Example sentences of "these findings " in BNC.

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1 What I want to emphasize here is the impact of these findings for a phenomenologist .
2 These findings broadly echo those of Gunter , Svennevig , and Wober ( 1986 , pp.98–9 ) , whose study of the 1983 election campaign showed that ‘ objectively measured knowledge was significantly correlated with interest in political discussion programmes both on radio and television , but with only one news-consumption variable — claimed viewing of television news ’ ( italics added ) .
3 Somewhat in contrast to these findings about Thatcher and Kinnock , the visibility of all ‘ other ’ Conservative and Labour politicians ( taken in each case as a collective , unspecified ‘ other ’ ) became more predictable as the election approached .
4 Somewhat in contrast to these findings about Thatcher and Kinnock , the visibility of all ‘ other ’ Conservative and Labour politicians , taken in each case as a collective ‘ other ’ , became more predictable as the election approached .
5 All of these findings remained broadly similar irrespective of whether we analysed total warmth towards parties and party leaders , total ratings for the parties ' performance on issues , or total inclinations towards voting for all three leading parties ( Table 8.8 ) .
6 While these findings are plausible enough they depend upon very small subsamples of our panel , since we have to categorize voters by their choice of paper and their reliance on the press rather than television while discarding the large numbers who relied equally on both television and the press .
7 Do these findings , taken together , indicate that the SCN are the site of the body clock ?
8 As a result of these findings Glaxo stopped clinical trials comparing ranitidine with omeprazole for ethical reasons .
9 Underlying some of these findings , however , is the further complication that the specialist team explicitly seeks to operate a policy of high throughput and speedy processing and closure .
10 These findings cover a broad range of information and issues , including identification of factors that have contributed to the widespread use of paraprofessionals around the world , detailed descriptions of their roles and utilization patterns , the nature of their relationships with professional colleagues , the types of training they receive , and the career paths open to them .
11 In light of these findings , we suggest that social work needs to move away from profession-centred approaches to education and practice and towards a reconceptualization of its place in social welfare and social development efforts .
12 One possible explanation for these findings is that people take time to adjust to living in residential homes .
13 There is again therefore a sympathetic attitude running through these findings , with some uncertainty about the danger element , but no outright antagonism or opposition to the possibilities .
14 These findings corroborate other studies as well as date collected by agencies in the course of dealing with homeless people . ’
15 Aggregate data do not , of course , allow us to draw any inferences about the behaviour of individual authorities which give rise to these findings , particularly where so few cases are often involved .
16 Interpretation of these findings is not straightforward .
17 The explanation for these findings offered by Pearce and Hall ( 1980 ) was that the associability of a stimulus is determined by how well the stimulus predicts its consequences , declining to zero as the CS — consequence association rises to asymptote .
18 Experiments by Murdock ( 1958 ) and Reese ( 1961 ) have confirmed these findings using a within-subject design .
19 We can conclude that an associative mechanism is required in order to explain these findings .
20 In other reports , however , these findings are actually incorporated into a project or programme — although whether those parts of the project are actually implemented is another matter .
21 These findings are replicated by the recent local crime surveys , notably those in Merseyside and Islington , which have constituted the empirical core of the ‘ New Left realism ’ in criminology ( Kinsey , 1985 ; Jones et al . ,
22 These findings are being applied in a systematic way to help managers influence the behaviour of their employees .
23 There is no serious argument against these findings .
24 Knowledge of these findings made a similar study , but with a focus solely upon mentally frail elderly people , an interesting proposition .
25 Other later short-term studies have confirmed these findings ( Tamborlane , 1979 ; Dunn et al , 198 1 ) , and deterioration of glycaemic control has also been shown to elevate lipid and lipoprotein levels ( Sosenko et al , 1980 ; Lopes-Virella et al , 1981 ) .
26 Although there are several possible explanations for these findings as reviewed by Skaer ( 1981 ) , it is possible that some α-granules may remain refractory to secretory stimuli .
27 These findings have stimulated an increasing amount of research into the mechanisms involved yet the pathogenesis of thrombus formation remains to be clarified .
28 Support for this sequence of events has come from animal models of atherosclerosis and studies using cell-culture techniques , and as Born ( 1983 ) has pointed out caution is necessary in translating these findings to the human situation .
29 These findings have led to the suggestion that altered endothelial function without endothelial loss may be important in permitting platelet thrombus formation .
30 No details were given of the glycaemic control or other metabolic parameters of the two groups of diabetics studied ( Davis et al , 1982 ) , and it is difficult to account for these findings .
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