Results 241 to 250 of about 434,490 (300)
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Productivity does not equal usefulness

Scientometrics, 2018
For a recent commentary in Nature, Ioannidis et al. (Nature 561(7722):167–169, 2018) searched the Scopus database and identified those “hyperprolific” authors who have published more than one paper every 5 days. The 265 authors who belong to this very productive class contribute disproportionately to the archive.
Lutz Bornmann, Alexander Tekles
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“Does Contain” vs. “Does Not Contain”: Does it Matter which GMO Label is Used?

European Journal of Law and Economics, 2003
Un cadre d'analyse dans lequel les consommateurs sont imparfaitement informés sur le contenu des produits est utilisé pour étudier les effets d'un système d'information publique. Bien qu'un label avec les mentions "contient des organismes génétiquement modifiés" (OGM) ou un label "ne contient pas d'OGM" informent les consommateurs, ces labels n'ont pas
Crespi, J.M., Marette, Stephan
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Does the use of indirect calorimetry change outcome in the ICU? Yes it does

Current Opinion in Clinical Nutrition & Metabolic Care, 2018
To review the recent findings on metabolic monitoring and possible beneficial effects of an adequate nutrition therapy, based on indirect calorimetry as the golden standard to predict energy expenditure.in the last decades, major steps are taken in the field of metabolism and nutrition, evolving from nutrition as a baseline support to a therapeutic ...
Elisabeth, De Waele   +2 more
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What does it mean for a system to be useful?

Proceedings of the 2014 conference on Designing interactive systems, 2014
HCI has always focused on designing useful and usable interactive systems, but usability has dominated the field while research on usefulness has been largely absent. With user experience (UX) emerging as a dominant paradigm, it is necessary to consider the meaning of usefulness for modern computing contexts.
Craig M. MacDonald, Michael E. Atwood
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What Nietzsche Does and Does Not Teach Us

Politics, Religion & Ideology, 2018
Friedrich Nietzsche left many intellectual legacies, but few are as ambiguous as his thinking about politics.
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What History Does to Us

2023
This chapter shows that this very White idea of lyric is in fact a raced illusion that was composed in response to Black and Indigenous figures in late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century American poetics. The chapter highlights that it was also an illusion firmly grounded in a history of American lyricization in which Black poets framed it as a ...
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The FDA Does Not Approve Uses of Drugs

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1984
As a reviewer of medical manuscripts and reader of published articles, I find it frustrating to continue to find reference to "Food and Drug Administration (FDA)—approved uses of drugs"—or worse, allegations that certain uses are "not approved." For nearly two decades, through published articles, speeches, and personal communications, I have cautioned ...
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DOE pushes for useful quantum computing

Science, 2018
As quantum supremacy nears, so does a desire to apply machines to science problems.
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Does Feminism Convince Us

Research on Social Work Practice, 2016
A response to the critique of where social work research currently stands, as put forth by Garrow and Hasenfeld, and their position that social work research should be undertaken from a feminist perspective. It is important to remember the origins and foundation of feminist thought and to approach research and practice with a full understanding of ...
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