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1 mong the applicants (i.e., life sciences and social sciences).
2 Population heterogeneity is ubiquitous in social science.
3 ervation, and 36% of intervention studies in social science.
4 gic interactions in evolutionary biology and social science.
5 evelopment of the new field of computational social science.
6 e to, and potentially transform, research in social science.
7 f the most reproduced findings in health and social science.
8 , computer science, information science, and social science.
9 ally all fields of science, engineering, and social science.
10 s, political polarization, and computational social science.
11 coming the most prominent unifying theory of social science.
12 modeling is a revolutionary development for social science.
13 provides a causal test for a cornerstone of social science.
14 to better, more replicable, and more useful social science.
15 rs are used in many fields of biomedical and social science.
16 ta analysis including biology, medicine, and social science.
17 the behavior of their peers, are central to social science.
18 ics, biology, neuroscience, engineering, and social science.
19 We also examined NIEHS programs that foster social science.
20 nonconformity of academics and the ethos of social science.
21 model by selected examples from biology, and social science.
22 servatives are reluctant to enter the modern social sciences.
23 ll as to similar applications throughout the social sciences.
24 s interested in joining the evolutionary and social sciences.
25 cally addressed by the arts, humanities, and social sciences.
26 th broad implications for the biological and social sciences.
27 is of major interest across the natural and social sciences.
28 actional video-analysis developed within the social sciences.
29 is a fundamental question in biological and social sciences.
30 SWB) is a major topic of research across the social sciences.
31 sing from the integration of the natural and social sciences.
32 t power-law distributions in the natural and social sciences.
33 ngest standing debates in the biological and social sciences.
34 puzzle for both evolutionary biology and the social sciences.
35 pen access to data from the earth, life, and social sciences.
36 is an enduring conundrum in biology and the social sciences.
37 rally accepted empirical regularities in the social sciences.
38 uld find applications across the natural and social sciences.
39 in network research across the physical and social sciences.
40 tion is a central problem in biology and the social sciences.
41 pervasive across the physical, natural, and social sciences.
42 undamental importance for the biological and social sciences.
43 onomics, and the tools of the behavioral and social sciences.
44 of the most widely studied constructs in the social sciences.
45 square tests and the Statistical Package for Social Sciences.
46 d on key human-environment theories from the social sciences.
47 vance causal knowledge more generally in the social sciences.
48 er Science, Social Physics and Computational Social Sciences.
49 red that integrates ecological, economic and social sciences.
50 ad importance across the physical, life, and social sciences.
51 ionary biology to other fields including the social sciences.
52 phy, as well as its lasting influence on the social sciences.
53 in intensity over time, particularly in the social sciences.
54 psychology is a foundational question of the social sciences.
55 nd for future research in the biomedical and social sciences.
56 ublic health, mental health, and medical and social sciences.
57 covariates using Statistical Package for the Social Sciences.
58 complex data, in the sciences as well as the social sciences.
59 o build bridges between neuroscience and the social sciences.
60 earch spanning the physical, biological, and social sciences.
62 t of institutional structures within states, social science analysis has focused on autochthonous fac
66 undertaken for 2 journals ('Midwifery' and 'Social Science and Medicine') covering a 3 year time per
67 in injury as well as in behavioral genetics, social science and neuroimaging techniques should contri
68 ck faculty across eight disciplines in STEM, social science and the humanities, we show that faculty
70 ge arguments about the value of genetics for social science and with it the claimed necessity of inco
71 udy of mediation has a long tradition in the social sciences and a relatively more recent one in epid
72 ter University, Northern Arizona University, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canad
73 ence; physical sciences and engineering; and social sciences and humanities) and 817 meso-level field
77 ost Hoc Test through Statistical Package for Social Sciences and it is observed that CuO doped Graphe
80 e predominantly developed in the humanities, social sciences and public health to the fields of natur
81 career progression at the 15 highest ranked social sciences and public health universities in the wo
82 pplications in data sciences, life sciences, social sciences and technology, and hence, motivates alt
84 increasingly important in the humanities and social sciences and there is a growing use of narrative
86 ication efforts that integrate epidemiology, social science, and economics as tools to target and mot
89 implications in other areas, like economics, social sciences, and biology, where node attributes can
91 into physical sciences, biological sciences, social sciences, and further subtopic classifications wi
92 million papers across the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities reveals a number of unde
93 g 36 participating journals in the sciences, social sciences, and humanities, we report on the effect
94 ifferentiation is a fundamental topic of the social sciences, and its prehistoric origins in Europe a
96 these results for evolutionary biology, the social sciences, and the use of animal models in underst
98 f efficient decision making developed in the social sciences are beginning to be used to describe the
102 to growth and consequences of ignoring them, social sciences are necessary to diagnose societal mecha
103 iation analysis used in epidemiology and the social sciences are valid, and they provide alternative
104 ance and ability is a central concern in the social sciences: Are the most successful much more able
106 s are detailed for sciences and engineering, social sciences, arts and humanities, and patents, sugge
107 widely used in the biological, physical, and social sciences as a concise mathematical representation
110 ment in modern science, and has enriched the social sciences, biology, physics, and computer science.
112 as been lagging behind the psychological and social sciences but has seen a massive surge in recent y
114 a, along with current recommendations in the social sciences, can be leveraged to promote more accura
115 s combine to provide foundations for a "new" social science centered on formal modeling not requiring
116 databases and the Science Citation Index and Social Science Citation Index were searched combining te
117 Information Center, Science Citation Index, Social Science Citation Index, Cumulative Index to Nursi
118 tium; CINAHL; ASSIA; Science Citation Index; Social Science Citation Index; Cochrane Database of Syst
119 INFO, EMBASE, POPLINE, PubMed, ERIC, and the Social Sciences Citation Index were conducted from Janua
120 led Trials, Science Citation Index Expanded, Social Sciences Citation Index, African Index Medicus, a
121 Med, EMBASE, the Science Citation Index, the Social Sciences Citation Index, Conference Proceedings C
126 f social science research to investigate how social science contributes to environmental health.
127 rrent antisocial behavior is integral to the social sciences, criminal justice procedures, and the ef
128 increases in the availability of informative social science data are making dramatic progress possibl
132 s were identified via electronic medical and social science databases from inception to April 2006 (P
133 0 datasets curated within one of the largest social science databases, Interuniversity Consortium for
134 hat an understanding of psychology and other social science disciplines can inform the effectiveness
135 ough political science and other neighboring social science disciplines offer insights into these pec
136 erature in political science and neighboring social science disciplines shows that prevailing assumpt
137 y are pitted against the insights from other social science disciplines, and (b) are less pressing th
143 ides a foundation for merging ecological and social science epistemologies to define and integrate cu
146 ial disclosures from all clinical, basic, or social science faculty who were principal investigators)
148 ve seen no evidence to support the idea that social science fields with more politically diverse work
151 undation of China, UN Population Fund, China Social Sciences Foundation, and Hong Kong Research Grant
152 lation models have a promising future in the social sciences, from political science to anthropology,
153 rsities (2011jdhz62), the Shaanxi Provincial Social Science Fund (10E066), and the Harvard Medical Sc
154 bacco and Genetics (TAG) Consortium, and the Social Science Genetic Association Consortium (SSGAC), a
155 birth weight combined with results from the Social Science Genetic Association Consortium study of 1
156 unds, including various medical specialties, social science, genetic counseling, and consumer advocac
159 ect in Akwesasne in order to demonstrate how social science has enhanced environmental health science
162 Conjecture about the weak replicability in social sciences has made scholars eager to quantify the
163 his phenomenon-which is termed 'overflow' in social science-has important implications for the integr
164 ories of epidemiology, health behaviour, and social science have changed the understanding of HIV pre
165 dynamics of animal societies, researchers in social sciences have been challenged by the complexity a
167 imply that various leading approaches in the social sciences have not adequately conceptualized how e
168 n decision making in economics, medicine and social science, have the potential to transform the scop
170 iew, I discuss four areas in which empirical social science helps clarify intuitive but sometimes fau
172 interactions are modeled in game theory and social science; however, inferring automatic imitation r
174 ealthline, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS), Eldis, British Library for Devel
176 w addresses issues central to debates in the social sciences in a far more sophisticated manner than
177 dly expanded to include a broad range of the social sciences in addition to basic scientists interest
179 second annual meeting of the Partnership for Social Sciences in Malaria Control was held at the Londo
180 -2017), PsycINFO (2012-2017) and the Applied Social Sciences Index (2012-2017), CNKI (2012-2017), Wan
181 searched MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts, Criminal Justice Da
182 atabases (MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts, Criminal Justice Da
184 rther integrate and translate behavioral and social sciences into oral health research, oral health p
185 s Perspective, we propose the integration of social sciences into the three pillars of academic medic
186 hat the increasingly computational nature of social science is beginning to reverse this traditional
188 causal inference with observational data in social science is impossible without strong assumptions.
193 nt problem within both epidemiology and many social sciences is to break down the effect of a given t
194 A long-standing problem in biological and social sciences is to understand the conditions required
195 type of solution, recently recognized in the social sciences, is evolutionarily stable and evolves in
199 sis techniques used in the epidemiologic and social science literatures to be valid, an assumption of
200 eory has become important in the humanities, social sciences, medicine, and psychotherapy for underst
201 f conflict and displacement-we highlight how social science methods can uncover the lived experiences
202 olutionary psychology (EP) with the standard social science model; however, since its inception, trad
203 claimed necessity of incorporating PGSs into social science models as measures of genetic influences.
204 of marketing, research in the psychology and social science of gift receipt and giving indicates that
205 Program of China, Project of Humanities and Social Sciences of the Ministry of Education in China.
206 scusses the problem, especially acute in the social sciences, of "operationalizing" intuitive concept
207 n of intersection between psychology and the social sciences, on the one hand, and computer science a
208 based on evidence-based publications in the social sciences or education research literature, the or
209 published in all disciplines of natural and social sciences over a time span longer than a century.
210 e agriculture are associated with particular social science paradigms: biotechnology has its foundati
211 ably one of the most important themes in the social sciences, permeating all aspects of human social
214 systems in chemistry, biology, finance, and social sciences present emerging features that are not e
219 rch spectrum from biomedical sciences to the social sciences, public health, epidemiology, cost-effec
223 cioeconomic conditions on population health, social sciences remain marginal to academic medicine.
224 elected officials alike, research across the social sciences repeatedly concludes that Americans are
226 ical Research Council (MRC) and Economic and Social Science Research Council (ESRC) (MR/N024397/1).
232 in which I advocate flipping the traditional social science research model to an approach that, from
233 behaviors may reveal the greatest payoff to social science research of all agent-based modeling effo
235 re among the most frequently used sources in social science research, and they are an essential tool
236 d to train these tools can negatively impact social science research-as well as a range of other chal
238 ed, including not only epidemiology but also social sciences, research and development, diplomacy, lo
240 of epidemiology, interventions research and social sciences researchers are often faced with the cha
241 n network analysis of "big data" sets in the social sciences, revealing non-obvious patterns of organ
242 effects of selection and influence is one of social science's greatest unsolved puzzles: Do people be
244 s in which PSID's history reflects shifts in social science scholarship and funding priorities over h
245 c analysis of the collected data, drawing on social science scholarship on collective action and a po
247 eption and Social Reality, I argued that the social science scholarship on social perception and inte
248 ibutes to our understanding in computational social science, social media analytics, and marketing ap
252 d analysed using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences software, with statistical significance
253 were analyzed using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) 20 version computer software.
256 were analyzed in IBM-Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS), with p<0.05 considered significa
259 nd analyses of these objects coming from the social sciences, statistics, probability and physics com
260 eas and developments in both the natural and social sciences suggest that leadership and followership
261 many areas of the cognitive, behavioral, and social sciences supports this basic model, including lab
262 We leveraged Time-sharing Experiments in the Social Sciences (TESS), a National Science Foundation-sp
264 ber of statistical analyses developed in the social sciences that are increasingly being applied to a
265 re we extend new techniques from physics and social sciences that estimate modularity on networks to
266 a distinct empirical methodology within the social sciences that has the potential to deepen our und
267 nections between philosophy, psychology, the social sciences, the humanities, and studies of disorder
268 distant past are fertile ground for testing social science theories of education and social mobility
269 's significance for psychological processes: social science theories that link the individual and soc
270 uman behavior provides a novel vision of how social science theory can inform large data set analysis
272 rgue that, through the lens of computational social science, this ability can be used to advance rese
274 mics uses evidence from psychology and other social sciences to create a precise and fruitful alterna
275 approach brings together the biological and social sciences to develop an integrative, collaborative
276 nd conjoint analyses, are widely used in the social sciences to elicit stated preferences and study h
277 atest statistical tools from ecology and the social sciences to evaluate the potential effects of env
278 Assortativity is a network property used in social sciences to identify factors affecting how people
280 health practice has emerged that engages the social sciences to paint a full picture of the consequen
281 paper draws on theoretical insights from the social sciences to show how incorporating knowledge brok
283 llection of articles draws on biological and social sciences to suggest changes in how ocean science
284 Nevertheless, an imperative to unite all social science under an evolutionary framework risks tur
285 iplinary field in which psychology and other social sciences unite with computer science and related
286 wever, while many estimation problems in the social sciences use prediction as an intermediate step,
287 search literature, across the behavioral and social sciences, uses information on individuals' subjec
289 the help of the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences version 20.0 software program (IBM Corp.
295 s working at the interface of biological and social science, we offer a candid discussion of the less
296 4 papers spanning five decades from both the social sciences (Web of Science) and the physical scienc
297 ethics, law, obstetrics, pediatrics, and the social sciences were invited to join the Working Group o
298 the exclusive province of the humanities and social sciences, where anthropologists, historians, ling
299 ong researchers from across the physical and social sciences who share a common interest in understan
300 r in disciplines ranging from biology to the social sciences, yet they are notoriously difficult to s