Not exact matches
But then
things ground to a halt, as both houses waited for the release
of three
final budget bills, including a revenue
measure that was expected to contain the most controversial elements
of the spending plan — the sort
of omnibus
measure known as a «big ugly.»
I suspected if we could comprehensively
measure all Olympians in
finals, we would see significant differences [when compared to non-Olympians], but we would not see them having freakish
things like 200 percent more lung capacity, or muscles that can contract at twice the [maximum] force
of a normal human muscle.
It is not so much the use / selection
of priors in a Bayes formula that will lead to bad results, but rather
things like: - not inducing precisely the probability
measures from measurements towards
final result variables (eg over a calibration curve).