There is typically a substantial
lag effect between sloppy intake and bad pricing decisions, and the losses traceable to those failings.
Other factors that could be considered include: the difference in jet
lag effect between travel towards the east and west; the added impact of travel fatigue; and the possible addition of consideration of cost - related factors.
Not exact matches
Latency, or the amount of time taken for devices to communicate with one another, can be a problem on a wireless network, resulting in a time
lag between the command input and its
effect taking place.
There is typically a bit of a
lag between falling energy prices and their
effect on consumer spending, but by Q3 12, declining energy prices should be supporting real consumer spending; we look for 2.5 % consumer spending growth in H2 12.
This distribution is difficult because what is beneficial to one group of people often is detrimental to another; because frequently those who receive the benefits are not those who pay the costs; and because there is a considerable time
lag between the imposition of either costs or benefits and the realization of long - term
effects.
Jet
lag is known for its fatigue - inducing
effects, most of which stem from a mismatch
between a person's internal clock and the time zone he or she is in, something called «circadian misalignment.»
They found a small correlation
between cosmic rays and global temperatures occurring every 22 years; however, the changing cosmic ray rate
lagged behind the change in temperatures by
between one and two years, suggesting that the cause of the temperature rise might not be attributable to cosmic rays and cloud formation, but could be caused by the direct
effects of the sun.
They add that the study did not look at the time
lag between implementation and
effect of the changes, but suggest that improvements in tooth decay would be seen first, followed by reduced rates of obesity and cases of type 2 diabetes.
Seiko Epson's chip also refreshes the display faster than the iLiad can, eliminating the slight
lag between movement of the stylus and its
effect on the screen.
Following are the things that can
effect changes on your scores: • Consistent and constant late payments • Increased or reduced credit limits • Higher credit card balances • Higher HELOC (Home Equity Line of Credit) balance • Closing revolving accounts • Recent credit inquiries made In the same way, any new practice you start in managing your credit takes
effect and influence your credit scores within 30 to 60 days; due to the
lag time
between the action you take against the period it takes the creditor to report the action to the agencies who handle credit reports.
You can create and join parties like any other multiplayer game, but parties will randomly break in the middle of matches, causing a limbo
effect after the match, there is some
lag issues even with a good connection, and sometimes it can take a while to even find a match, but those instances are few and far
between, thankfully.
The problem with the climate change problem is the time
lag between when we finally take action and when it takes
effect.
There's a time
lag between choices made today and their future
effects, which are not yet affecting short term projections.
15 year
lag is well known natural
effect The 15 years
lag is nothing to do with CO2, it is result of totally natural process, since this is exactly the delay
between geomagnetic signal (simply derived from the combined sun - Earth magnetic field changes and the AMO: http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net//GSOc.htm Why is that?
The vast majority of greenhouse gases (GHGs) exhibit relatively long atmospheric residence times, some upwards of a hundred years, creating a
lag time
between the release of atmospheric pollution and realization of the actual side -
effects.
I know many on this site beleive peak oil is a bigger threat than global warming, but I can't help but think the 20 - 100 year time
lag between CO2 release and maximum
effect is a far less addressable than issues of increasing fossil fuel prices.
I've never been happy with the vagaries of the residence time of anthropogenic CO2 in the atmosphere and the lack of any
lag between the industrialized northern hemisphere and the southern when charting anticipated Anthropogenic CO2 warming
effects...... The AGW hypothesis is full of inconsistencies and problems that were never even address or explained, just hand waved away or ad hoc - ed with another hypothesis.
True, but I keep thinking the entire system is dominated by negative feedback and so really as a whole it is never quite in equilibrium, but is always chasing equilibrium, Taking a look over a long time period and quantifying the
lag time
between cause and
effect, even when the cause is unknown might help to isolate what the cause might be.
You asked, «Do you believe that the El Nino / La Nina
effect causes SST changes because of the time
lag between them, or because of a to - be-postulated mechanistic
effect?»
Do you believe that the El Nino / La Nina
effect causes SST changes because of the time
lag between them, or because of a to - be-postulated mechanistic
effect?
As with CO2 and global warming, there is some
lag between cause and
effect.
In Gore's movie, he gives ample space
between the C02 and Temperature trend line when graphing so as to hide the
lagging effect.
In other words, is there a
lag between the time CO2 appears at altitudes where it has an
effect and the time CO2 appears in the proxy records at the surface where it can be measured?
In the proxy records (ie the ice cores) the rise in CO2 is ~ 50x slower than what we see today, so any
lag between source and atmosphere will have even less
effect.
Actually Fielding's use of that graph is quite informative of how denialist arguments are framed — the selected bit of a selected graph (and don't mention the fastest warming region on the planet being left out of that data set), or the complete passing over of short term variability vs longer term trends, or the other measures and indicators of climate change from ocean heat content and sea levels to changes in ice sheets and minimum sea ice levels, or the passing over of issues like
lag time
between emissions and
effects on temperatures... etc..
«If precipitation exceeds melting the glacier advances: if melting exceeds precipitation the glacier recedes, but there will be a time
lag between cause and
effect.
The
lags would vary markedly
between cause and
effect, as for example, an ice melt from Greenland is not likely to have any immediate impact on the Mediterrian sea.
The time
lag of 20, 30, or more years includes many more complex physics, as you point out, but the salient point is that there is a decadal - scale time
lag between what we do and when when see the
effect, and for my intented audience, that is already news.
This figure indicates 3 things: (1) the time
lag between emitting greenhouse gases and when we see the principle
effect is about 30 years, due mostly to the time required to heat the oceans, (2) the rate of temperature increase predicted by a climate sensitivity of 3 °C tracks well with the observed rate of temperature increase, and (3) we have already locked in more than 1.5 °C warming.
Remember that there is a variable
lag between the initial solar
effect of warming or cooling on the Pacific Ocean and that
effect then working through all the other oceanic oscillations so it is difficult to establish the overall balance of the oceanic oscillations at any given time.
This would maybe explain the long
lag between cause (shifting disposition of gravitational bodies), and
effect (shifting currents of sub-surface matter).
Important
lag effect and the difference
between transient and equilibrium responses.
Warmer air temperatures with ocean temperatures
lagging would result in La Nina's having a relatively larger spread
between water and air temps producing a stronger
effect even with weak La Nina's.
«On the basis of the information in the public domain about solar cycles and the positive PDO it should have been blatantly obvious that the world would warm up without the need to speculate on a contribution from CO2 or anything else... I find Mr. [Alec] Rawls very helpful in illustrating the
effect of time
lags between solar input and oceanic oscillations... As Mr. Rawls points out...
This accounts for the cause and
effect lag observed
between warming and CO2 release, which Al forgot to mention in his movie.
1) A accurate regression of CO2 in the atmosphere against temperature change resulting in a strong correlation
between the two (This might be made more difficult by a time
lag effect).
There's a 20 - 30 year
lag between CO2 emissions and warming CO2 emissions rose rapidly since 2000, and that heating
effect has not yet been felt.
Like I said earlier, the problem is that the
lag between emissions and
effect is so long, that it occupies half an average lifespan, and people dismiss it or aren't worried about it since they are more worried about immediate survival.
The Go will sport an all new fast - switch LCD display with a 2560 x 1440 resolution that head of Oculus Hugo Barra says should help eliminate the screen door
effect (the lines you see
between pixels) and help reduce
lag or latency
between when you move and when images change on the headset's display.
Because we were interested in interpreting the
lagged effects of each predictor with controlling for change in the predictor, we summed the
lagged and concurrent paths and tested this
effect against the null value of 0.47 Findings revealed that R - rated movie restrictions at baseline also predicted lower likelihood of onset
between 8 months and 16 months (HR: 0.73 [95 % CI: 0.62 — 0.87]-RRB- and restrictions at 8 months predicted lower likelihood of onset
between 16 months and 24 months (HR: 0.64 [95 % CI: 0.53 — 0.77]-RRB-.
However, the time
lags between cause and
effect in real estate are huge so we may not see any impact for a while.