Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Chapters 5 and 6. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 16 page paper providing Chapter 5: Discussion of Findings and Chapter 6: Summary and Implications of a student-supplied and conducted study investigating the effects of the number of meals consumed during a day and acquisition of most of the day's calories earlier in the day. The study used data from a larger, earlier study that the student was not involved in and appeared not to support conventional wisdom that body mass index and body weight are positively affected by eating earlier in the day and eating a greater number of smaller meals. These two chapters discuss why this could be the case and makes recommendations for future research. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
16 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KShlthNutStu.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
As stated with each hypothesis, the current study sought to discover correlation between frequency of eating episodes, timing of those eating episodes, and BMI.
Again, the hypotheses were: * "Hypothesis 1. The number of eating episodes per day is negatively associated with overall caloric intake per meal, body mass index, and body weight,
after adjustment for changes in physical activity in the REACH population. * "Hypothesis 1a. The number of eating episodes per day is more negatively associated overall caloric intake per
meal, body mass index, and body weight, after adjustment for changes in physical activity, in the males in the REACH study than in the females. * "Hypothesis 2. An
eating pattern composed of a greater percentage of total caloric intake earlier in the day is positively associated with a reduction in overall caloric intake, lowered body mass index, and
lowered body weight, after adjustment for changes in physical activity in the REACH population. * "Hypothesis 2a. An eating pattern composed of a greater percentage of total caloric earlier
in the day is more positively associated with a reduction in overall caloric intake, lowered body mass index, and lowered body weight, after adjustment for changes in physical activity, in
the males in the REACH study than in the females." Taken together, had these hypotheses been supported then it would be expected that
the most advantageous scenario for all individuals regardless of gender would be that they consume the greatest proportion of daily calories earlier in the day and consume few if any
of their daily calories past the early evening hours. Hypotheses 1a and 2a were variations of Hypotheses 1 and 2, variations that favored males in their influence in avoiding
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