Sentences with phrase «relatively little influence»

County has relatively little influence in impoverished, predominantly black East New York.
Upthread, I've suggested reasons why the CO2 effect is relatively little influenced by chaotic factors, and why anthropogenic warming can be predicted with reasonable accuracy independent of initial conditions.

Not exact matches

With relatively little work (approx 1 day) to get on the ballot, you can become an elected official and directly influence the democratic party and begin to effect change from the bottom up.
Eliot Spitzer, a former state governor and attorney general, argued that because New York City is overwhelmingly Democratic, corruption is even more prevalent in local Republican organizations struggling to make an electoral impact with relatively little amounts of money and influence.
Yet for all its influence in many aspects of our lives — from sleep to immunity and, particularly, metabolism — relatively little is understood about the mammalian circadian rhythm and the interlocking processes that comprise this complex biological clock.
«In this way of thinking, there is an implicit assumption that the female has relatively little latitude for action or influence over her reproductive success beyond choosing the right male,» says Halberg.
But it can also be strongly influenced by fringe candidates with relatively little support.
In my own data, I find relatively little evidence that the propensity of a student's peers to engage in criminal activity influences the degree to which he commits violent crimes.
This relatively isolated life, without TV, little music and few visitors — away from the art scene in New York — was to become a definitive influence on her work, and one which Martin consciously aspired toward.
Though long considered domineering, Stieglitz had relatively little to do with influencing O'Keeffe's taste in dress.
«Ocean evaporation has little direct influence on California precipitation because of its relatively weak variability,» Wei said.
Gasoline is a relatively inelastic product, meaning changes in prices have little influence on demand.
Relatively little is known about how this trait actually influences physiology and health, but the data suggest it does (Lahey, 2009) and it could therefore be of clinical importance to infertility patients, as well as of psychological significance to their treatment experience.
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