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121 - 140 of 222 search results for Economics test |u:www.cam.ac.uk where 17 match all words and 205 match some words.
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  2. Graduate earnings: what you study and where matters – but so does…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/graduate-earnings-what-you-study-and-where-matters-but-so-does-parents-income
    Thumbnail for Graduate earnings: what you study and where matters – but so does parents’ income | University of Cambridge 13 Apr 2016: In terms of earnings according to subject, medical students were easily the highest earners at the median ten years out, followed by those who studied economics. ... For men, median earnings for medical graduates were about £50,000 after ten years, and
  3. Major global study reveals new hypertension and blood pressure genes…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/major-global-study-reveals-new-hypertension-and-blood-pressure-genes
    Thumbnail for Major global study reveals new hypertension and blood pressure genes | University of Cambridge 12 Sep 2016: The discoveries include DNA changes in three genes that have much larger effects on blood pressure in the population than previously seen, providing new
  4. Neurons feel the force – physical interactions control brain…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/neurons-feel-the-force-physical-interactions-control-brain-development
    Thumbnail for Neurons feel the force – physical interactions control brain development | University of Cambridge 19 Sep 2016: Scientists have found that developing nerve cells are able to ‘feel’ their environment as they grow, helping them form the correct connections within the brain
  5. Oesophageal cancer treatments could be tailor-made for individual…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/oesophageal-cancer-treatments-could-be-tailor-made-for-individual-patients-study-finds
    Thumbnail for Oesophageal cancer treatments could be tailor-made for individual patients, study finds | University of Cambridge 6 Sep 2016: The trial would use a DNA test to categorise patients into one of the three groups to determine the best treatments for each group and move away from a ... For the first time we may be able to identify and test targeted treatments designed to exploit the
  6. Potential new treatment for haemophilia developed by Cambridge…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/potential-new-treatment-for-haemophilia-developed-by-cambridge-researchers
    Thumbnail for Potential new treatment for haemophilia developed by Cambridge researchers | University of Cambridge 27 Oct 2016: To test their theory, the team administered the serpin to mice with haemophilia B and clipped their tails.
  7. Opinion: Latest Brexit legal challenge will not be ‘back door’ to…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/opinion-latest-brexit-legal-challenge-will-not-be-back-door-to-single-market
    Thumbnail for Opinion: Latest Brexit legal challenge will not be ‘back door’ to Single Market | University of Cambridge 28 Nov 2016: Kenneth Armstrong. The think-tank British Influence is said to be contemplating a judicial review arguing that the UK remains a contracting party to the European Economic Area (EEA) agreement and
  8. Brains of overweight people ‘ten years older’ than lean counterparts…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/brains-of-overweight-people-ten-years-older-than-lean-counterparts-at-middle-age
    Thumbnail for Brains of overweight people ‘ten years older’ than lean counterparts at middle-age | University of Cambridge 4 Aug 2016: as measured using a standard test similar to an IQ test.
  9. Nan Shepherd celebrated: the Scottish writer who knew mountains |…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/features/nan-shepherd-celebrated-the-scottish-writer-who-knew-mountains
    Thumbnail for Nan Shepherd celebrated: the Scottish writer who knew mountains | University of Cambridge 4 May 2016: The term ‘nature writing’ didn’t exist in the 1940s when Nan Shepherd wrote The Living Mountain, a book in which she describes exploring the Cairngorm
  10. What birds' attitudes to litter tell us about their ability to…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/what-birds-attitudes-to-litter-tell-us-about-their-ability-to-adapt
    Thumbnail for What birds' attitudes to litter tell us about their ability to adapt | University of Cambridge 31 May 2016: The study led by Gates Cambridge Scholar Alison Greggor and published in the journal Animal Behaviour, shows that corvids - the family of birds which includes
  11. From robot intelligence to sex by numbers: Cambridge heads for Hay |…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/from-robot-intelligence-to-sex-by-numbers-cambridge-heads-for-hay
    Thumbnail for From robot intelligence to sex by numbers: Cambridge heads for Hay | University of Cambridge 29 Mar 2016: And theatre director and academic Zoe Svendsen and journalist and economist Paul Mason will explore the theatricality of capitalism through examining what an economic analysis of Shakespeare’s plays might tell
  12. Languages still a major barrier to global science, new research finds …

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/languages-still-a-major-barrier-to-global-science-new-research-finds
    Thumbnail for Languages still a major barrier to global science, new research finds | University of Cambridge 29 Dec 2016: The Cambridge team also conducted a litmus test of language use in science.
  13. Women and people under the age of 35 at greatest risk of anxiety |…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/women-and-people-under-the-age-of-35-at-greatest-risk-of-anxiety
    Thumbnail for Women and people under the age of 35 at greatest risk of anxiety | University of Cambridge 6 Jun 2016: The review, published today in the journal Brain and Behavior, also highlighted how anxiety disorders often provide a double burden on people experiencing
  14. Evidence of a prehistoric massacre extends the history of warfare |…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/evidence-of-a-prehistoric-massacre-extends-the-history-of-warfare
    Thumbnail for Evidence of a prehistoric massacre extends the history of warfare | University of Cambridge 20 Jan 2016: This would extend the history of the same underlying socio-economic conditions that characterise other instances of early warfare: a more settled, materially richer way of life.
  15. Willingness to give to charity depends on how inferior or superior…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/willingness-to-give-to-charity-depends-on-how-inferior-or-superior-you-feel
    Thumbnail for Willingness to give to charity depends on how inferior or superior you feel | University of Cambridge 22 Mar 2016: said. The paper is based on four separate but related experimental tests on hundreds of people, including undergraduate students as well as non-students. ... In one test, students were told that their job prospects were easier (prompting downward
  16. Rats | University of Cambridge

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/research-at-cambridge/animal-research/what-types-of-animal-do-we-use/rats
    28 Oct 2016: Rats have also been widely used to test drug efficacy and safety. ... Image: Rat taking part in test of 'checking behaviour', a key trait in OCD.
  17. Overcrowded Internet domain space is stifling demand, suggesting a…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/overcrowded-internet-domain-space-is-stifling-demand-suggesting-a-future-not-com-boom
    Thumbnail for Overcrowded Internet domain space is stifling demand, suggesting a future ‘not-com’ boom | University of Cambridge 1 Mar 2016: Dr Thies Lindenthal from the University of Cambridge, who conducted the study, says that – while the domain name market may be new – the economics is not. ... The market fits nicely onto classic models of urban economics, he says, and – as with
  18. Brain waves could help predict how we respond to general anaesthetics …

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/brain-waves-could-help-predict-how-we-respond-to-general-anaesthetics
    Thumbnail for Brain waves could help predict how we respond to general anaesthetics | University of Cambridge 14 Jan 2016: Currently, patients due to undergo surgery are given a dose of anaesthetic based on the so-called ‘Marsh model’, which uses factors such as an individual’s
  19. Researchers identify when Parkinson’s proteins become toxic to brain…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/researchers-identify-when-parkinsons-proteins-become-toxic-to-brain-cells
    Thumbnail for Researchers identify when Parkinson’s proteins become toxic to brain cells | University of Cambridge 14 Mar 2016: Researchers have used a non-invasive method of observing how the process leading to Parkinson’s disease takes place at the nanoscale, and identified the point
  20. Opinion: How fruit flies can help keep African scientists at home |…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/discussion/opinion-how-fruit-flies-can-help-keep-african-scientists-at-home
    Thumbnail for Opinion: How fruit flies can help keep African scientists at home | University of Cambridge 15 Feb 2016: The humble fruit fly is being put to an unusual use in sub-Saharan Africa: it’s being used as bait. Its intended lure? It’s hoped that the tiny creature, whose
  21. Cause of phantom limb pain in amputees, and potential treatment,…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/cause-of-phantom-limb-pain-in-amputees-and-potential-treatment-identified
    Thumbnail for Cause of phantom limb pain in amputees, and potential treatment, identified | University of Cambridge 27 Oct 2016: Researchers have discovered that a ‘reorganisation’ of the wiring of the brain is the underlying cause of phantom limb pain, which occurs in the vast majority

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