Sentences with phrase «heavily on assumptions»

the answer depends heavily on the assumptions made about the effects of all other causes.
People tend to rely heavily on assumptions to communicate.
However, the model depends heavily on assumptions about the way soot particles form, he says.
This is because both our analysis and previous analyses relied heavily on the assumption of parsimonious genome evolution, where lineage - specific gain and loss patterns are based on the fewest possible evolutionary changes.

Not exact matches

The fund, run by state Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli, is also heavily weighted to stocks — and, like all public pension funds, is allowed to calculate its funding needs based on accounting assumptions that would not pass muster in the private sector.
«I believe the real devil here is in your assumptions, because the plan's true costs are as yet unknown and depend heavily on the performance of the State's pension fund.»
is a film that shows little and tells less, existing entirely in media res and relying on context clues and assumptions to tell a story that otherwise leans heavily on emotion to convey its plot and themes.
Midnight Special is a film that shows little and tells less, existing entirely in media res and relying on context clues and assumptions to tell a story that otherwise leans heavily on emotion to convey its plot and themes.
Of course, that risk is somewhat mitigated by the assumption that the marketing arm of the only platform a book published by Amazon is expected to sell on, the Kindle, will heavily support the book in question.
Which program is ultimately less expensive depends heavily on the economic assumptions one uses in a model of the program costs.
However from what I have read and what I have seen, much of the actual science seems to be flawed, and is heavily weighted on assumptions which are in turn based on assumptions, based on sketchy data, in which much of the methods used are questionable.
However, given that the CAGW position doesn't rest on specific numbers, but is instead an unorganized collection of anecdotal evidence, coupled with heavily - tweaked computer models, unfounded assumptions about positive feedbacks, and a healthy imagination about possible future disasters, a lower warming number for the 20th century will simply be brushed over with claims about aerosols being stronger than previously thought, more warming still waiting in the «pipeline» or similar ad hoc «explanations» that keep the overall story alive.
Even if we accept the questionable assumption that meteorite clusters give information on CRF variations, we find that the evidence for a link between CRF and climate amounts to little more than a similarity in the average periods of the CRF variations and a heavily smoothed temperature reconstruction.
The in - depth analysis exposes that fossil fuel industry thinking is skewed to the upside, and relies too heavily on high demand assumptions to justify new and costly capital investments to shareholders.
The three A1 groups are distinguished by their technological emphasis: fossil intensive (A1FI), non-fossil energy sources (A1T), or a balance across all sources (A1B)(where balanced is defined as not relying too heavily on one particular energy source, on the assumption that similar improvement rates apply to all energy supply and end use technologies).
On one hand, there's a widely - held perception that the government will swoop in, take your hard - earned assets and leave precious little for your family; on the other hand, there's an assumption you're not «rich» enough to pay it but that the truly «rich» should be heavily taxed before their families benefit from inherited wealtOn one hand, there's a widely - held perception that the government will swoop in, take your hard - earned assets and leave precious little for your family; on the other hand, there's an assumption you're not «rich» enough to pay it but that the truly «rich» should be heavily taxed before their families benefit from inherited wealton the other hand, there's an assumption you're not «rich» enough to pay it but that the truly «rich» should be heavily taxed before their families benefit from inherited wealth.
Findings in this heavily litigated area are often predicated on erroneous clinical assumptions such as: that doctors accept uncritically and at face value what the client says about their history (HE (DRC — credibility and psychiatric reports) Democratic Republic of Congo [2004] UKIAT 00321); that only psychiatrists can diagnose conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder (HH (Ethiopia) v SSHD [2007] EWCA Civ 306, [2007] All ER (D) 259 (Mar)-RRB-; and that doctors do not consider alternative explanations, including fabrication when, in fact, this is integrated into medical training and has always been a specified requirement of the IP (para 105 (f)-RRB-.
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