Mr. Kotkin is a presidential fellow in urban futures at Chapman University and a City Journal contributing editor.
Nor did it impact measures like stomach pain or missed days of school, according to the results published by Georgetown University researchers in a medical journal last August.
Research conducted by Purdue University and published in the journal Science have proven that students remember science topics longer through actively recalling information than through textbooks or other exercises like concept maps.
Researchers at Tufts University, writing in the journal Circulation, found that doctors were significantly more likely to report serious muscle, kidney and liver side effects during Crestor's first year on the market than they were for other cholesterol-lowering drugs, such as Lipitor, Zocor and Pravachol.
In a separate New England Journal editorial, University of Washington epidemiologist Bruce Psaty and Wake Forest University's Curt Furberg are also harshly critical of Pfizer for not publicizing details until just a few weeks ago of another study that found hints of cardiovascular problems with Celebrex in 2000.
In a 2008 Yale University report published in the International Journal of Adolescent Medicine and Health, researchers analyzed 37 studies that examined bullying and suicide among children and adolescents.
Researchers from Warwick University, writing in the British Journal of Psychology, said that dogs gave people a safe topic of conversation with which to break the ice with a stranger.
"That's very provocative, " said Dr. Allan Ropper, a neurologist at Brigham and Women's and Harvard University who wrote a commentary in the journal.
The researchers, from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston and Stanford University, published their results in the journal Nature Genetics.
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Suicide victims often have low levels of serotonin, a brain chemical that helps to regulate mood, says Morton Silverman, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Chicago and editor of the Journal of Suicide.
ECONOMIST: Why do so many young Americans end their own lives?
The EEOC is confident that its guidance will boost minority hiring, but studies published in the University of Chicago Legal Forum and the Journal of Law and Economics have found that businesses are much less likely to hire minority applicants when background checks are banned.
WSJ: James Bovard: Perform Criminal Background Checks at Your Peril
The latest edition of The Lancet medical journal reports on research from the University of Helsinki in Finland.
This paper, by researchers at the University of Georgia, was published in the journal Crop Science back in 2009.
Last week in the Journal of Experimental Biology, Stanford University biology professor Mark Denny concluded male sprinters could get the 100m record down to 9.48 and the 200m down to 18.63.
Marcia Angell, a lecturer at Harvard University, former editor of The New England Journal of Medicine and author of The Truth About Drug Companies, wrote in an e-mail that ghostwriting practices are "evidently very common" in medicine.
Ian Bremmer and Nouriel Roubini, respectively president of the Eurasia Group and a professor at New York University, pointed out in The Wall Street Journal last week that 39 of the 42 Chinese companies listed among the Fortune 500 are state-owned, and three-quarters of China's 100 largest publicly traded companies are state-controlled.
The latest findings were revealed as archaeologists published a paper on the university-led search for Richard III in the journal Antiquity.
He is a consulting professor of Computer Science at Stanford University and editor-in-chief of the Journal of the Association of Computing Machinery.
In the current issue of the journal Nature, Hod Lipson from Cornell University describes robots in his lab with a limited ability to self-reproduce.
Dr. Mark Hlatky, a professor of health policy and cardiology at Stanford University, reviewed the study for The New England Journal of Medicine.
CNN: Study: Cholesterol drugs could help those with healthy levels
Barbey, an assistant professor of medicine at Georgetown University, points to a recent study in The Journal of the American Medical Association that indicated that there may be heart problems associated with Vioxx and Celebrex.
In one recent commentary in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, University of Toronto oncologist Ian Tannock argued that a three month survival difference is the minimum clinically meaningful difference for most solid tumors.
FORBES: Real Cancer Drug Breakthrough Is Astronomical Prices
In 2011, an article in the same journal from a team led by the University of Antwerp's Koen Janssens reported that a pigment Van Gogh favoured called chrome yellow degraded when other, chromium-containing pigments were present.
BBC: Van Gogh's Flowers In A Blue Vase damage seen in X-rays
Prof Paul Sereno, from the University of Chicago, has published the analysis in the journal Zookeys.
The research team, led by Prof Irwin McLean at the University of Dundee, has published its results in the journal Nature Genetics.
Then there's the new medical study in the Journal of Occupational and Environment Medicine at Columbia University that looks into the cardiovascular health of business travellers.
Back in 2003, Kathryn North and colleagues at the University of Sydney published a paper in a leading genetics journal about a gene called ACTN3.
FORBES: Genetic tests for kids' sports abilities: hype or science?
Yet a study published recently in The Quarterly Journal of Economics by Grant Miller of Stanford University indicates that female voters did have a profound and positive impact.
FORBES: Is Occupy Wall Street The Answer To Your Money Problems?
Another recent paper from the journal Consciousness and Cognition by psychologists at the University of Illinois confirms what many have long suspected: a couple of drinks makes workers more creative.
ECONOMIST: Drinking at work: The boredom of boozeless business | The
As the Wall Street Journal recently reported, both Princeton and Harvard University researchers have concluded that students in the Milwaukee choice program have made achievement gains over their public school counterparts.
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