After many decades of being victimized by fraudulent claims from their customers, the industry is adept at sorting through and spotting suspicious
looking claims activity.
Not exact matches
«Low - Calorie Diet Slows Aging in Mice in Study,»
claimed a recent headline.17 According to the article, «Putting elderly mice on a very low - calorie diet for as little as four weeks reversed many of the changes in the
activity of various genes that had occurred during normal aging...» The resesearchers were not
looking at actual signs of disease, nor were they measuring lifespan, but instead focused on the analysis of 11,000 different genes using a method called microarray technology in which Spindler has large financial holdings.
Looking to 2014, management's comfortable YTD severe weather
claims are within budget, but expects a pick - up in regular
claims in line with increasing economic
activity.
The authors
look closely at the
claim of a «scientific consensus» that most of the climate change that occurred in the past 50 years was due to human
activity and that future climate change will be dangerous.
I've audited many
claims about cycles since November 2007 and pursued many curiosities arising along the way; most of them run into dead ends of one form or another, but the ones I describe in this comment keep getting cleaner as I
look more carefully (an
activity for which I no longer have much time, unfortunately).
However, if we extend the corrected SSNs back to 1750 it
looks like this http://www.leif.org/research/Corrected-Wolf-Sunspot-Numbers.png where you can see that solar
activity was also high in the 18th and 19th centuries, while temperatures were not [so people
claim, at least].
They
look for patterns of
claims activity among people like you.
Look for examples of past jobs or
activities to back up your
claims (e.g. art or graphic design experience, etc.).