Esper seems to have a heap of thoughtful papers on the subject of increasing the quality of this type of science.
Not exact matches
In In the
Esper et al. 2002 reconstruction paper, the authors conclude: Therefore, the large multicentennial differences between RCS and MBH are real and would
seem to require a NH extratropical forcing to explain them, one that attenuates toward the equator.
[Response: This indeed would
seem to be the kind of thing
Esper et al have in mind, but the problem is coming up with a physical explanation that would allow the system to behave this way.
Frances (Gerwig) and her best friend / roommate Sophie (Sumner)
seem to do everything together: dance around the park, smoke out the window, play backgammon, etc... When her boyfriend Dan (
Esper) suggests she live with him, she can't
seem to depart her Sophie.
Again, it
seems Esper is trying to convince us that we are not merely shadows, but that we are part of a much larger system.
The installation embodies
Esper's DIY spirit, but it
seems too didactic and is less well executed than his other works.
In In the
Esper et al. 2002 reconstruction paper, the authors conclude: Therefore, the large multicentennial differences between RCS and MBH are real and would
seem to require a NH extratropical forcing to explain them, one that attenuates toward the equator.
[Response: This indeed would
seem to be the kind of thing
Esper et al have in mind, but the problem is coming up with a physical explanation that would allow the system to behave this way.
It's quite difficult to judge on Wikipedia plot, but
Esper and Moberg reconstructions
seem to have the same trends at centennial scale (even if
Esper's one have globally more amplitude than all others).
And for 1600 - 1900, period of interest for Nicola's paper, Moberg,
Esper, Huang (and even Briffa) reconstructions
seem to have a comparable slope.
«This figure we calculated may not
seem particularly significant,» says lead author Jan
Esper, «however, it is also not negligible when compared to global warming, which up to now has been less than 1 °C.
If a researcher chooses to use the
Esper version then it will make the Medieval Warm Period
seem warmer than the Current Warm Period.