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51.www.futura-sciences.com1220000
52.www.meteored.com1220000
53.www.hpl.hp.com1210000
54.www.persee.fr1200000
55.www.daimi.au.dk1190000
56.www.Sigma-Aldrich.com1110000
57.www.slac.stanford.edu1110000
58.www.cnshb.ru1090000
59.www.absoluteastronomy.com1050000
60.www.physorg.com1030000
61.www.informatik.rwth-aachen.de972000
62.www.journals.uchicago.edu970000
63.www.mpg.de967000
64.www.rsc.org956000
65.www.unexplained-mysteries.com922000
66.www.rcsb.org914000
67.www.matheboard.de838000
68.www.nationmaster.com836000
69.www.wiley-vch.de789000
70.www.math.tu-berlin.de785000
71.www.inauka.ru778000
72.news.com.com776000
73.www.therainforestsite.com774000
74.www.audioasylum.com766000
75.www.eng-tips.com761000
76.www.electroportal.net756000
77.www.ine.es731000
78.www.abcelectronique.com728000
79.www.space.com713000
80.www.mondomarino.net701000
81.www.college-de-france.fr677000
82.www.nada.kth.se658000
83.www.nasa.gov654000
84.www.biodic.go.jp650000
85.www.hq.nasa.gov643000
86.www.plosone.org636000
87.www.yoreparo.com622000
88.www.bio.uu.nl618000
89.news.nationalgeographic.com615000
90.www.popsci.com588000
91.www.nhm.ac.uk587000
92.www.eol.org569000
93.www.erudit.org558000
94.gallica.bnf.fr556000
95.www.ifremer.fr556000
96.citeseer.ist.psu.edu544000
97.www.sciam.com541000
98.innovations-report.de538000
99.www.fof.se529000
100.www.ermesambiente.it523000
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54. www.persee.fr

Rating: 1200000 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.persee.fr' on the other websites

www.persee.fr

Accueil de Persée

Description: Persée - Site de numérisation rétrospective de revues françaises en sciences humaines et sociales. Texte intégral en mode image et mode texte (OCR).

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The price of happiness? £50,000pa
Research shows that happiness increases with earnings – up to a pointMoney can't buy you love, but it can make you happier if you are not a high earner, according to a Nobel prizewinning psychologist.A survey of 1,000 Americans found that happiness rose in line with salary, but only until people earned $75,000 a year, the equivalent of around £50,000.Earning more than this did nothing to boost how happy people were, according to Daniel Kahneman, a psychologist at Princeton University in New Jersey, who won the Nobel prize for economics in 2002.Kahneman teamed up with Angus Deaton, an economist at Princeton, to analyse 450,000 responses to a daily survey on happiness and life satisfaction run by Gallup in 2008 and 2009.The survey asked people to rate how happy they felt each day, based on their experiences of emotions such as joy, worry, sadness and fascination. They were then asked to rate their overall satisfaction with life, on a scale where zero was the worst they could imagine life to be and 10 being the best.The researchers found that life satisfaction rose steadily the more people were paid. Happiness rose with income too, but plateaued when people reached an annual salary of $75,000. For those on more, happiness appeared to depend on other factors.Describing their research in the journal, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the authors write: "Perhaps $75,000 is a threshold beyond which further increases in income no longer improve individuals' ability to do what matters most to their emotional well-being, such as spending time with people they like, avoiding pain and disease, and enjoying leisure."The figure will make grim reading for the majority of people who work in Britain. According to the Office of National Statistics' annual survey of hours and earnings, half of people in full time jobs in 2009 earned less than £25,816. Some 90% earned less than £46,278 a year.The researchers warn that the emotional strain of negative experiences, such as getting divorced or being ill, appear to be exacerbated by being poor. "More money does not necessarily buy more happiness, but less money is associated with emotional pain," they write.PsychologyPayFamily financesWork-life balanceWork & careersIan Sampleguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
A Sharp Ocean Chill and 20th Century Climate
An abrupt Atlantic cool spell 40 years ago adds a wrinkle to the picture of 20th century climate shifts.
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On Our Radar: White House Climate Battles
How missed chances and tepid support from Obama administration insiders helped thwart climate legislation.
feeds.nytimes.com
Election unlikely to change US farm subsidies
By STEVE KARNOWSKI 2010-10-15T08:03:35ZMINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Republicans might take control of Congress as they ride a wave of voter anger over deficit spending and big government, but experts who follow agriculture say they don't expect deep cuts in subsidies to farmers who grow crops such as corn and soybeans....
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Frustrations show as climate talks resume
CANCUN, Mexico (AP) -- Frustrated at past failures, climate negotiators began a critical two-week conference Monday with a call from Mexico's president to think beyond their nations' borders and consider all humanity as they bargain over an agreement to fight global warming....
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