Sentences with phrase «rely on correlation»

This approach overcomes the limited comparability between studies that is typical for methods that rely on correlation in gene expression.
That paper «Climate Over Past Millennia» relies on the correlation of temperature with tree ring width as proved by other people / papers.
The essential problem that killed LTCM is that their model relied on correlations which (we have been reminded) fail in times of stress.
That paper «Climate Over Past Millennia» relies on the correlation of temperature with tree ring width as proved by other people / papers.
One can't rely on the correlations alone, as the correlation between temperature and CO2 increase is the same, wether you detrend the CO2 data or not, and in fact the emissions correlate much better.

Not exact matches

For instance if your retirement relies solely on a stock portfolio, then market volatility likely is much more of a risk than a situation where your retirement will be supported by income from several different vehicles with varying degrees of correlation to market ups and downs.
My point is that if you are going to rely on a historical based fear of women and babies dieing in childbirth (which they did and still do) then it is important to look at the correlations and significant factors so you can consciously choose if you want to continue acting from that fear based model.
It was therefore essential to determine whether a causal link exists between methylation and gene expression, rather than relying on a simple correlation.
«Among the prominent advantages of M - TIP is its ability to solve the structure directly from the correlation data without having to rely on any symmetry constraints, and, more importantly, without the need to solve the orientation determination problem,» Donatelli said.
Studies have yet to confirm this correlation, but many practicing hypnotists rely on it.
Because of this correlation, the authors rely on the Hypersegregation Index to identify the most - and least - segregated districts, while including the Isolation of Poverty Index and Isolation of Wealth Index data as measures of further insight.
Provide a wide range of asset classes (excluding equities) that, historically, have little to no correlation with equities; thus, one is able to hedge against stock risk without relying on a single asset, leverage, shorting or inverse products.
«The problem with this approach to risk is that it relies on volatilities and correlations that are assumed to be stable.
«Clearly correlations aren't stable through time,» he concludes, adding that investors who rely on average correlation to determine risk aren't diversifying at all.
In cases where the correlation coefficient is close to zero, as it is for year - to - year equity market returns, a prediction that relies predominantly on the base rate is likely to outperform predictions derived from other approaches.
That is definitely not the case for the other natural variations such as the PDO and the AMO, which rely on fairly crude statistical correlations (fish catches?)
Anthropogenic global warming does not rely on simple correlations.
SW find that solar forcing accounts for ~ 50 % of 20C warming, but this conclusion relies on some rather primitive correlations and is sensitive to assumptions (see recent post by Gavin on attribution).
The correlation merely represents the fact that «prosperous» nations which have used more energy have historically primarily relied on fossil fuels to supply that energy.
It might be that the correlation breaks down whenever it gets too hot, in which case reconstructions of past temperature that rely heavily on tree - ring data will give a misleading picture.
It relies on the naïve and quite unscientific principle that correlation establishes cause and effect, and its corollary, the unprecedented principle.
While the average earthly temperature does climb in correlation to the amount of atmospheric carbon, people tend to rely on their observations of the weather to validate or repudiate the science behind climate change.
Your figures showing correlations pretty much rely on using fat lines that obscure the actual data See Figs. 5, 6 and 7 for a start.
However, don't rely on recruiters and hiring managers to see the correlation between your past experience and your future career.
These two approaches may rely on different cognitive processes, explaining why no correlation was found between the two emotion regulation strategies.
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