Sentences with phrase «hence more observation»

Brief touching of hand or shoulder can be friendly or romantic, hence more observation should be done to detect your date's fondness towards you, e.g. eye contact.

Not exact matches

It also allows more continuity and carry - over at the level of observations and laws before and after a revolution, and hence a more cumulative history, than Kuhn and Feyerabend recognize.
Our observations of reduced fever at 1 month and reduced stuffy nose at 6 months associated with nonprone sleep positions are consistent with this hypothesis, as is the reported observation that adults with upper respiratory tract infections have lower nasal bacterial counts after lying supine for 1 hour vs lying prone for 1 hour.11 Also, infants sleeping supine swallow more frequently than infants sleeping prone in response to a pharyngeal fluid stimulus, suggesting more effective clearing of nasopharyngeal secretions in the supine position and, hence, less potential for eustachian tube obstruction and fewer ear infections.12
The observations in 2013 were far less conclusive, and hence more controversial, than the new results.
«The tendency to base classroom observation on the gender and race of the child may explain in part why those children are more frequently identified as misbehaving and hence why there is a racial disparity in discipline,» added Walter S. Gilliam, director of The Edward Zigler Center in Child Development and Social Policy and associate professor of child psychiatry and psychology at the Yale Child Study Center.
Future observations may yield more - precise information on the masses and hence the composition of the three planets.
They are the locations of bright stars and other nearby objects that get in the way of the observations of more distant galaxies and are hence masked out in these maps as no weak - lensing signal can be measured in these areas.
Other Hubble observations confirmed that bluer (hence more massive) stars tend to sink towards the centre of a globular cluster, while redder, smaller stars move to the periphery — an idea that had long been predicted from theory, but never seen.
Thorp, the quantitative investor, valued securities on a probabilistic basis and relied on the statistical phenomenon known as «the law of large numbers» — the law states that more observations we make, the closer our sample will be to the population, and hence greater the certainty of our prediction — to construct portfolios of securities that would, in aggregate, outperform the market.
Concern is raised by recent inferences from gravity measurements that the WAIS is losing mass (39), and observations that glaciers draining into the Amundsen Sea are losing 60 % more ice than they are gaining and hence contributing to sea - level rise (40).
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