Sentences with phrase «wonder if the study»

I wonder if the studies looking at the nutrient intake of kids eating school lunches are factoring in what the children actually ate — or simply what they took (or had to take) on their tray?
I wonder if these studies that purportedly show how harmful a lot of exercise is really control for DIET.
2) I wonder if those studies were done on people who are not used to getting a lot of antioxidants throughout the day (so that a healthy smoothie may be treated like an assault by the body?)
I'm wondering if the studies about supplements and longevity adjust for people like myself, who start taking supplements * because * they are unwell?
I wonder if that study takes into account that EVs and plug - in hybrids become cleaner over time as coal - fired plants are replaced with natural gas - fired plants, wind turbines, and solar plants.
Makes one wonder if this study was funded by some crazed biofuel investors in an attempt to increase needed acreage dedicated to industrial biofuel agriculture, no?

Not exact matches

After reading this study, I'm wondering if perhaps women entrepreneurs face very different social environments than the men do, even outside of tech enclaves like Silicon Valley.
I wondered if there were any research studies that showed why startups succeed and fail?
And if you're wondering how much sleep is enough, here's a rough guide: One of the most acclaimed sleep researchers, Daniel Kripke, found in a recent study that «people who sleep between 6.5 hours and 7.5 hours a night, live the longest, are happier, and most productive.»
Venture capitalists are, in a way, the gatekeepers to Silicon Valley, and if they are a group of white men who studied at places like Stanford, it is no wonder that most of the entrepreneurs fit the same mold.
I wonder what would be revealed if scientists would be permitted to study the remains in the tomb at Machpelah... after all, like all things Biblical, we only have one reference, and we ONLY have Abraham's word that he saw the face of God (contrary to John 1:18: No man hath seen God at any time, AND John 6:46: Not that any man hath seen the Father)... Bet you those bones aren't from a 175 year old man and 127 year old woman...
The fact that this study is in a biology journal, when it is a social science study, makes me wonder if it was rejected from journals where a rigorous and learned peer review would have taken place.
I wonder if the boy scouts would do that at a Bible study or Christmass dinner, together with the muslim kids?
If your wondering why all the suffering, then you need to actually study the bible.
Meanwhile, the slightly - older - than - middle - age grandmother who doesn't play the piano so well — or the forester who loves to study the Bible but can't make it every Sunday — or the welder and his wife, who homeschools their 3 children with the desire to minister to their kids and their friends but can't because they ticked off the pastor's wife on the last trip — they'll just sit and wait, or wonder if they should leave and re-enter.
As I work my way through Genesis 2 for my One Verse Podcast, I have been studying quite a bit about Adam's «rib» in Genesis 2:21 - 23 and am wondering if the «rib» actually refers to a boneless boner.
In any case, I wonder what the study of church history would look like if it had a global perspective — if it viewed world Christianity not with a sense of decline and uncertainty but with a sense of expansion and promise.
If one has never journeyed into the deep — prayed (which includes Scripture / theological study, faith sharing, adoration, spiritual formation / retreats, pilgramages, Mass, reconciliation, fasting, listening for God's voice, and more) on an ongoing fashion or done God's will (been obedient, patient, humble, unconditionally sacrificing, unselfish) to the extent that they understand what it means to be Catholic and God being your number one priority — that His Ways and those of His Church are not the ways of the world (trade vices for virtues) and that we are being called into communion with Him via love for Him and one another in our faith community and broader community — then it is no wonder some are lost or disillusioned.
I am just wondering why we study the Bible at all if we are just supposed to «love» others and never confront sin?
I've seen mission boards fire the missionary, because their monthly report was: * Monday: Bible study with x, y, z. Z pointed out that Jonah must have been dead, and asked if that was a pointer towards Christ spending Three days in Hell; * Tuesday: Bible study with a, b, c. B was asking why Pilate had to go along with the crowd's wishes, even though he thought Jesus was not worthy of being crucified; * Wednesday: Bible study with g, h, i. H is wondering how the Flood story can possibly be true.
I wonder if Old Testament study ever fully recovered from Gilkey's essay.
I would be most interested in seeing a comparison study done with raw vegan vs. vegan diets... I am wondering if eating cooked vegan foods would make a difference.
I was wondering if Elana knows about «he China study» and what she thinks about it.
Some brilliant students are wondering if they should devote any time at all to studying agriculture and biology.
I wonder if someone will visit my blog and think, how can she be studying holistic nutrition if she eats — gasp — chocolate cake!
I wonder if anyone has done a scientific study on this phenomena — when we tend to blank out the bad when watching our favourites and can only see bad with those we dislike / distrust / don't rate etc..
We spoke intensely about preparing for the future, and I started to wonder if I should have studied how to be better «wife material» as much as I studied ontology and the happy hour menu at The Heights.
I didn't see the actual study but I wonder if they followed up on the kids later or just looked at them over a short period.
Sure we can read books by experts, study as if there is a parenting test, and constantly wonder if we doing things wrong.
Sometimes, by the time I've listed the problems with interpreting a breastfeeding study, I wonder if these findings were actually meaningful, and I'm sure my readers feel the same way.
The Environmental Working group did an earlier study in 2003 which made me wonder if breast milk was truly safer than formula.
While previous studies have examined the relationship between formula use and breastfeeding, some have questioned the results, wondering if mothers using formula were simply less committed to breastfeeding.
Esslinger and his colleagues wondered if they could observe the transition from non-superfluid to superfluid, and use this as a model for studying the onset of superconductivity.
While studying Beckwith - Wiedemann, Le Bouc and Netchine wondered what would happen if the gene expression patterns were flipped.
Based on Frank's observations, others who study ants are now wondering if they also have seen such rescue tactics.
The technique worked well in lab experiments, but when Eugene Madsen, a microbiologist at Cornell University, and colleagues saw the study, they wondered if the technique could locate bacteria in the field.
During her graduate studies at Harvard, Jennifer Weuve, now an epidemiologist at the Boston University School of Public Health, wondered if airborne pollutants might be bad for the brain.
Instead, Peter Forster and Colin Renfrew of the University of Cambridge wondered if changes could be traced via maternal or paternal genes, by studying mitochondrial DNA or Y - chromosome genes, respectively.
Previous studies have connected high levels of inflammatory markers in the blood to bone loss and to fractures in older women and men, which prompted Orchard and her colleagues to wonder what they'd find if they took one more step back — to the dietary choices that contribute to inflammation in the body.
In this part of the study, Knight's team wondered if KatharoSeq might be able to detect microbes in what is thought to be a sterile facility.
She wondered if the moss had any special water collection phenomena based on a preliminary study that she and Ye Tao had performed.
But Jennifer Rudgers, a botanist at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, who led the new study, began to wonder if there was more to the relationship.
The commission did suggest that researchers had the right to exclude from studies people who didn't want potentially lifesaving findings returned to them and wondered whether researchers have a legal obligation to return certain findings and can be sued if they don't.
This study didn't examine birth outcomes, but prompted the researchers to wonder if this rapid biological aging could put a woman at greater risk of premature delivery, gestational hypertension, preeclampsia and other problems.
Peter Walsh, a researcher at the same institute who was helping a student with a study on the social development of young chimps, wondered if something akin to daycare outbreaks was at work in the forest.
If this situation is occurring with butterflies, the researcher at the University of Valencia wonders what might be happening, for example, with less known or poorly studied groups of arthropods.
And if you register a study with 20 mice but then only publish results with 13 mice, people are going to wonder what happened to the other seven mice.
Study lead author Dr. Roelof van Leeuwen and colleagues wondered if drinking an acidic soda beverage such as Coca - Cola Classic may provide a solution.
In this new effort, the researchers wondered if the team in Sweden had missed something, so they decided to conduct a study of their own.
Ever since the summer of 2015, when NASA's New Horizons performed a six - month - long reconnaissance flyby study of Pluto and its moons, fans of the dwarf planet have wondered if or when we'd ever go back.
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