Researchers
in sentence
1152 examples of Researchers in a sentence
You see, you can go ahead and create new pandemics, and the
researchers
who did this were so proud of their accomplishments, they wanted to publish it openly so that everybody could see this and get access to this information.
What happens if we were to take the President's DNA, or a king or queen's, and put it out to a group of a few hundred trusted
researchers
so they could study that DNA and do penetration testing against it as a means of helping our leaders?
So as researchers, that's what we decided to find out.
Researchers
around the globe still do not know what's causing it, but what we do know is that, with the declining numbers of bees, the costs of over 130 fruit and vegetable crops that we rely on for food is going up in price.
I'm not one of the many
researchers
around the world who's looking at the effects of pesticides or diseases or habitat loss and poor nutrition on bees.
The
researchers
had to lever up their human minds with technology to dive deeper, to explore non-obvious hypotheses, and in fact, insights emerged.
Perhaps most clever of all, though, and least obvious, by flipping the data on its head, the
researchers
were able to deeply explore the coordination networks in Syria that were ultimately responsible for receiving and transporting the foreign fighters to the border.
So you could really say that
researchers
trying to understand the cause of disease without being able to have human stem cell models were much like investigators trying to figure out what had gone terribly wrong in a plane crash without having a black box, or a flight recorder.
Well, as I started to trace back our love of color, I found that some
researchers
see a connection to our evolution.
So in March, 2012, just one month ago, some
researchers
reported in the journal Nature how they had tried to replicate 53 different basic science studies looking at potential treatment targets in cancer, and out of those 53 studies, they were only able to successfully replicate six.
So in 1980, some
researchers
did a study on a drug called lorcainide, and this was an anti-arrhythmic drug, a drug that suppresses abnormal heart rhythms, and the idea was, after people have had a heart attack, they're quite likely to have abnormal heart rhythms, so if we give them a drug that suppresses abnormal heart rhythms, this will increase the chances of them surviving.
Now actually, in 1993, the
researchers
who did that 1980 study, that early study, published a mea culpa, an apology to the scientific community, in which they said, "When we carried out our study in 1980, we thought that the increased death rate that occurred in the lorcainide group was an effect of chance."
And when that responsibility is diffused between a whole network of researchers, academics, industry sponsors, journal editors, for some reason we find it more acceptable, but the effect on patients is damning.
When we see this separateness of wanting, liking and learning, this is where we find an explanatory framework for understanding what
researchers
call arousal nonconcordance.
Well, in the mid-'70s, there were not great opportunities for a bioengineer like me, especially in Italy, and so I decided, with some
researchers
from the United States and the University of Florence, to start probing the murals decorated by Vasari on the long walls of the Hall of the 500 searching for the lost Leonardo.
It turns out that over the past five years a number of
researchers
have done this, and by and large the results have all been the same, that when people are feeling disgust, their attitudes shift towards the right of the political spectrum, toward more moral conservatism as well.
Ladies and gentlemen, and more importantly, Mo Bros and Mo Sistas — (Laughter) — for the next 17 minutes, I'm going to share with you my Movember journey, and how, through that journey, we've redefined charity, we're redefining the way prostate cancer
researchers
are working together throughout the world, and I hope, through that process, that I inspire you to create something significant in your life, something significant that will go on and make this world a better place.
We literally fund hundreds if not thousands of institutions and
researchers
around the world, and when we looked at this more recently, we realized there's a real lack of collaboration going on even within institutions, let alone nationally, let alone globally, and this is not unique to prostate cancer.
So they identified that as a priority, and then they've got and recruited now 300
researchers
from around the world that are studying that topic, essentially the same topic.
A couple of
researchers
asked a few hundred people to read a scientific article.
Here's a study published by a team of
researchers
as an op-ed in The New York Times.
The high prevalence of HIV drives
researchers
to conduct research that is sometimes scientifically acceptable but on many levels ethically questionable.
Now,
researchers
need to make every effort to ensure that an intervention that has been shown to be beneficial during a clinical trial is accessible to the participants of the trial once the trial has been completed.
And ever since those results came out, policymakers, educators,
researchers
from around the world have tried to figure out what's behind the success of those systems.
Researchers
at Emory gave children a simple "what do you know" test.
So the more people experiment with materials, the more
researchers
are willing to share their research, and manufacturers their knowledge, the better chances we have to create technologies that truly serve us all.
Francis Collins: So what would you like to say to
researchers
here in the auditorium and others listening to this?
SB: Well, research on progeria has come so far in less than 15 years, and that just shows the drive that
researchers
can have to get this far, and it really means a lot to myself and other kids with progeria, and it shows that if that drive exists, anybody can cure any disease, and hopefully progeria can be cured in the near future, and so we can eliminate those 4,000 diseases that Francis was talking about.
Third, the idea of, it takes
researchers
to produce
researchers.
And then finally, if you've got the community and you've got the high expectations and you've got
researchers
producing researchers, you have to have people who are willing as faculty to get involved with those students, even in the classroom.
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