Sentences with phrase «find public data»

You can't find any public data on how much I paid for any of the houses that I've double closed on (except the ones I bought via the MLS).
While Advantage Credit Counseling Service promotes they are successful (source) I could not find any public data on the Advantage Credit Counseling Service website regarding their performance data like that is offered by this group as an example.

Not exact matches

Away from public meetings, she adds, more planners also find themselves working with new forms of real - time urban data and analytics techniques to assist with their work.
«So I took all the public data I could find and wrote a program that automatically spit out the kind of companies that excited me.»
Those findings jibe with just - reported data from the National Venture Capital Association, which reports 36 venture - backed companies went public, raising $ 3.3 billion, a 50 percent increase by number of deals and nearly 40 percent increase from the fourth quarter in 2013.
Bernstein analyzed patent data from nearly 2,000 tech companies and found that innovation at newly public companies was more incremental and less ambitious.
The Arthur Liman Public Interest Program at Yale first collected data from state and federal corrections officials in 2014 and again, in more detail, last year, taking what amounts to a comprehensive census on the use of solitary confinement in the U.S. Researchers found that in the fall of 2015, at least 67,442 U.S. prisoners were kept in some kind of restricted housing.
It presented two findings: First, the German public didn't like the reforms passed by Merkel's government in its first year; second, when the public was presented with arguments and data justifying the reforms, it liked them even less.
Venter, who created the first synthetic human cell back in 2010, feels the FDA hasn't found a way to serve the public in regard to genome data regulation — it barred 23andMe from offering genetic - risk assessments in 2013 before later reinstating the right to offer limited genetic reports.
Some politicians find polling to be a little old fashioned, so they're using big data to see what the public thinks about them.
You can find a public Google Spreadsheet with the data: CTO Equity Compensation Google Spreadsheet.
With Facebook facing a wave of public backlash over how it has handled user data over the years — a backlash that was kicked off two weeks ago with the revelation that data analytics firm Cambridge Analytica had worked on targeted election campaigns using personal and private Facebook data — the company today announced a new set of changes to help users find and change their privacy settings, as well as download and delete whatever data has been collected through Facebook's network of social media services.
What's curious about this response is that Zuckerberg elides to mention how Facebook's own staff have worked with the program he's suggesting his company «found now» — as if it had only discovered the existence of the Cambridge University Psychometrics Centre, whose researchers have in fact been working with Facebook data since at least 2007, since the Cambridge Analytica story snowballed into a major public scandal last month.
UpGuard, who spent the past few weeks analyzing the data, says the LocalBlox archive it found contained data scraped from public profiles on sites like Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and real estate site Zillow.
However, The New York Times and The Guardian found that the data was still accessible even in 2017 and that it was only last week, hours before the whistleblower's allegations were made public, that Facebook banned Cambridge and SCL from its platform.
It cited 2016 Pew Research Center data showing that more than 55 percent of households older than age 65 watch cable news programs, and it noted that «one multi-country study found that public broadcast news (such as PBS) increased political knowledge, while cable news actually reduced knowledge that people have about actual events.»
It cited 2016 Pew Research Center data showing that more than 55 % of households older than age 65 watch cable news programs, and it noted that «one multi-country study found that public broadcast news increased political knowledge, while cable news actually reduced knowledge that people have about actual events.»
By analyzing our historical archive of NFL betting trends data, we've found that whenever the public loads up on one NFL team, it's been historically profitable to bet the other side of that matchup.
Historically this has created value on underdogs and unders, but every season we update our betting percentage data to find the optimal betting percentage threshold for betting against the public.
Monitoring public betting trends data is one of the most vital betting tools used by professional handicappers to find value within the sports betting marketplace.
As detailed in our 2011 NHL Betting Against the Public article, our historical data has found a terrific return on investment betting against the public — specifically on teams receiving less than 35 % of moneylPublic article, our historical data has found a terrific return on investment betting against the public — specifically on teams receiving less than 35 % of moneylpublic — specifically on teams receiving less than 35 % of moneyline...
To find contrarian value, the team at SportsInsights.com has built a sports betting database that includes valuable historical information like NFL line data, public betting percentages, team and player stats, streaks, ATS stats, weather information and more.
Found with our betting percentage data, these are the plays that have attracted the most public action on Wednesday.
The Canadian authors of the report, which is based on data collected from nearly 35,000 adult Americans, said their findings underscore that spanking and other forms of harsh physical punishment are a matter not just of private behavior but of public health.
«A study that analyzed data from a national public opinion survey conducted in 2001 found that only 43 % of U.S. adults believed that women should have the right to breastfeed in public places.
I find it very interesting that you imply that because you have been published in medical journals that means that your scientific data is the one that is correct, if public media attention on your research is what you feel solidifies it as «right» then wouldn't you have to say that scientific data on the other end of the spectrum that has been published is «right» as well.
The findings of this study contribute accurate and reliable data to the global estimates, and have important implications for public health programmes to improve maternal and newborn survival.
«A study that analyzed data from a national public opinion survey conducted in 2001 found that only 43 percent of U.S. adults believed that women should have the right to breastfeed in public places.
Where can I find this sort of data available to the public consumer like myself from the traditional obstetric model of care?
In the age of increased consumer access to scientific findings, it is imperative that public health information and recommendations are based on the best available data.
The data series in which we found serious discontinuities or complete breaks are not trivial or obscure, but are (or should be) of major importance to the evaluation of government of any political stripe, such as total public sector capital investment, local government spending (on which the Office for Budget Responsibility and the government differ whether it is rising or falling), how much the government costs to run, and how much the civil service costs to employ.
This requires not just the development of a safe, secure and efficient system for linking, managing and analysing such data, founded on secure technologies, but also trust between data owners, researchers and other interested parties including the public.
In doing so, we did find a statistically significant positive correlation between performance and voting intention as measured by Public Policy Polling data around the same time.
When we look back at the historical data summarised in Figure 1 below, we find the period since the mid-1980s has been one in which successive governments have opted for small, year - to - year reductions in the growth of overall public spending, rather than greater reductions over a shorter period.
Data from the Committee for Standards in Public Life found the wider public's confidence in MPs had reached a new low of just 26 % - a 20 % drop in confidence sincePublic Life found the wider public's confidence in MPs had reached a new low of just 26 % - a 20 % drop in confidence sincepublic's confidence in MPs had reached a new low of just 26 % - a 20 % drop in confidence since 2008.
Meanwhile a research and data report from the Empire Center for Public Policy, which describes itself as «an independent, non-partisan, non-profit think tank based in Albany, New York,» found that since the tax cap went into effect, school tax levies have risen by an average of just 2.2 percent annually — the lowest in any four - year period since 1982.
New York State's open data initiative is particularly innovative and interesting from a national perspective, because it makes the state's data website available to local governments as a resource they can use to make their data easier for themselves and the public to find and use.»
If 2015 was the year that showed us the feral negativity and limited value of the public sphere, it was also the campaign that shored up the importance of data and the point where micro-campaigning, long a mainstay of US elections, finally found its feet in Europe, albeit in a very European (and less intrusive) way.
Using Twitter and Google search trend data in the wake of the very limited U.S. Ebola outbreak of October 2014, a team of researchers from Arizona State University, Purdue University and Oregon State University have found that news media is extraordinarily effective in creating public panic.
The FDA disputes the finding, but Houlihan urges the public to avoid farmed salmon until better data are available.
The research, conducted by Leah Schinasi, PhD, assistant research professor, and Ghassan Hamra, PhD, assistant professor, both of Drexel's Dornsife School of Public Health, was published in the Journal of Urban Health and used a decade's worth of crime data in Philadelphia (from 2006 until 2015) to find that rates of violent crime and disorderly conduct increased when daily temperatures are higher.
A more useful approach, he says, would be to find a way to make genomic data public without allowing individuals to be identified.
From additional analyses of data based on more recent years, they continue to find public pre-K attendance to be correlated with a boost in gifted and talented test taking.
«Patients deserve access to the best possible information when researching where to go for treatment, and they are increasingly looking to public reporting websites, including U.S. News, because they know that's where they'll find authoritative data,» said Ben Harder, Chief of Health Analysis at U.S. News & World Report.
Professor Carol Brayne, Director of the Cambridge Institute of Public Health, adds: «Even with a reasonably large number of studies of anxiety disorder, data about marginalised groups is hard to find, and these are people who are likely to be at an even greater risk than the general population.
Newly public data on grant funding success rates reflect one impetus for abandoning the set - aside: At many institutes, AIDS grants have been much easier to get than non-AIDS funding, suggesting that officials were struggling to find ways to spend the money.
Since then, he and Dr. Biden have worked to enhance public data sharing among federal and academic research institutions and to prompt medical facilities to find ways to share more rapidly and easily share diagnostic test results.
Laird analyzed federal unemployment data from 2003 to 2013 by gender, racial groups and public - and private - sector employment, and found that:
Eileen Chou, a public policy professor at the University of Virginia, and her collaborators began by analyzing a data set of 33,720 U.S. households and found that those with higher levels of unemployment were more likely to purchase over-the-counter painkillers.
But the sheer amount of data available will enable researchers to tackle previously difficult problems, such as finding out whether government health policies are being engaged with by the public.
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