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Bullet projectile and case feeding device

The present invention relates to a bullet-projectile and case feeding device, characterized in that it comprises a drum (1) internally provided with at least two compartments: a concentric inner compartment (6), and another outer compartment (7), wherein the compartments (6, 7) are suitable for housing cases or bullets-projectiles. The bottom of the drum (1) has an inclination of essentially 45° to 70°, the compartments are provided with: first housings (8) and second housings (9) forming positioning means for positioning the bullets-projectiles and cases, and one inner tube (3) and one outer tube (4) per compartment for feeding the assembly press, said bullets-projectiles and cases being moved in a disorderly manner when the drum rotates (1) and accessing said inner tube (3) and outer tube (4). The device is used in a feeding method for feeding bullets and cases to an assembly press and in a case annealing method.




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Direct drive cloth feeding mechanism of sewing machine

A direct drive cloth feeding mechanism of a sewing machine includes a cloth feeding structure, a vertical driving structure and a direction adjustment structure. The cloth feeding structure includes a swing shaft and a cloth feeding teeth member. The vertical driving structure includes an eccentric shaft connected to the cloth feeding teeth member, and an eccentric cam disposed on the eccentric shaft. The direction adjustment structure includes a stepping motor, and a rotating shaft driven by the stepping motor to rotate and switch between a first position and a second position. When the stepping motor directly drives the rotating shaft to the first position, the cloth feeding teeth member performs a forward feeding process. When the stepping motor directly drives the rotating shaft to the second position, the cloth feeding teeth member performs a reverse feeding process.




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Method and apparatus for feeding a laundry article to a mangle or the like

Laundry articles are spread out by input machines in front of a feed conveyor which feeds the spread-out laundry article to a mangle. The respective laundry article is previously fed by a transfer device to a draw-on device onto which the laundry article is drawn. In known input machines, relatively complicated transfer devices are provided. According to the invention, the transfer device is provided with a rectilinear conveying section ascending to the draw-on device. The laundry article is thereby transported to the draw-on device by the transfer device in the plane in which it is transferred to the transfer device. Such a transfer device needs to have only a simple set-up. Since the laundry article remains in the plane in which it is fed to the transfer device, it can be brought by the transfer device into a favorable initial position for being drawn reliably onto the draw-on device.




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Medicine feeding device, and medicine counting device

A medicine counting device including a rotary container broadening radially in an upward direction and configured to rotate around an axis of the rotary container; a guide member fixed with a predetermined gap on a top surface side of the rotary container, spirally extending from the central portion towards an outer circumference of the rotary container, and configured to guide a medicine moved by a rotation of the rotary container from the central portion towards the outer circumference of the rotary container. The medicine counting device further includes a detector provided outside of the rotary container and a regulator configured to feed a medicine having been moved to the outer circumference and being in contact with the guide member towards the detector but returns the medicines which are not being in contact with the guide member to the central portion side of the rotary container by overpassing the guide member.




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DEVICE AND METHOD FOR DETECTING WALL ABRASION OF SOLID FILLER FEEDING WELL

Disclosed is a device for detecting wall abrasion of a solid-filling feeding well and a detection method thereof. The device comprises a well wall abrasion detector, a horizontal displacement meter, a vertical displacement monitor, and a limit guide rod. One end of the limit guide rod is connected to the well wall abrasion detector. The signal output terminal of the well wall abrasion detector is connected to the signal input terminal of the horizontal displacement meter, and the other end of the limit guide rod passes through the vertical displacement monitor for slidable setting. This disclosure mainly utilizes a resistance strain displacement sensor to detect the abrasion and deformation degree of the well wall, determines the position of damages with the vertical displacement monitor, and draws wall abrasion curves by using the obtained data. The device provided is easy to use, has low cost, has high reliability, and can effectively detect the wall abrasion condition of a solid-filling feeding well, thereby providing a basis for ensuring the working efficiency of the feeding well.




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TSI Live: Feeding Austin’s Hungry

In this special edition of Views & Brews, KUT’s Rebecca McInroy joins the hosts of The Secret Ingredient, Raj Patel and Tom Philpott, as they talk with guests Edwin Marty, the Food Policy Manager for the City of Austin, and Erin Lentz, from the LBJ School of Public Affairs, to ask: Why are people starving in one of the...




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‘Just glad we can help’: Free Idaho potatoes are feeding people at home, across U.S.


Like many farmers and ranchers in Idaho, Ryan Cranney began feeling the effects of COVID-19’s disruption in the restaurant supply chain in mid-March. What was supposed to be a good year for Cranney Farms’ crops quickly turned into a surplus he couldn’t sell. That is when he took to Facebook and put out a call […]




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Sea lion ends up in humpback's mouth in remarkable feeding frenzy mix-up

A baleen whale off California almost swallowed a sea lion that got in the way during an anchovy feeding frenzy, in an encounter rarely seen let alone caught on film.




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Blue Mountains charity feeding 18,000 daily

A charity in the Blue Mountains is feeding 18,000 people a week during the COVID 19 crisis.




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Hand feeding cotton seed




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Breastfeeding used as a survival tool by Australopithecus africanus, our early human ancestor

How scientists "read" two-million-year-old teeth and uncovered the hidden breastfeeding patterns of our ancient ancestors.



  • ABC North Coast
  • northcoast
  • adelaide
  • Health:Reproduction and Contraception:Breastfeeding
  • Science and Technology:Anthropology and Sociology:All
  • Science and Technology:Evolution:All
  • Science and Technology:Palaeontology:All
  • Science and Technology:Research:All
  • Australia:NSW:Lismore 2480
  • Australia:NSW:Southern Cross University
  • Coffs Harbour 2450
  • Australia:QLD:University of Queensland 4072
  • Australia:SA:Adelaide University 5005
  • Australia:VIC:Monash University 3800
  • South Africa:All:All

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Fitzroy River humpback dolphins use strand feeding

Researchers make some interesting discoveries about Fitzroy River humpback dolphins.




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Farmers feeding the nation struggle to feed themselves as donations dry up

While farmers are keeping the nation fed during the coronavirus lockdown, many struggle to put food on their own tables. The ABC joined a charity travelling around hard-hit rural areas helping farmers through the tough times.





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From feeding goats to fighting virus

Chris Bishop's career as an epidemiologist had slowed down, allowing her to spend time on her farm, until the coronavirus pandemic was declared.






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Townsville Mayor says feeding people staying in parks encourages them to stay there






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HSBC & TEDS Annual Feeding Programme

In partnership with The Eliza DoLittle Society [TEDS], an estimated 400 staff members of HSBC Bermuda are getting set to volunteer to help cook hot meals at St. John’s Church Hall and distribute grocery hampers to members of the community. A spokesperson said, “In partnership with The Eliza DoLittle Society, HSBC Bermuda’s workforce strive to […]

(Click to read the full article)




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Kenan Thompson, Billy Crystal, Tiffany Haddish and Byron Allen to Co-Host Two-Hour "Feeding America Comedy Festival" on NBC

Will Smith, Will Ferrell, Wanda Sykes, Stephen Colbert and Colin Quinn are among the latest additions.




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Popular pesticide throws off birds’ feeding and migration schedules

Delays during migration can imperil birds’ chances of a successful breeding season.




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27,525 pounds of carrots a day: How L.A. schools are feeding the masses

Coronavirus: While food banks struggle, L.A.'s schools are feeding the hungry




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Surviving the Shutdown: Brodard Restaurant keeps feeding Little Saigon

Sales are down at one of Orange County's most famous Vietnamese restaurants, but Brodard is adapting to survive




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Lactation vs Formula Feeding: Insulin, Glucose and Fatty Acid Metabolism During the Postpartum Period

Milk production may involve a transient development of insulin resistance in non-mammary tissues to support redistribution of maternal macronutrients to match the requirements of the lactating mammary gland. In the present study, adipose and liver metabolic responses were measured in the fasting state and during a 2-step (10 and 20 mU/m2/min) hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp with stable isotopes, in 6-week postpartum women who were lactating (n=12) or formula-feeding (n=6) their infants and who were closely matched for baseline characteristics (e.g., parity, body composition, intrahepatic lipid). When controlling for the low insulin concentrations of both groups, the lactating women exhibited a fasting rate of endogenous glucose production (EGP) that was 2.6-fold greater, and a lipolysis rate that was 2.3-fold greater than the formula-feeding group. During the clamp, the groups exhibited similar suppression rates of EGP and lipolysis. In the lactating women only, higher prolactin concentrations were associated with greater suppression rates of lipolysis, lower intrahepatic lipid and plasma triacylglycerol concentrations. These data suggest that whole-body alterations in glucose transport may be organ specific and facilitate nutrient partitioning during lactation. Recapitulating a shift toward noninsulin-mediated glucose uptake could be an early postpartum strategy to enhance lactation success in women at risk for delayed onset of milk production.




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Impaired Metabolic Flexibility to High-Fat Overfeeding Predicts Future Weight Gain in Healthy Adults

The ability to switch fuels for oxidation in response to changes in macronutrient composition of diet (metabolic flexibility) may be informative of individuals’ susceptibility to weight gain. Seventy-nine healthy, weight-stable participants underwent 24-h assessments of energy expenditure and respiratory quotient (RQ) in a whole-room calorimeter during energy balance (EBL) (50% carbohydrate, 30% fat) and then during 24-h fasting and three 200% overfeeding diets in a crossover design. Metabolic flexibility was defined as the change in 24-h RQ from EBL during fasting and standard overfeeding (STOF) (50% carbohydrate, 30% fat), high-fat overfeeding (HFOF) (60% fat, 20% carbohydrate), and high-carbohydrate overfeeding (HCOF) (75% carbohydrate, 5% fat) diets. Free-living weight change was assessed after 6 and 12 months. Compared with EBL, RQ decreased on average by 9% during fasting and by 4% during HFOF but increased by 4% during STOF and by 8% during HCOF. A smaller decrease in RQ, reflecting a smaller increase in lipid oxidation rate, during HFOF but not during the other diets predicted greater weight gain at both 6 and 12 months. An impaired metabolic flexibility to acute HFOF can identify individuals prone to weight gain, indicating that an individual’s capacity to oxidize dietary fat is a metabolic determinant of weight change.




feeding

Digestion and indigestion : proper and improper feeding in health and disease / by A. Lockhart Gillespie.

Edinburgh : MacNiven & Wallace, 1896.




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The growing role of fish in feeding the world

People have never consumed so much fish or depended so greatly on the sector for their well-being as they do today. Did you know?  Fish is one of the most-traded food commodities worldwide, worth almost US$130 billion in 2012 – a figure that will probably continue to increase. World per capita apparent fish consumption increased from an average of 9.9 kg in the [...]




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Feeding Baby

feeding baby 1




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Penn State nutritionist shares tips for feeding kids while stuck at home

Balancing finicky kid appetites with proper nutrition can be a challenge in the best of times. But now, with the majority of schools and day cares closed across Pennsylvania, many parents working from home, and schedules thrown in disarray, it may seem downright impossible. A Penn State nutritionist offers tips for feeding kids during stressful times.




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Pediatricians Are Perfectly Positioned to Help Mothers Reach Their Breastfeeding Goals




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Evidence-Based Updates on the First Week of Exclusive Breastfeeding Among Infants >=35 Weeks

The nutritional and immunologic properties of human milk, along with clear evidence of dose-dependent optimal health outcomes for both mothers and infants, provide a compelling rationale to support exclusive breastfeeding. US women increasingly intend to breastfeed exclusively for 6 months. Because establishing lactation can be challenging, exclusivity is often compromised in hopes of preventing feeding-related neonatal complications, potentially affecting the continuation and duration of breastfeeding. Risk factors for impaired lactogenesis are identifiable and common. Clinicians must be able to recognize normative patterns of exclusive breastfeeding in the first week while proactively identifying potential challenges. In this review, we provide new evidence from the past 10 years on the following topics relevant to exclusive breastfeeding: milk production and transfer, neonatal weight and output assessment, management of glucose and bilirubin, immune development and the microbiome, supplementation, and health system factors. We focus on the early days of exclusive breastfeeding in healthy newborns ≥35 weeks’ gestation managed in the routine postpartum unit. With this evidence-based clinical review, we provide detailed guidance in identifying medical indications for early supplementation and can inform best practices for both birthing facilities and providers.




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Early or Delayed Enteral Feeding for Preterm Growth-Restricted Infants: A Randomized Trial

Preterm, growth-restricted infants are at high risk of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC). NEC occurs most frequently in infants who have received enteral feeds. It is common practice to delay introduction of enteral feeds in these infants.

Early introduction of enteral feeds results in earlier achievement of full enteral feeding. Early feeding is not associated with a higher risk of NEC. Delayed feeding is associated with a higher risk of cholestasis. (Read the full article)




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Baby-Friendly Hospital Practices and Meeting Exclusive Breastfeeding Intention

Most mothers in the United States do not meet recommendations for exclusive breastfeeding; however, little is known about how long mothers intend to exclusively breastfeed or how hospital practices affect achieving these intentions.

Most mothers who want to exclusively breastfeed intend to do so for ≥3 months, but the majority are not meeting their intended duration. Mothers are more likely to achieve their intended duration when their infant is not supplemented in the hospital. (Read the full article)




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Food Insecurity and Obesogenic Maternal Infant Feeding Styles and Practices in Low-Income Families

Food insecurity has been linked to childhood obesity in a number of studies. Few studies have explored potential pathways through which food insecurity is related to child weight, especially in low-income families with young infants.

We found that food insecurity was related to maternal controlling feeding styles and concerns about the infants’ future weight. Early obesity prevention should aim to decrease food insecurity and to reduce controlling feeding styles in families who remain food insecure. (Read the full article)




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An Evaluation of Mother-Centered Anticipatory Guidance to Reduce Obesogenic Infant Feeding Behaviors

Childhood obesity occurs in 20% of children before they enter kindergarten. Treatment is difficult, making prevention desirable, but little is known about effective methods using anticipatory guidance to prevent obesity in pediatric primary care.

This study provides a comparison of 2 approaches versus usual care using anticipatory guidance to improve infant feeding during the first year of life, and demonstrates positive specific feeding behavior differences at 1 year in the intervention groups. (Read the full article)




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Breastfeeding, Childhood Milk Consumption, and Onset of Puberty

Early life nutrition may program pubertal timing. Limited evidence suggests breastfeeding is associated with later puberty and childhood milk consumption with earlier puberty; whether these observations are biologically mediated or confounded by socioeconomic position is unclear.

In a developed non-Western setting with little socioeconomic patterning of pubertal timing, neither breastfeeding nor childhood milk consumption was associated with pubertal timing, suggesting nutritional exposures during potentially critical periods may not have long-term effects on rates of maturation. (Read the full article)




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Bottle-feeding and the Risk of Pyloric Stenosis

Pyloric stenosis is the most common condition requiring surgery in infants. It is typically not present at birth but develops within the first weeks after birth. The etiology is largely unknown, but bottle-feeding has been suggested as a risk factor.

This study demonstrated that bottle-fed infants had a 4.6-fold increased risk of developing pyloric stenosis compared with infants who were not bottle-fed. The result adds to the evidence supporting the advantage of exclusive breastfeeding in the first months after birth. (Read the full article)




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Breastfeeding Education and Support Trial for Overweight and Obese Women: A Randomized Trial

Obesity is a risk factor for failure to initiate breastfeeding, formula supplementation, and short breastfeeding duration. There is a need for interventions that can improve the breastfeeding outcomes of overweight and obese women.

Breastfeeding peer counseling targeting overweight/obese women did not affect exclusive breastfeeding rates or breastfeeding continuation beyond 2 weeks. However, the intervention was associated with improvements in early breastfeeding intensity and fewer infant hospitalizations in the first 6 months after birth. (Read the full article)




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Reasons for Earlier Than Desired Cessation of Breastfeeding

Reasons mothers cite for breastfeeding cessation vary across an infant's first year of life; however, once women stop breastfeeding, little is known about whether they breastfed as long as they desired or reasons why they did not meet their desired duration.

About 60% of mothers do not meet their desired breastfeeding duration. Mothers who do not breastfeed as long as they desire primarily cite concerns about maternal or child health and processes associated with breastfeeding as their reason to stop breastfeeding. (Read the full article)




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Prevalence of Childhood Celiac Disease and Changes in Infant Feeding

Celiac disease is increasing in several countries and has emerged as a public health problem. Infant feeding has been suggested to affect celiac disease development and/or clinical expression. However, evidence-based complementary feeding strategies are limited.

Significant difference in celiac disease prevalence between 2 cohorts of 12-year-olds indicates an option for disease prevention. The cohorts differed in infant feeding, and our findings suggest that gradual introduction of gluten in small amounts during ongoing breastfeeding is favorable. (Read the full article)




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Baby-Friendly Hospital Accreditation, In-Hospital Care Practices, and Breastfeeding

Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI) accreditation can have a positive effect on breastfeeding initiation and continuation rates; however, little is known about the effect of BFHI accreditation in populations with high breastfeeding-initiation rates and where infant-friendly practices are common.

BFHI accreditation per se does not improve breastfeeding rates at 1 and 4 months when breastfeeding-initiation rates are high and accredited and nonaccredited hospitals have infant-friendly practices. Baby-friendly practices are more important than accreditation. (Read the full article)




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Pacifier Restriction and Exclusive Breastfeeding

Pacifiers may interfere with breastfeeding and thus are discouraged until 3 to 4 weeks of life, when they are recommended for sudden infant death syndrome risk reduction. Hospitals are restricting pacifier distribution as part of the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative.

We describe a temporal association between reduced exclusive breastfeeding and pacifier restriction. This observation encourages research on breastfeeding promotion and the effects of pacifiers and pacifier restriction on breastfeeding. (Read the full article)




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Prevalence and Reasons for Introducing Infants Early to Solid Foods: Variations by Milk Feeding Type

Adherence to infant feeding recommendations in the United States is low. The prevalence of early introduction of solid foods (<4 months of age) in the United States has been estimated to range from 19% to 29%.

Mothers’ most commonly cited reasons for early solid food introduction include perception of readiness, hunger, wanting to feed something in addition to breast milk or formula, perception of interest in solids, advice from a clinician, and to improve infant’s sleep. (Read the full article)




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Evaluation of an Office Protocol to Increase Exclusivity of Breastfeeding

A gap exists with lack of programs to help mothers breastfeed. The 2012 American Academy of Pediatrics' "Policy Statement on Breastfeeding and the Use of Human Milk" re-emphasized breastfeeding as an important public health initiative rather than a lifestyle choice.

Families who receive care in a primary care setting that has implemented a "breastfeeding-friendly" office protocol may have increased rates of exclusive breastfeeding. This study evaluated an accepted clinical protocol in a large, diverse pediatric primary care setting. (Read the full article)




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The Effects of Music Therapy on Vital Signs, Feeding, and Sleep in Premature Infants

Recorded music, parent voices, and sung lullabies have been shown to increase oxygen saturation, nonnutritive sucking, and weight gain in premature infants.

Parent-preferred melodies and entrained live rhythm and breath sounds can enhance quiet alert and sleep states, suck response, and oxygen saturation in premature infants and significantly reduce fear and anxiety perception in parents. (Read the full article)




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Association Between Total Duration of Breastfeeding and Iron Deficiency

Previous studies have found a relationship between exclusive breastfeeding for ≥6 months and iron deficiency. Little is known about the relationship between total breastfeeding duration, including the period after the introduction of complementary foods, and infant iron status.

Our results suggest that infants with longer total breastfeeding duration may be at risk for iron deficiency. Our findings highlight a clinically important association warranting additional investigation that may inform future guideline updates regarding assessment of risk for iron deficiency in young infants. (Read the full article)




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Effect of Early Limited Formula on Duration and Exclusivity of Breastfeeding in At-Risk Infants: An RCT

Public health policy focuses on reducing formula use for breastfed infants during the birth hospitalization. Observational evidence supports this approach, but no previous studies have examined the effect of early use of small volumes of formula on eventual breastfeeding duration.

Use of limited volumes of formula during the birth hospitalization may improve breastfeeding duration for newborns with high early weight loss. Reducing the use of formula during the birth hospitalization could be detrimental for some subpopulations of healthy term newborns. (Read the full article)




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Outcomes of an Early Feeding Practices Intervention to Prevent Childhood Obesity

About one in five 2-year-olds are overweight, with potential adverse outcomes. Early feeding practices lay the foundation for food preferences and eating behavior and may contribute to future obesity risk. High-quality obesity prevention trials commencing in infancy are rare.

In this large randomized controlled trial, anticipatory guidance on the "when, what, and how" of complementary feeding was associated with increased maternal "protective" feeding practices. Differences in anthropometric indicators were in the expected direction but did not achieve statistical significance. (Read the full article)