Not exact matches
The study also
suggests two
other widely - used sea surface temperature
datasets, the Hadley Centre's HadSST3 record and the Japanese COBE - SST record, have significant «cool biases» due to treating all measuring instruments equally.
In turn, we find these
datasets to correspond well to independent observations of SST,
suggesting that some particular regions of the globe are not as affected as
others by calibration artifacts.
In particular it was
suggested here at Climate etc, that folks should look at
other datasets to conform or call into question K5 decisions.
Although the current
dataset collected little demographic data on individual cases, information from the practices showed a very high percentage of suburban practices in the current sample,
suggesting the possibility that the overall socioeconomic status of these subjects might be much higher than it was in the original PSC - 17 sample.1 As noted in previous studies with the PSC43 and
other measures, 9,13,44,45 the rate of positive screening, especially for externalizing problems, is usually higher in lower — socioeconomic status populations.