CO2 variations show
little correlation with our planet's climate on long, medium and even short time scales.
Only if you believe, and I'd like to see the evidence, that these recent trees are a small subset of those cored, and data from those cores not included gave
little correlation with temperatures.
Before 1998 the consensus was that there was much more variability in past temperatures and very
little correlation with CO2 on the other hand temperature did seem to correlate with solar cycle length.
We found generally that proxy data for that region show
little correlation with hemispheric mean temperature.
Talking to real people, views on climate have
little correlation with other political views.
Annual emissions show very
little correlation with annual changes in concentration.
The down side is that it appears this exposure to nature and conservation via film bears very
little correlation with a more complex and deep understanding of the natural world and its protection, or actions relation to personal lifestyle and responsibility.
Timothy Patterson, professor of geology and director of the Ottawa - Carleton Geoscience Centre of Canada's Carleton University, says that «CO2 variations show
little correlation with our planet's climate on long, medium and even short - time scales.»
There is
little correlation with clinical signs and x-ray findings.
I've seen a study (I think it was presented by Cliff Asness at a CFA Institute conference, though I'm not 100 % sure) which showed that there is very
little correlation with dividend payout and a company's growth rate.
AI - long term, stocks have demonstrated very
little correlation with the economy overall, or with credit conditions.
This is one of the enduring paradoxes of investing: effort has very
little correlation with outcome.
Because of their hedged construction, the carry, momentum, and value factors have very
little correlation with most exposures to asset classes and traditional risk factors.
Slightly exaggeratingly they argued that ETFs could be a threat to the financial system and that some ETFs were too complicated to be traded by private investors as the securities had
little correlation with the indices they were tracking.
Much like the pattern in U.S. data, year - over-year changes in World EPS have very
little correlation with the short - term returns of the MSCI World price index.
On a budget of $ 500 billion, that means $ 50 billion is paid out every year for something that has
little correlation with student achievement.
And though the Globes have
little correlation with the Oscars, a handful of movies came away with big wins.
Average annual temperatures showed surprisingly
little correlation with mosquito population trends.
In other words, how or where or what you do about your child sleeping when they're a baby has
little correlation with your lives when your child is 6.
Also, during normal fluctuations (outside of Global Financial Crisis) there is very
little correlation with equities.
But many startups fail each year; a founder's background has
little correlation with success.
Not exact matches
High - quality bonds protect investors during times of market stress and deflation, providing a diversification benefit
with little - to - no
correlation to stocks in the short - term.
Instead of keeping 20 % in cash, thereby reducing expected risk to 12 %, the investor could move into 10y government bonds
with a higher return than cash and even a
little bit of negative
correlation with equities.
The starting to advance age is a
little concerning to me if he played more as a speed merchant earlier in his career (no idea if that is the case since I have never seen him play, just speculating given his small stature and playing at wide positions) as their production generally declines more quickly in
correlation with age.
I have worked (and been friends
with) both «younger» and «older» parents and frankly have seen
little correlation between the age (or even planning) of parenthood and a parent's responsiveness or choice to employ AP principles.
These behaviours have
little direct
correlation with the nutritional needs of an infant and such advice would never be given by a knowledgeable doctor.
To calculate the
correlation during the
Little Ice Age, researchers compared the core data
with proxies for precipitation data, such as data from tree rings, cave formations and other natural records.
The study reports that glaciers flowing to the coast on the western side of the Peninsula show a distinct spatial
correlation with ocean temperature patterns,
with those in the south retreating rapidly but those in the north showing
little change.
Because China Study II includes regions
with a much greater degree of urbanization than the first China Study, some of the
correlations are a
little different.
He also ignores the reality that the education spending has continued to increase for the past five decades, and that much of the troubles
with American public education has
little do
with money than
with the fact that so much school funding is trapped by practices such as degree - and seniority - based pay scales for teachers that have no
correlation with improving student achievement.
States differ in the amount budgeted for education, often
with little to no apparent
correlation between number of dollars spent and graduation rates or scores on achievement tests.
«Today's vote to move Senate Bill 455 forward is a move in the right direction for Connecticut schools, and can eliminate barriers to teaching that have
little or no
correlation with a teacher's job performance or positive impact on kids,» said Jen Alexander, chief executive officer of ConnCAN (Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now).
I can really see myself raising a
little kid and teaching them word
correlation with kids ebooks and the audiobook version.
This, for us, is a critical requirement for investors, because there are dozens of garbage models that purport to measure stock market valuation, but have
little (and sometimes zero or negative)
correlation with subsequent market performance.
Provide a wide range of asset classes (excluding equities) that, historically, have
little to no
correlation with equities; thus, one is able to hedge against stock risk without relying on a single asset, leverage, shorting or inverse products.
Returns go down a
little bit, and the strategy's volatility goes up, but its
correlation with the stock market goes to zero.
The Fund may have
little or no
correlation with general market fluctuations for meaningful periods of time.
The first is that a truly diversified portfolio must include asset classes that have
little correlation (or even some negative
correlation)
with stocks.
I agree
with you that filters are a
little tricky, it's the causation vs
correlation argument.
Pending that the fund can attract additional capital — or competition — a reduction in the management fee could very easily provide for a low - cost hedging mechanism for generating income from dividends
with little correlation to the broad market.
This return is more impressive when you consider the fund's beta of.25, meaning it has very
little correlation to the S&P 500 index
with very low volatility.
While 9 % (or thereabouts) may not match the long term return for index funds, it does offer some diversity (
with risk, yes, but
with very
little, if any,
correlation to the market).
Really, it would be better to break the world down by industry, but there is enough
correlation within nations that this characterization works,
with a
little hand - waving.
Gummy, a prominent poster and retired mathematics professor whose real name is Peter Ponzo, was able to shed a
little bit of light by plotting the (Half Failure Withdrawal Rate
with 80 % stocks) HFWR80
correlation versus E10 / P (over a 36 - year period) versus start year.
One
little - known fact is that the classic 60/40 balanced portfolio has roughly a 98 percent
correlation with stocks.
They also found very
little correlation between a dog being aggressive
with other dogs and
with humans.
And of course then there are studies that show that show there is very
little correlation (if any) that violent behavior in youths is already developed elsewhere and games are just a bargaining chip
with that already established mentality.
On that basis I could put a
little more faith in Milivoje's
correlations between CET and other phenomena for the first half of CET than for the second (and yet more
with some improvements to the physics!).
Predicting climate behavior by fabricating
correlations with little understanding of the system as a whole does require certain parts of the brain to go dead.
There is very
little consensus that there is a
correlation of CO2 increase
with the debated temperature increase.