Sentences with phrase «young researchers whose»

IIASA's annual 3 - month Young Scientists Summer Program (YSSP) and ongoing Postdoctorial Program offers research opportunities to talented young researchers whose interests correspond with IIASA's research.
Below, we profile two top young researchers whose interdisciplinary training during their graduate studies has helped propel their careers in neuroscience forward.
Since 1977, IIASA's annual 3 - month Young Scientists Summer Program (YSSP) offers research opportunities to talented young researchers whose interests correspond with IIASA's ongoing research on issues of global environmental, economic and social change.

Not exact matches

But the researchers did find two positive associations between working motherhood and well - adjusted children: kids whose mothers worked when they were younger than 3 were later rated as higher - achieving by teachers and had fewer problems with depression and anxiety.
The researchers found that relatively cool accretion discs around young stars, whose inner edges can be several times the size of the Sun, show the same behaviour as the hot, violent accretion discs around planet - sized white dwarfs, city - sized black holes and supermassive black holes as large as the entire Solar system, supporting the universality of accretion physics.
Is the prominent climate scientist a role model for younger researchers — or a polarizing figure whose tactics have proved counterproductive?
«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.
Now, with his impending retirement from NASA, the community asks: Is Hansen a role model to be emulated by younger researchers — or a polarizing figure whose tactics have proved counterproductive?
Around 2,000 Finnish young people, whose educational paths and well - being were investigated by the researchers during all educational transitions, participated in the study.
He tells of «senior professors whose partners had cancer and no health insurance; researchers who left the commonwealth, taking major grants with them; faculty who, unlike their straight colleagues, are paying out of their pockets for costly individual policies for their partners and who resent the discrimination; young professors and administrators who are looking to leave the state; and so forth.»
Those who would win from such a change would be the young researchers, whose ideas would be linked more publicly with their names, and the largely unsung technicians whose names are otherwise almost hidden towards the ends papers.
A Southampton astronomer is among a team of international researchers whose work has revealed a surprising similarity between the way in which astronomical objects grow including black holes, white dwarfs and young stars.
The present authors have all been subject to such attacks, whose similarity is notable because the authors» research spans a broad range of topics and disciplines: The first author has investigated the psychological variables underlying the acceptance or rejection of scientific findings; the second author is a paleoclimatologist who has shown that current global temperatures are likely unprecedented during the last 1,000 years or more; the third and fourth authors are public - health researchers who have investigated the attitudes of teenagers and young adults towards smoking and evaluated a range of tobacco control interventions; and the fifth author has established that human memory is not only fallible but subject to very large and systematic distortions.
Researchers at the Institute of Behavioral Sciences in Hungary studied couples who stayed together long - term and found that couples whose wives were younger and less educated than their husbands lasted longer than other couples did.
Fortunately, conducting randomized trials over the decades, intervention researchers have produced numerous manual - guided, evidence - based treatments (EBTs) for depression, anxiety, and conduct in youth.2 Unfortunately, these treatments have not been incorporated into most everyday clinical practice.3 - 5 A common view is that the complexity and comorbidity of many clinically referred youths, whose problems and treatment needs can shift during treatment, may pose problems for EBT protocols, which are typically designed for single or homogeneous clusters of disorders, developed and tested with recruited youths who differ from patients seen in everyday clinical practice, and involve a predetermined sequence of prescribed session contents, limiting their flexibility.3 - 8 Indeed, trials testing these protocols against usual care for young patients in clinical practice have produced mixed findings, with EBTs often failing to outperform usual care.7, 9
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