weight gain
PLAIN-2364 ยท run 19 (hybrid, A) vs run 16 (vector, B)
The actual ranked results each run returned for this one query, in order. Documents the benchmark judged relevant are highlighted green (with their relevance grade). Comparing the two columns shows why one run scored higher โ which relevant docs it surfaced, and how near the top.
A โ run 19 (hybrid)
- Increased food energy supply is more than sufficient to explain the US epidemic of obesity.
- Meat consumption and prospective weight change in participants of the EPIC-PANACEA study.
- Intake of total, animal and plant protein and subsequent changes in weight or waist circumference in European men and women: the Diogenes project.
- Weight gain over 5 years in 21,966 meat-eating, fish-eating, vegetarian, and vegan men and women in EPIC-Oxford.
- Nut consumption, weight gain and obesity: Epidemiological evidence.
- Do all sedentary activities lead to weight gain: sleep does not.
- Prospective study of nut consumption, long-term weight change, and obesity risk in women
- Endocrine-disrupting chemicals and obesity development in humans: a review.
- Whole grain intake in relation to body weight: from epidemiological evidence to clinical trials.
- Changes in bread consumption and 4-year changes in adiposity in Spanish subjects at high cardiovascular risk.
B โ run 16 (vector)
- Increased food energy supply is more than sufficient to explain the US epidemic of obesity.
- Meat consumption and prospective weight change in participants of the EPIC-PANACEA study.
- Dietary saturated fat intake is negatively associated with weight maintenance among the PREMIER participants.
- Intake of total, animal and plant protein and subsequent changes in weight or waist circumference in European men and women: the Diogenes project.
- Weight gain over 5 years in 21,966 meat-eating, fish-eating, vegetarian, and vegan men and women in EPIC-Oxford.
- Nut consumption, weight gain and obesity: Epidemiological evidence.
- Long-term morbidity and mortality of overweight adolescents. A follow-up of the Harvard Growth Study of 1922 to 1935.
- Body-mass index and incidence of cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective observational studies.
- Do all sedentary activities lead to weight gain: sleep does not.
- Overweight, obesity, and mortality from cancer in a prospectively studied cohort of U.S. adults.