Sentences with phrase «n't model his behaviour»

God doesn't model his behaviour on ours.

Not exact matches

He invests long - term in a limited number of well understood businesses, a model he says emulates the behaviour of the world's super-rich, who don't constantly churn their portfolios and who don't flip their investments when markets dive.
Why wouldn't women be afraid of their ability to labor independently and successfully when the only behaviour that is modeled for them is of the «good» passive woman who does what the doctor tells her and the «bad» hippy woman who screams and flails about uncontrolably?
Not only does admitting we've done wrong model good behaviour, it also re-establishes trust.
In other words, even when home visitation programs succeed in their goal of changing parent behaviour, these changes do not appear to produce significantly better child outcomes.21, 22 One recent exception, however, was a study of the Home Instruction Program for Preschool Youngsters (HIPPY) model with low - income Latino families showing changes in home parenting and better third - grade math achievement.23 Earlier evaluations of HIPPY found mixed results regarding program effectiveness.
DR. DEBORAH PONTILLO: I might change the word competition to modelling behaviour just because I think the word «competition» may imply one child wins, the other loses and of course you never want to get into that because of [inaudible 00:29:41] reasons just to make the other child not feel very good especially if you're truly not as ready.
He insists that he is the model of good behaviour - «I can't abide PMQs.
Behaviours may be unpredictable, important factors may be left out or even underestimated, and models are not guaranteed to work the first time.
But a model of Ceres presented at the LPSC has added a wrinkle by suggesting comet - like behaviour is only possible at the poles of the dwarf planet, not the lower - latitude areas where the bright spot has been seen.
The academics used standard tests and a psychological model to investigate associations between autistic traits, depression, feelings of not belonging and of being a burden, and suicidal behaviour.
If this «wobbling» is not an unknown astrophysical phenomenon and in fact the result of the behaviour of dark matter, then it is inconsistent with the standard model of dark matter and can only be explained if dark matter particles can interact with each other — a strong contradiction to the current understanding of dark matter.
Previous analogs failed because they could not mimic the behaviours of native gangliosides even in artificial model systems.
Often his behaviour wasn't of a standard that you would readily associate with a role model, but his charismatic personality, along with that iconic eighties hairdo, inspired me to work hard and gave me that drive to push boundaries to succeed in sport and life.
The other thing Rebecca is if we think about... obviously that's the end result, children being either suspended or excluded because the manage - and - discipline model doesn't work for them and they are moved out of the school, or pushed out of the school I some cases after their behaviour escalates.
Behaviour management was a concern for me and as a mentor teacher who supervises pre-service teachers, I believe it is an integral part of my role to not only model effective behaviour management approaches, but to give my pre-service teacher strong support when classes are dBehaviour management was a concern for me and as a mentor teacher who supervises pre-service teachers, I believe it is an integral part of my role to not only model effective behaviour management approaches, but to give my pre-service teacher strong support when classes are dbehaviour management approaches, but to give my pre-service teacher strong support when classes are difficult.
It's simply a matter of applying these skills and knowledge and... this doesn't work for kids who don't fit in or have disabilities or whatever, whose behaviour we decide is unmanageable, they are moved out of the classroom so there's exclusion built into the manage - and - discipline model of behaviour.
The wheel is not just about the learners, it is about the teachers — they have to live the wheel and model the behaviour for new learners introduced to the 4Cs — communication, collaboration, creativity and critical thinking.
As ever with electrified vehicles, there's a curious satisfaction and a fluidity to the Clarity's behaviour, and it's difficult to think of many cars that would soothe away your daily commute to quite the same extent, but Honda hasn't added to the world's (small) tally of low - emission drivers» cars with its latest fuel cell model.
At this stage the essential differences between the previous model and the new car become clear, not least because you now have an «RS Drive» button, which offers a choice of three distinct modes (Normal, Sport and Race) to tailor the car's behaviour to the road you're on and the mood you're in.
Another model of the (price) technical behaviour is that the prices are a result of a very complex «chaotic» dynamical system (the behaviour of all those that trade), where the «strange attractors» are not fixed, (i.e the phase space changes with expectations).
Rat models are experimental and do not show spontaneous compulsive behaviour, as canine models do.
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There is some really impressive realistic damage modelling including loss of tyres following a heavy impact with the barrier or a collision with another car, the front wing becoming detached which will affect the handling of your car until a pit stop has been made, aerodynamic carbon fibre bodywork flying through the air in a variety of directions after a lesser impact which is not race ending but could affect the behaviour of your car, engine blowouts following a mechanical failure or too much mileage on the same engine and more besides.
These statistical models are very efficient at encapsulating existing information concisely and as long as things don't change much, they can provide reasonable predictions of future behaviour.
I hope we're not starting to confuse model behaviour with real - world behaviour!
It seems that CCSM4 models, whether time shifted or not, fail to account for the recent behaviour of Arctic sea ice.
And I'm not aware of any climate model that shows chaotic behaviour on long time scales.
If you do not believe that system with chaotic behaviour can be modeled in this way then you have far better things to worry about.
For example, Hansen's recent paper on Scientific Reticence is quite explicit that much of important physics of ice sheets is not included in the models, hence his raising of matters to do with nonlinear behaviour (eg disintegration) of ice sheets.
And I suspect that vegetation models would mostly be tuned to simulate interior forest behaviour and so might not be that informative about vegetation response to changing diffuse / direct light near the tree line with open and sparse forest cover.
So now you can say that climate models have this «averaging over chaotic behaviour» and weather models don't?
Remember that sensitivity is not defined from the models, but from the paleo - climate observations, and so you would need some radical departure from expected behaviour to challenge that.
Like I say, you see a richness of behaviour in the models including in some occasions behaviour that at first sight looks not dissimilar to that highlighted in the observations by the Thompson paper and this on top of the «external control» as we called it in our 2000 paper in Science of the external forcings in a particular model which drives much of the multi-decadal hemispheric response in these models and which, in terms of the overall global warming response, is dominated by greenhouse gases.
Seeing as the hundred of other models certainly don't conform to the future behaviour of the climate — as they don't all track each other — it must be a fortuitous accident.
It studies the behaviour of people with reference to Risk and Ambiguity Avoidance, but that is psychology, not economics and physics modelling, etc..
While climate models show their own El Niño - and La Niña - like behaviour, it does not necessarily occur at the same time in models as it does in the real world.
We know that every bit of weather is caused by purely physical activity, but our models of weather behaviour are imperfect because we do not have all the theoretically possible data.
Given that law shows that Gleick's behaviour is a criminal offence and given that the whole climate science sand castle is built upon dodgy models and statistics, it seems that you've not bothered to understand what you talk about.
They have not yet had the same impact as the Black Death — but as we saw in New Orleans in 2005, it does not take the bubonic plague to destroy social order and functional infrastructure in a financially complex and impoverished society... Once you understand the transition in this way, the need is not for a supercomputed Five Year Plan — but a project, the aim of which should be to expand those technologies, business models and behaviours that dissolve market forces, socialise knowledge, eradicate the need for work and push the economy towards abundance.
Michael Chriton posed the question «if we can not acurately model the stock market to the point we can predict it's behaviour, what makes us think we can model a far more complex system, being the climate».
I suspect that the behaviour of clouds is one reason the AGW models don't work as well as we'd like.
Consider models to be the equivalent of hypotheses representing how it is believed that atmospheric physics works and the various measuring activities to be the experiments so that over many years predicted changes in climate behaviour may or may not be observed.
But perhaps a more important point to make here is that even where behaviours are satisfactorily reproduced it would not mean that the physical basis of the model are correct.
This is a lovely example of the type of human behaviour that modellers consistently fail to include in their models — because they can not.
They are not simulated in the climate models because emergent properties can not be simulated without adequate understanding of the emergent behaviour.
But ENSO, AMO, etc. do not arise in the output of climate models and there is lack of knowledge to enable these behaviours to be simulated in the models.
However since such chaos - based variability can not be explicitly modeled, one can not be certain that recent warming is natural - chaotic however much it might resemble climate behaviour in past times.
I don't think that the variation in the age effects estimates is due to the choice of models or to strange behaviour in older trees.
What was done, was to take a large number of models that could not reasonably simulate known patterns of natural behaviour (such as ENSO, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation), claim that such models nonetheless accurately depicted natural internal climate variability, and use the fact that these models could not replicate the warming episode from the mid seventies through the mid nineties, to argue that forcing was necessary and that the forcing must have been due to man.
-- the behaviour of large influences on temperature has to be guessed (e.g. clouds)-- historical data are inadequate to estimate the size of other influences (aerosols)-- we don't know if we have even identified all the factors (forcings) involved, and of those already identified, not all are included in the models.
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