his book (same name — Rich Habits), so I feel like if it's
working for them it would
work for us too;)
The late MIT economist Rudiger Dornbusch made an extensive
study of the results of populist economic programmes around the world, finding that while they sometimes had immediate positive results, over the medium - and long - term they were catastrophic for the
working class in
whose name they were launched.
The carpooling start - up Splitting Fares Inc,
whose app connects people who share the same route to their place of
work or
study, will be part of Bosch's new Connected Mobility Solutions division, the world's largest automotive supplier said.
Its CEO has less than four years of professional
work experience and a non-technical background (she has an MA in business management and dual BAs in Africana
studies / Spanish), and is running a company
whose market cap went from $ 7.2 m to $ 60m in a single month, despite not having a finished product or revenue, much less profit.
The introduction, afterword, translation, appendices and critical apparatus are all stellar
work by a dedicated team of scholars
whose contribution to future
study is enormous.
The
study of history is arid and incomplete unless it is understood as a
work about (and by) individual human beings — and, moreover, a story
whose substance and manner of telling are matters of moral significance.
This date was forced on anthropoligists
studying fossils by the geneticists
whose work beginning in the 90's completely threw all the previous
work into disarray.
There are many recent novels in English, written by Indians, which reveal new dimensions of Indian religious life and illuminate the historical, philosophical, and religious
studies of Hinduism: R. K. Narayan is one contemporary novelist
whose works have excited students to further
study of Hinduism and Indian culture.
Thus the G.I. Bill, the Public Facilities Act, the National Defense Education Act, and the various forms of student aid initiated in the 1960s — BEOGs, SEOGs,
Work -
Study, Pell grants, etc. — have subsidized the survival of many colleges and universities, but inexorably they have served as well to make the grantee institutions more anxious to observe the laws and regulations of the State than the strictures of the Church
whose sponsorship is, by comparison, so intangible.
Even Robert Spitzer,
whose work is often cited by ex-gay ministries, retracted his own
study in 2012, citing problems with its methodology.)
But this line has already been pursued with enormous energy by Stanley Hauerwas,
whose work deserves its own
study.
We are grateful to the authors of the 66
studies whose extensive field
work provided the data for this meta - analysis.
UAE FBMG carried out a comprehensive
study on the food and beverage value chain and
worked on the need for a Food Platform,
whose success can be ensured by the collaboration between different players in the value chain.
The credit goes partly to the researchers
whose studies have shown a myriad of benefits to human milk, and partly to activists who have fought admirably for better pumping rights and hospital policies, doggedly
working to make breastfeeding the norm.
From this page you can access several case
studies of agencies
whose work emphasises the importance of engaging with young fathers (as featured in the Invisible Fathers pack):
Boys
whose mothers
work part time or full time fared better, staying in school longer and later earning more than sons of mothers who
work overtime, the
study shows.
That 2005 Economic Journal
study of American women who returned to
work within 12 weeks showed that infants
whose mothers went back even earlier were likely to have more behavioral problems and lower cognitive test scores at age 4.
The
study was spurred by a conversation about an untranslated book, says Shahar Ronen, a Microsoft program manager
whose Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) master's thesis formed the basis of the new
work.
Scientific American covers this year's winners,
whose work includes advances in the
study of nanotechnology, the building of complex organic compounds, the development of in vitro fertilization and the understanding of «search friction» in the job market
Learning to deal with and respond to the media attention that a Wastebook mention can generate is valuable in and of itself, notes Tommy Blanchard, a data scientist at Fresenius Medical Care in Waltham, Massachusetts,
whose graduate
work studying rhesus macaques» decision - making made the cover of the 2014 Wastebook.
In the
study, which included a series of laboratory experiments, field surveys and mathematical modeling, the presence of various species of dragonfly larvae reduced the infections in frogs caused by parasitic flatworms called trematodes, said Val Beasley, professor and head of the department of veterinary and biomedical sciences, Penn State, who
worked with Rohr and
whose research group collaborated with Lucinda Johnson, senior research associate and director of the Center for Water and the Environment, University of Minnesota Duluth, to complete the field
study.
«Every year, the particular group of viruses is mutable, keeps modifying genetically, so the shot you got last year may not
work this year,» says Elaine Leventhal, professor emerita of medicine at Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, in
whose practice the
study was conducted.
Modern diesel cars emit less pollution generally than cars that run on gasoline, says a new six - nation
study published today in Scientific Reports
whose groundwork was laid in part by an American chemist now
working at Université de Montréal.
«Our results indicate that this simple intervention could be an effective and scalable approach to use the design of electronic health records to increase the rate of flu vaccinations, which are estimated to prevent millions of flu cases and tens of thousands of related hospitalizations every year,» said
study lead author Mitesh S. Patel, MD, MBA, MS, an assistant professor of Medicine and Health Care Management in Penn's Perelman School of Medicine and The Wharton School, a staff physician at the Crescenz VA Medical Center, and director of the Penn Medicine Nudge Unit,
whose work is supported by the Penn Center for Health Incentives and Behavioral Economics.
Hugh Herr is a classically understated, yet obviously determined, researcher and inventor
whose work in novel prostheses and orthotics design and human motion
study appears boundless.
«Even though they're inactivating the virus, it's still there,» says Ross,
whose laboratory
worked with Novavax during its preclinical
studies, when the start - up was in need of laboratory facilities.
Patterson's
study does not convince the researchers
whose results were published in July and are called into question by the new
work.
Because genes and the proteins they code for are often highly conserved across species, the researchers suspect their discoveries — boosted by preliminary
studies in mice — could lead to new treatments for people
whose insomnia or off - hours
work schedules keep them awake long after their heads hit the pillow.
The expert is the author of a
study published in the «International Journal of Cancer», which reveals the importance of assessing how the circadian system
works in order to prevent chronodisruption and to implement measures to strengthen the biological clock in people
whose system is damaged.
Kipnis also saluted the «phenomenal» surgical skills of Igor Smirnov, a research associate in the Kipnis lab
whose work was critical to the imaging success of the
study.
But a new UCLA
study suggests a simple way to lighten their load: a «physician partner»
whose role would be to
work on those administrative tasks, such as entering information into patient records, that take up so much of doctors» time.
«Our
work describes for the first time that, along with the classical mutualist relationship between both insects, there exists an aggressive mimicry of aphids towards ants,» explains Genetics professor David Martínez Torres, director of the
study whose results were published in PNAS, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal.
He is now a tenured professor at Brown University
whose most important
work has taken place in the field of dynamics, which
studies the long - run behavior of iterative processes, like a billiard ball ricocheting on a frictionless table.
«Because of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, we were able to
work with other researchers to make patient cells into any type of neuron,» said Young - Pearse,
whose lab spent two years fine - tuning protocols with collaborators to generate the neurons needed for her early onset Alzheimer's
study.
«Our
study reveals that a stable microvasculature constitutes a dormant niche, whereas a sprouting neovasculature sparks micrometastatic outgrowth,» says cell biologist Mina Bissell, in
whose laboratory this
work was done.
But many stem cell scientists in Italy and abroad say it's too early for such a
study because there is little to suggest that the therapy,
whose details remain unpublished, might
work.
In the
study, Dr. Murphy's team
worked with a person
whose leg has been amputated above the knee (transfemoral amputee).
The St George's team
worked with partners at Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, The Institut Pasteur, Paris Descartes medical school and hospitals in Malawi, Zambia, Cameroon and Tanzania for the
study whose results were announced at the International AIDS Society meeting in Paris on July 24.
But Hochedlinger,
whose group's paper appears in a new journal called Cell Stem Cell, stresses that researchers still need to
study human cells to learn how to reprogram them and have no idea yet which approach would
work better in the long run.
Given the number of genomes
studied and the sophisticated analysis used, the date for when the species diverges is «the best estimate of what we've gotten so far, and it makes sense,» says Beth Shapiro, an evolutionary biologist at UC Santa Cruz,
whose earlier
work also suggested these bears split less than a million years ago.
As a result, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis are difficult,» says Dr. Rajeet Singh Saluja, a neurosurgeon and the
study's first author
working under the guidance of Dr. Alain Ptito, a neuropsychologist
whose laboratory is at The Neuro.
A Russian astrophysicist who pioneered the
study of fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background to learn more about the universe and an American chemist
whose work led to the development of several new materials have won the Kyoto Prize from the Japanese Inamori Foundation.
«Our
work indicates that SWEET4 could be a promising target for engineering varieties of maize, rice and other crops,» said Bing Yang from Iowa State University,
whose team performed all the rice
studies.
«This is essentially a recipe for how to make human inner ears from stem cells,» said Dr. Koehler, lead author of the
study and
whose research lab
works on modeling human development.
The
work was led by reproductive biologist Michael Skinner of Washington State University in Pullman,
whose lab has been
studying vinclozolin, a fungicide used in the wine industry.
«Patients have told us how their lives have changed since receiving gene therapy,» said
study co-leader Jean Bennett, M.D., Ph.D., F.M. Kirby professor of Ophthalmology at Penn,
whose work in this field has repeatedly been supported through RPB grants since 1992.