Sentences with phrase «data graph below»

As you can see from the data graph below, THC metabolite levels go down much more slowly using the expensive detox kit (priced at $ 125) and failed to reach acceptable levels (below 10g / ml) even after the end of the experiment 65 hrs after detox began,

Not exact matches

However, the end result was well worth the time since all of my dividend data is compiled (see graph & table below).
It is calculated based on quarterly compounding, using the exact historical swing trade performance data detailed below the graph (please note disclaimer at bottom of page):
As the graph below shows, the relationship between conscientiousness and openness to experience I suggested above is what we find in the data — those who are high on conscientiousness and those who are low on openness are the least likely to support Scottish independence, and as people become less conscientious and more open to experience support for independence rises.
The graph of YouGov's BrandIndex tracker data below (click on the graph for a bigger version) shows the net impression figures for senior Labour party politicians over the last five months, hopefully in the coming months I'll be updating it so we can track the manoeuvring for the Labour crown.
Data from the U.S. government show that car fleets from Japanese firms Toyota and Honda have consistently been above the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards that manufacturers are supposed to meet (small graphs below).
Cronin et al's data, given in text below the graph, clearly show that ranges do overlap.
The graph below, Figure 6, plots historical temperature data from the Northern Hemisphere, with each colored line representing a different decade.
The graphs below illustrate data over the last year.
The graph below comes from a post I wrote last fall showing national, longitudinal data from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES).
The link is in the notebook, and below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EQ1HKCYJM5U Get the pupils to find their total rating over all 7 clips, and use the data to complete the Rating overall cumulative frequency table and graph as an example.
The graph below pulls in 10 years of retirement data from the state of Illinois.
Pulling data from the Teacher Follow - Up Survey (see Table 1 here), he created the graph below showing changes in teacher turnover over time.
If you'd like to sort through the PARCC data yourself, and compare the scores at different schools for different types of students (black, white, male, female, etc.), you can use the interactive graphs below.
The graphs below come from the same data set.
The graph below uses data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to show the annual change in employer costs by category.
The first graph below, in which each data point relates the average socioeconomic index score for a decile of a particular OECD country's students to that decile's average performance on PISA's math test, depicts this relationship.
And as shown in the graph below, which like the other charts in this piece come courtesy of the industry researchers at Codex Group, and updates the sample data to match the 2010 Census, just 19 percent read a dozen or more titles.
The graph below shows two years of historical sales rank data from Author Central for one of my titles.
Data Source: Media General Note: Do not cite or republish this graph without publishing the limitations paragraph below.
This from Bill Hester: «The graph below maps out global recessions using recession data from the Economic Cycle Research Institute (by permission).
However, the end result was well worth the time since all of my dividend data is compiled (see graph & table below).
I showed him the graph below which shows lower than average TOTAL returns in a rising interest rate environment and he checked his long - term data and found that bond holders between 1953 and 1980 had actually lost money.
The graph below shows the rolling drawdowns of the MSCI US Index and the MSCI European Value Index (using monthly data, in US dollars).
The data can be viewed as a line graph which should show the rates of growth relative each other (see below).
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Zebra and Killian, since both of you have rubbished my commentary on GDP growth In the USA relentlessly falling since the 1950s, for once read some economic data as below in the graph.
i can «see» (i'm visual...) how on both graphs about half the blue lines (temp) fall above and below the pink line (linear fit and filtered error)-- like that pink line WOULD represent a good «averaging out» or «noise reduction» in the data.
If you look at more recent data since 2010, say this Colorado graph, you will see the blue wiggles start mainly below the linear trend line and by 2006 have become above the trend line.
In the figure below, we have superimposed the standard CRU data set (blue curve) of global mean temperature on Veizers graph.
The graph below, of data from the National Severe Storms Laboratory in Norman, Okla., shows trends over the last 60 years.
Figure 1 (below) plots ice core data, covering the past 11,700 years — an age known as the Holocene period — with present day included at the far right of the graph.
Figure A below, which graphs the global annual average temperature from 1861 to the present, does indeed seem to show a warming trend.1 But such data must be interpreted carefully.
Despite stating that there is no CO2 data near the time of the Devonian glaciation [there are values of 1000ppm and 1300ppm before and after the glaciation], and surmising that perhaps 2000ppm CO2 would be low enough to allow permanent ice to form the graph shows a value of below 500ppm for the late Devonian.
Give the students the graph below from Johnstone 2014 and ask them to compare changes in sea surface temperatures (SST in red) with the raw and recently homogenized temperature data from southern California.
After students have graphed their own temperature trends, have them compare their results with the graph below illustrating how USHCN climate experts actually homogenize the data.
Teacher input: After students have graphed their own temperature trends, have them compare their results with the graph below illustrating how USHCN climate experts actually homogenize the data.
The graph below shows the data.
The graph below shows the same data as the graph above but shaded to show what range of possible actual temperatures the graphed line represents.
As can be seen in Figure 1 below, the global oceans have warmed so quickly in 2013 that the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) is going to need a bigger graph.
The graph below shows the data for global (dark blue), northern hemisphere (pink / purple) and southern hemisphere (dark green).
This year we have seen the Arctic sea - ice melting season once again reported by contrarians as a recovery, although as the graph below, from the National Snow and Ice Data Center, clearly shows, there have been a number of «recoveries» in previous years too.
The government also published revisions to data going back to 2013 through the first quarter of 2016 (graph below from the WSJ).
But in fact, as Hantemirov explains, his application of the RCS (regional curve standardization) method to the larger live core data set now available, gives a result very close to Briffa's, as seen in Hantemirov's graphs below.
I find it amazing that when Al Gore graphed the ice core data for temperature then plotted the CO2 on a separate chart below it and never bothered to line up the time scale to show the lags of hundreds of years.
Starting with two closely spaced data points on the graph below, lay a straight - edge between them and notice how for a short period of time you cancreate almost any slope you prefer, simply by being selective about what data points you use.
As discussed in the article on natural cycles of ocean «acidification», and illustrated in the graph below by Martinez - Boti, over the past 15,000 years proxy data (thick lines) has determined surface pH has rarely been in equilibrium with expectations (green line) based on models driven by atmospheric CO2.
Below is a new version of Carl's graph that uses different data that slightly enhances the AMP events at the green arrows.
The data presented below were scaled from the Michaels» graph.
The graph has been cut off at a lower limit of Y = 0.2, corresponding to the upper limit of S = 18.5 that the IPCC imposed when transforming the data, as explained below.
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