Sentences with phrase «yet unpublished study»

In an as - yet unpublished study, Johnson found that males were more likely to court females if they were sitting on a web and had been recently fed.
In one as - yet unpublished study of 156 addicts ranging in age from 24 to 68 at a methadone clinic, the subjects» reported levels of boredom were the only reliable factor that predicted whether they would stay on course, Todman notes.

Not exact matches

In an as - yet - unpublished study, the team examined 245 skeletons unearthed from a cemetery in Hull in northeastern England that was used between 1319 and 1539.
The observational study published in Genome Biology utilized publicly available and unpublished data sets to find 2,147 vlincRNAs that cover 10 percent of the human genome, suggesting that their production is a common, yet undiscovered, feature of human DNA.
At the meeting, Schal presented an as - yet - unpublished study that suggests a different scenario.
Yet clinical trials in children commonly go either uncompleted or unpublished, finds a comprehensive study conducted by researchers at Boston Children's Hospital.
The results match the companies» own as - yet - unpublished studies, Chaplin says.
The need for a broader appreciation of the factors driving Islamist extremism is underlined by an as - yet - unpublished study conducted by McCauley's team.
Another, as - yet - unpublished Stanford study confirms that the SAT and ACT scores of a typical new teacher had declined to the 42nd percentile in 2000 — a middling figure, not a bottom one.
The move is apparently based on an as - yet unpublished University of Hamburg study that analyzes video game sales and business models, ultimately determining what most online gamers already know: that such games actively target whales, who are responsible for the majority of their revenue.
The piece focuses on a new and as - yet - unpublished (but much publicized) study of fetal health in relation to gas drilling by Elaine L. Hill, a doctoral candidate in Cornell University's department of applied economics and management.
The piece will focus on a new and as - yet - unpublished (but much publicized) study of fetal risks related to gas drilling by Elaine L. Hill, a doctoral candidate in Cornell University's department of applied economics and management.
Via Twitter, I was alerted that Cicero (see above) has posted a long and useful piece explaining the research project, which goes by the acronym, CLIMSENS, that has produced both the Aldrin paper and the as - yet - unpublished study.
And his colleague and fellow author of an as - yet - unpublished study, Oner Sufri, a doctoral student, said «As the storm turned west - northwest, the seismometers lit up.»
In a yet - unpublished study, (Dell et al., 2008) find that climate (change) has no effect on economic growth in countries with an income above the global median ($ PPP, 20003170) but a large impact on countries below the median.
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