A golden rule in looking at polls should be to examine to the big picture, the trend in the polls as a whole, rather than trying to
draw conclusions from individual polls.
Not exact matches
Corley, an accountant and financial planner,
draws conclusions from surveys of 233 wealthy
individuals on their daily habits and compares them with 128 lower - earning
individuals.
Different
conclusions can be
drawn from certain facts, but it's up to the
individuals in question to articulate why you can't
draw certain
conclusions from certain facts.
On
individual policies I've seen Corbyn supporters taking succour
from polls showing, for example, that a majority of the public support rail nationalisation or much higher taxes on the rich and
drawing the
conclusion that there is a public appetite for much more left wing policies.
Using statistical methods, they were able to
draw conclusions about
individual emission sources
from the measurement data.
The site pointed out that «cease - and - desist letters
from individuals whose work I report on will be ignored, because I'm only highlighting what's already out there and allowing readers to
draw their own
conclusions.»
Taking test results
from a test that's designed to evaluate a program and using those results to
draw conclusions about
individual students is just plain unsound assessment practice.
When I undertook the appeal, I assumed that there must be a lot of scientific validity to
conclusions you could
draw from hair found at a murder scene because the FBI and other police agencies testified about their ability to connect hair to a specific
individual.
And both
individuals running are deeply unpopular so to
draw any
conclusion from this is absurd.
Although his comment suggested such, I doubt that he really believes that
individual commenters here were responding because something had been «deemed urgent» by some unspecified «deemers,» and, (2) it seems to me that you might be
drawing conclusions from Lewandowsky's research that (assuming you find his research methodology to be valid — which some seem to question) are not supported by the evidence he offered: Evidence that informs the question of whether conspiracy ideation is relatively more prevalent on the «skeptical» side than the «realist» side.
(He is not talking about a statistical connection,
from which no
conclusion about one
individual event should be
drawn, only about ensembles.
That is the
conclusion drawn from a study on Long - Term Mortality Risk in
Individuals with Permanent Work - Related Impairment conducted by the Institute for Work and Health in Toronto.