Cited
in sentence
302 examples of Cited in a sentence
Indeed, the fragility of the global economic recovery is often
cited
as a justification to delay such action.
In particular, emphasizing a “shift to more assertive diplomacy,” Abe’s policy speech
cited
Japan’s initiative in proposing sanctions against North Korea to the United Nations Security Council, and its success in overseeing – through close coordination with the United States and other countries – the resolution’s unanimous adoption.
A 2004 report by the Humanitarian Policy Group
cited
a survey carried out in Ethiopia after UN agencies said that humanitarian efforts had averted widespread famine in 2000.
In 1955, Garfield created the Science Citation Index (SCI), a database containing all of the
cited
references across the most highly respected scientific journals, thereby capturing the sprawling web of connections among texts.
The enrichment of the subject matter with previous analyses, connections, and conclusions regarding the same
cited
texts was certainly part of the attraction.
More appealing, however, was the possibility of tracking the scholarly influence of oneself and others over time and across fields, and identifying the most highly
cited
scientists, papers, journals, and institutions.
The first – another brainchild of Garfield’s – is impact factor (IF), which offers a putative indication of an academic journal’s quality based on the average number of times its articles were
cited
during the previous two years.
H-index accounting is straightforward: if a researcher publishes 20 papers that have each been
cited
at least 20 times, she has an h-index of 20.
If she publishes 34 papers, each
cited
at least 34 times, she earns an h-index of 34.
Greece, Ireland, Portugal, and even Italy are often
cited
as countries that might benefit from being able to pursue an independent monetary policy and allow their currencies to adjust to more competitive levels.
Speaking at the Nuclear Security Summit in The Hague in March, Andrii Deshchytsia, Ukraine’s acting foreign minister,
cited
the “potential threat to many nuclear facilities” should events deteriorate into open warfare.
Why China Can’t AdjustCLAREMONT, CALIFORNIA – China’s current economic slowdown has no shortage of causes: Europe’s financial turmoil, sputtering recovery in the United States, and weak domestic investment growth, to name the most commonly
cited
factors.
The basis for this claim was a single report from the World Wildlife Fund that itself
cited
only one study, which didn’t even look at climate change, but rather at the impact of human activities like logging and burning.
According to a recent survey, among first-year university students in the United States in 2012, 88%
cited
getting a better job as an important reason for attending college, and 81% listed “being very well off financially” as an “essential” or “very important” goal.
Among the objectives they considered “essential” or “very important,” 51% mentioned “improving my understanding of other countries and cultures,” 45.6%
cited
“developing a meaningful philosophy of life,” and substantial fractions listed such goals as “becoming a community leader,” “helping to promote racial understanding,” and “becoming involved in programs to clean up the environment.”
These problems have been cited, year after year, in the United Nations Development Program’s reports.
According to figures
cited
by the news organization and tallied by the International Monetary Fund, Vietnam’s exports to China totaled $50.6 billion in 2017, compared to $46.5 billion in exports to the US.
Immediately, the bombings began to be
cited
by some leaders as a call to limit constitutional rights.
The slowness of democratic states in meeting the fascist challenge in the thirties or the scourge of ethnic cleansing in the Balkans is often
cited
in this regard.
This point was driven home in a recent New York Times article, which
cited
a European Commission survey indicating that 80% of Swedes “express positive views about robots and artificial intelligence.”
Skills gaps and a lack of infrastructure are frequently
cited
as factors that hinder service-sector dynamism in Asia.
An even more spectacular example of a statistical error and sleight of hand is the widely
cited
claim of Harvard economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff that countries’ growth slows sharply if their debt/GDP ratio exceeds 90%.
In fact, the austerity boosters in the UK and Europe frequently
cited
the Alesina and Reinhart/Rogoff findings.
The institute’s director, Thomas R. Insel,
cited
DSM-5’s “lack of validity,” saying that its “diagnoses are based on a consensus about clusters of clinical symptoms, not any objective laboratory measure.”
The sources
cited
by Vanity Fair confirm that the intelligence on which the team made the decision to “go in” was impressionistic and incomplete (that is, the target, judging from the length of his shadow, was “tall and thin” like Bin Laden, but his identity was not 100% certain).
China’s Jobless Growth MiracleBEIJING – Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang recently
cited
job creation as vital to his country’s “ultimate goal of stability in growth.”
Outdoor air pollution – caused by fossil-fuel combustion, not by global warming – contributed to 30% of all deaths
cited
in the study.
Asked to name where to turn to understand what was going on in 2008, Summers
cited
three dead men, a book written 33 years ago, and another written the century before last.
Nevertheless, according to University of Chicago Law professor Cass Sunstein, Wikipedia is now
cited
four times more often than the Encyclopedia Britannica in US judicial decisions.
Bentham’s objection to “natural rights” is often
cited.
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