Sentences with phrase «critical implications»

These findings have critical implications for future studies on the continuity of problems but also in the investigation of treatment effects.
The finding has critical implications for TB outbreak potential among wildlife and livestock.
For instance, models with different parameterization strategies give very different estimates of the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere necessary to raise Earth's surface temperature by 2 °C — with critical implications for policy decisions.
In summary, Michigan ASCD and GELN see critical implications related to the conditions above in making a quality decision related to assessment practices in our state.
Such complex legislation, with such critical implications for our constitutional future, should not be decided by a hurried command from ministers.
«The ability to remain employed following a heart attack is essential to maintaining one's quality of life, self - esteem, emotional and financial stability, so our findings carry critical implications not only for Danish patients but, perhaps more importantly, for people who live in countries with less advanced social welfare systems than Denmark,» said study first author Laerke Smedegaard, M.D., a medical doctor at Herlev & Gentofte University Hospital in Hellerup, Denmark.
She also examined Morton's extensive notebook archives to analyze the broader critical implications of using women artists» autobiographical writing in art history.
Guyton's process is now implicit — any lay student of contemporary art knows that he feeds folds of primed canvas into his taxed and sputtering Epson printers — as are the conceptual and critical implications of that process and its resulting works: painting after the fact, postindustrial manufacture of gorgeously distilled canvases offering the retro payoff that comes of
For instance, models with different parameterization strategies give very different estimates of the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere necessary to raise Earth's surface temperature by 2 °C — with critical implications for policy decisions.
The critical implication of a lower natural rate of interest is that conventional monetary policy has less room to stimulate the economy during an economic downturn, owing to a lower bound on how low interest rates can go.
Leonardo Boff, Church, Charism and Power (New York: Crossroad Publishing Co., 1985), 110 - 15, has seen the critical implications of this insight of production concerning the ideological control that the interpreting community exercises over the text.
The critical implications of the study relate to what it reveals about the early development of social disability.
From the start, the budget had critical implications on the design, but architects worked within existing conditions, retaining surfaces, and affordable materials.
World Bank economist Jean - François Rischard2 (2002) seriously argues that the next twenty years will be of critical implication to our planet.
This variation can have critical implications for school and district leaders, as it is unlikely that students are having uniform experiences with bullying across all schools in a district.
This variation has critical implications for those leading school systems.
In this talk, Healy reviews recent copyright developments around the world and some that are pending and explain how business - critical their implications are for publishers and users everywhere.
Heslin's process of recovering discarded raw canvas and linen fragments she hand - dyes and sews together before stretching over a wood strainer is redolent with critical implications.
Politically, the post-2015 and UNFCCC process are discrete processes; however, the decisions taken within one will have critical implications for the other.
But large uncertainties and postulations underlie the debate about the indirect land - use effects of biofuels on tropical deforestation, the critical implication being that use of U.S. farmland for energy crops necessarily causes new land - clearing elsewhere.
In the report's core, OCI draws out a new and critical implication of the carbon budget approach.
As Clay Shirky's latest book makes clear, the internet's reduction of publishing costs to effectively zero has critical implications for all the professions that are built upon the former reality of high publishing costs, librarianship and journalism among them.
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