Sentences with phrase «inference as»

New statistical conventions have highlighted how designs with small numbers of targets are just as problematic for statistical inference as designs with small numbers of participants (Westfall, Judd, & Kenny, 2015).
... any lack of proof or inference as to what the position was in the Goldfields in 1829 tells against the claimants, who bear the onus of proving all the elements of their claims.
Stacking inferences is impermissible in Florida personal injury cases, but a defendant may not frame a single inference as multiple inferences in order to defeat a plaintiff's claim.
It could conceivably amount to circumstantial evidence, derived from the expert's experience, from which an inference as to the origin of the complainant's DNA could reasonably be drawn.
I've previously drawn attention to this need to ensure validity of statistical inference as a reason why climate modelling is not immune from these findings, but some here continue to seek refuge in the first point above i.e. this can't be right because it is inconsistent with the science.
However, in every instance in which a heuristic identified a particular inference as the correct inference, at least one different heuristic identified a different inference as the correct inference.
With increasing data the problem gets less severe in the Bayesian inference as the relative power of data grows and the choice of prior affects less the outcome.
«It's been known» allows the reader to draw his or her own inference as to by whom it has been known, while leaving Mann with plausible deniability if the consequences of any particular inference do not suit him.
I think using standard regression inference as in your paper should be asymptotically equivalent (under the assumption of model adequacy).
After defining inference as «a conclusion drawn from the information available,» we might put the learning target in student - friendly language: «I can make good inferences.
The film works largely on inference as we watch Hannah become estranged from her neighbors, her family and even her dog.
«That allows us to couple our task inference as well as our inferred specificity level with a hierarchical planner, so we can plan at any level of abstraction,» Arumugam said.
McCrea wants to follow Day's lead and probe the prints he has found for clues about dinosaurs» biological capabilities, but he doesn't have as much time for inference as he would like.
First and foremost, the resurrection proves that Jesus was the Son of God (cf. Wright, The Resurrection of the Son of God, p. 728, 730), and by inference AS the Son of God, Jesus dealt with the issue of sin.
As Emmet states, «indirect inferences as to the transcendent character of these events are built up from our responses to them.
We can make only indirect inferences as to how far this belief was authoritatively proclaimed; but it is certain that it was widely held, and that it formed an impressive part of the popular religious doctrine.
If we call one «the I stratum» and the other «the P stratum» we do so (as always in this discussion) without dogmatic inferences as to sources, scope, form, and date of the arrangement, or composition, or integration, or entity of such strata.
Accordingly, this research can help future consumers be proactive in terms of ensuring, as best they can, that results might yield as valid inferences as possible.
Without spoiling too much though, the plot is similarly inferenced as per the older games and requires a bit of deductive insight on the part of the player.
Unfortunately, it's all very possible... Basically, what Levin does here is compile various predictions from a number of climate scientists and writers, cite historical precedents for climate - related migrations in the US (the Dust Bowl), and make some compelling inferences as to what could happen as weather conditions continue to get worse than they ever have before.
Here she explains that when a party has chosen not to fully and frankly disclose their financial position, the court may draw adverse inferences as to the extent of their wealth.
The trial judge noted that the intentions, motivations and preferences of the infringing party in the real world are instructive in drawing inferences as to what it would have done in the hypothetical world.
It was said on Mr Abramovich's behalf that no inferences as to residence should be drawn from his ownership of Chelsea which was simply part of a growing phenomenon of wealthy foreigners acquiring English football clubs.

Not exact matches

Our reasoning here applies what's known as the principle of restricted choice, which comes up in the card game bridge, and is the intuition behind the formal mathematical procedure for updating beliefs based on new information, Bayesian inference.
«Reputational ratings are simply inferences from broad, readily observable features of an institution's identity, such as its history, its prominence in the media, or the elegance of its architecture.
But this only raises more important questions, such as, what inferences should be drawn from the government's intervention?
Nevertheless, available data and softer sources of information, such as market intelligence, allow some inferences to be drawn.
Either way, action or inaction will allow us to make some inferences about Poloz as a central banker that will be very useful going forward — this is a huge learning experience, and the statement, the monetary policy report that accompanies it, and the press conference that follows are much - reads and must - watches.
Maybe if you can start to try to wrap your head around that concept... then you have just started to understand that science will NEVER figure that out and there is no evolutionary process that will ever make us understand... so you are left with only one inference (as you guys like to say)... it is GOD
I also left out the people, such as yourself, who find the bible so completely true, they enter in on bias and start extrapolating and inferring to make sure the bible fits in with reality even when theres no trace of that inference.
While that may be «accurate» as to what jesus says about marriage, etc.... I am speaking to the * inference * that @barry, for sure and it looks like you....
Since he was executed by Rome, the inference is that he broke Roman Law, or was seen as a threat to Roman rule.
8) «This conclusion serves to corroborate the inference made by Soviet archaeologists from their discovery of camel - headed wagons that as early as the first half of the third millennium B.C. two - humped camels were used in Turkmenistan for drawing wagons...» The Camel and the Wheel, Richard W. Bulliet p155
We need not be deceived or make any false inferences from sunsets as long as we keep our larger knowledge of the solar system in mind.
Here is the Surgeon General of the U.S. by inference laying the blame for the AIDS epidemic at the feet of the U.S. government, the Roman Catholic Church, the conservative press («the stridently conservative Washington Times»), Phyllis Schlafly (whom he describes as «beneath contempt» because she opposed him on his proposed condom solution), and a sinister cabal of White House conservatives led by Carl Anderson.
It may have been a second step, following the first which identified Jesus with the Messiah — a view held more firmly in the south — or it may indeed have been the very first step, direct and immediate, from the appearance of the risen Jesus to the inference that he was now the anticipated heavenly figure of Daniel's vision, as currently interpreted.
The crucifixion, then, can serve as at - one - ment by showing people the nature of the love of God's messenger and — by inference — the nature of the love of God.
Unlike most contemporary philosophers, who restrict their examination of induction to the modern sense of the term, in which it is construed as a method of inference which permits some prediction of future events on the basis of past events, Whitehead also recognizes the importance of the ancient meaning of induction.
As in the other quoted passages, he moves from «seems» to «is» without providing explicit reasons for the inference.
In writing any history of the recent past, factual error is a danger, as is distortion of perspective, oversimplification or faulty inference.
Hartshorne is willing to begin with the metaphysical reality of God and other selves (not just as a postulate, but as concrete existences), and then to use inference and imagination to provide an account of their nature and relations — an account which can he more or less adequate to its object, given the limitations of our form of consciousness.
Since (2) is crucial for the justification of inductive inference, it can not be called uninteresting as long as we regard the problem of induction as interesting.
Inference and imagination can go astray, but the laws of nature and logic are reliable enough, in Hartshorne's view, to guide us in making inferences and imagining «the other» as it really is; otherwise the knowledge of nature, God, and the self could not increase through history, as Hartshorne is convinced it does.
For Hartshorne, the difference between a self and its past (and other selves) is understood as a matter of degree, and known by how much inference and imagination is required in order to make the idea of that other self distinct.
Brightman insists that we must start with our own human experience and infer the metaphysical reality only of what reasonably follows from that experience, and the contents of these inferences will never be more than hypothetical — and it is difficult to be certain how adequate they are to the phenomena, since those phenomena are not given as they are in themselves.
God knows us only by inference and construction, and our purposes only as an otherness of purpose in what is given to God — in their disvalue, their fallenness.
unless God is given I do not see how he could be inferred, for the foundation of inference beyond immediacy seems to me necessarily the reality of God as the ground of world order.
What we call the perception of these latter objects is in fact an inference we make to them from images as their representations.
All that can be attained by aetiological inference of that kind taking as its starting - point concrete reality, in other words the supernatural history of redemption and grace of man as he is, forms the content of the statement.
Today history is increasingly understood as essentially the unique and creative, whose reality would not be apart from the event in which it becomes, and whose truth could not be known by Platonic recollection or inference from a rational principle, but only through historical encounter.
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