Sentences with phrase «at historical data such»

The bureau wants consumers to have the ability to look at historical data such as sold prices and comparables from their own computers.

Not exact matches

These are the most updated historical estimates and data available regarding the Blue Spec and Gold Spec deposits (except for the data contained in this news release and Novo's news release of January 21, 2016) and, as such, no work needs to be done at this point in time to upgrade or verify the historical estimates.
When determining if your business is right for an unsecured business loan, our underwriters analyze a variety of metrics such as big data, historical risk models, and trade line distribution to determine its unique growth potential instead of just looking at your credit score.
For example, if a player had a shot at De Gea from inside the box from open play, the shot may have a xGoT total of 0.25 meaning that, based on historical data, such a shot would be scored 25 per cent of the time by an average player against an average goalkeeper.
Historical data show that whale numbers are concentrated in particular areas of the US East Coast at certain times, such as calving season.
Developed in collaboration with the Laboratory Medicine, Information Technology and Health Science Research departments of Mayo Clinic Geneticist Assistant NGS Interpretative Workbench, is a web - based tool for the control, visualization, interpretation and historical knowledge base of next generation sequencing data targeted at specific genes for the purpose of identifying potentially pathogenic variants associated with specific conditions such as hereditary colon cancer.
A 2008 study led by James Hansen found that climate sensitivity to «fast feedback processes» is 3 °C, but when accounting for longer - term feedbacks (such as ice sheet disintegration, vegetation migration, and greenhouse gas release from soils, tundra or ocean), if atmospheric CO2 remains at the doubled level, the sensitivity increases to 6 °C based on paleoclimatic (historical climate) data.
Historical data indicate that such capacity exists, as full - time equivalent enrollment has increased 54 percent since 1990 at private, non-profit institutions, compared to 45 percent at public institutions.
(A backtest is simply a statistical look at historical data to determine whether employing a given investment factor, such as selecting stocks with low price - earnings ratios, results in excess returns over time; i.e., returns above a stock market benchmark.)
But you can gauge the risk of such a disaster by looking at historical data.
An insurer will look at its historical data, such as premium collected and claims paid, to determine their potential risk for each breed and place it in a category.
Along those lines, has the following been tried (again, forgive if I'm asking something with an obvious answer published somewhere): 1) pick starting projection dates and subsequent run paths 2) example for (1): start 1980, run forward 5 years; start 1982, run forward 5 years; start 1984 (run to 1989) etc etc 3) at each start we proceed as with the 1979 directive; ie calibrate with several months of starting year data 4) thus the latest such (example) run where we could compare against actual data would be an initialization in 2008 and run forward for 5 years to 2013 5) the advantage of the above (and I recognize that there is a huge amount of work involved in crunching these simulations) is that we could see the starting temp and 5 year projections against the historical record for a number of overlapping segments.
On the frequency of the storms, I note that the weather really didn't change much during Dec 04 and part of Jan 05 such that you had four distinct spots in the oceans at 90 intervals in the Southern hemisphere that showed substantial chilling compared to historical data.
The problem with the historical data (besides accuracy and repeatability and quality control questions,...) is that many of the series or single measurements were done at such places like Diekirch, which introduces a strong positive bias.
The concentration of the CRU's effort at historical temperature reconstruction around tree ring data seems overly focussed, given that there are proxies with more stable surrounding factors, such as speleothems in deep caves.
It is possible to construct crosswalks between health, early child development and education databases that integrate population - wide, person - specific data at national, provincial and community levels.60 As such, it is possible to create a historical perspective of developmental trajectories for an entire population of children.
He argued that by omitting vital MLS information such as historical data, VOWs are at a competitive disadvantage and will not be able to break into the red - hot, yet cutthroat GTA market.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z