Sentences with phrase «meaningful conclusions about»

According to this line of reasoning, the 35 years since 1979 are simply not long enough to form meaningful conclusions about the longer - term pace of global warming.
While these assumptions admittedly simplify the socioeconomic complexities and uncertainties, they allowed us to draw meaningful conclusions about the economic impact of educational gaps in the United States.
With more complete data we are able to draw more meaningful conclusions about student learning.
It is not possible to draw meaningful conclusions about improvements in outcomes or practices if this initial information is unreliable.
The effect of stellar contamination is up to 15 times larger than the signal expected from molecules in the atmosphere of a rocky planet (light green band), which means that we can't currently draw any meaningful conclusions about planetary atmospheres from measurements like this.

Not exact matches

Having participants choose their own group is a major issue for drawing meaningful conclusions in science because there's the possibility that something about the people who choose a particular group might be inherently different from the people who choose the other group.
Although Tononi's volunteers got only a few minutes of artificial sleep — not enough for the volunteers to draw meaningful subjective conclusions about sleep quality — previous studies have indicated that TMS applied at certain frequencies during sleep can improve memory.
Noted as well were the «absence of any meaningful» challenge to [Sheri's] experts» conclusions, especially about the dramatic swings noticed between her, and potentially others» scores, and the other «litany of expert affidavits submitted on [Sheris»] behalf].»
As students work through eScience3000's proven 5 - step routine, they read and discuss texts to develop meaningful understandings of disciplinary core ideas; engage in hands - on activities and investigations that reflect today's science and engineering practices; and reflect on crosscutting concepts and the nature of science as they analyze their results and write about their conclusions.
«The cynical but probably realistic conclusion is that nothing very meaningful will be done about global warming until the politicians are being hammered over the head with the consequences.»
Lynn, as someone who often has to work with sparse datasets where things vary Poisson-wise about some mean, that also may be changing, I can attest that drawing rigorous and meaningful conclusions is not easy.
If I were an editor, i would solicit a review from those being criticized (they are the ones most likely to have something meaningful to say about the paper), but I would weight their review that considered their arguments, rather than their conclusions.
Not sure what to think about the finding... but as to whether I find it surprising... I think that it isn't particularly surprising because in the end, the questions themselves aren't informative enough to draw truly meaningful conclusions.
Granted the analogy is facile, but it continues to mystify me how meaningful conclusions can be drawn about climate over a period of decades.
In coming to this conclusion the Court made some very important observations about how computers and the information they contain are used and viewed by contemporary Canadian society: Specifically, it found that computers that are reasonably used for personal purposes — whether at work or at home — contain information that is meaningful, intimate, and which «touch [es] on the user's biographical core».
I did some rough estimates and came to the conclusion that it would take about 40 — 50 rental properties to generate, what I considered to be «meaningful passive income» (somewhere in the $ 150 — $ 200k a year range).
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