Sentences with phrase «show little variation»

In contrast, husbands» fairness ratings and satisfaction with housework show little variation across the life course.»
The first 400 years show little variation, only the effect caused by the temperature changes, including the LIA.
They all feel the same early in and show little variation from one another.
Sequences of their nuclear and mitochondrial DNA show little variation and none of the telltale signs that suggest distinct species.
This «airborne fraction» has shown little variation over this period.»

Not exact matches

The initial recipe was for Flourless Peanut Butter Cookies, but the picture showed a variation that tasty little cookie, that included broken pretzels and heath bar pieces!Need I say more?It was a no brainer, I mean how could I resist Toffee - Pretzel Peanut Butter Cookies!
Given that many of the fine details of violin shape probably have little impact on the instrument's tone, says Chitwood, the analysis could have shown much subtle variation.
Also, while the movements that make up terrestrial gaits like trotting can vary from one dog breed to another, the dog paddle gait showed very little variation among the different breeds.
They confirmed earlier studies» results, which showed relatively little genetic variation in late European Neanderthals — in other words, that they were closely related to one another.
They found that all families showed similar responses, indicating low levels of genetic variation in temperature sensitivity, and therefore little potential for climatic tolerances to evolve.
Our data show little generational variation.
Notice that these variations between the Medieval Maximum and the Little Ice Age (no more than 0.3 oC or so) are not that different to what Mann showed in his «hockeystick» curve.
The rigorous value - added models of student achievement tend to show considerable variation in teacher effectiveness, but very little of the variation can be attributed to the academic backgrounds of teachers.
We found little significant variation by district type, except that more high - performance districts than high - need districts reported having a policy in place (98 % to 80 %), as Figure 2 shows.5
A plot of average overall vehicle fuel economy (CAFE) for new model year passenger cars, the required by law CAFE standard target fuel economy value (CAFE standard) for new model year passenger cars, and fuel prices, adjusted for inflation, shows that there has been little variation over the past 20 years.
Most recently, she published this little 44 - page cahier called Variations on the Right to Remain Silent, which includes an essay about the complicating gaps (physical and metaphysical) that show up when we try to translate things.
That will show you how your book is faring compared to others in its field — and it will also help you avoid worrying about variations in rank that have little to do with your own book.
LittleBigPlanet 3 was revealed with very little drumroll, as the demo jumped straight into gameplay, showing off new features, like three new character variations that change the traversal mechanics.
Nor does it help that there's precious little variation in the foes themselves, who almost always show up as tall, shirtless warriors with deer - skull helmets or as beefy berserker shamans.
/ Kempner / 501 W 23 / thru 7/13 Opening 6/6 Unique / Von Lintel / 520 W 23 / thru 7/12 Richard Dupont / Williams / 521 W 23 / thru 6/28 Valeri Larko; Trevor Young / Cacciola / 537 W 23 / thru 6/29 Carolyn Case; Jens Schubert / Geisberg / 537b W 23 / thru 7/13 Opening 6/6 Logical Expressions & Variations: William Betts; Gary Carsley; Shane Hope; Julie Oppermann / Thatcher / 539 W 23 / thru 6/8 In Form: K.Teale; J.Camacho; G.Petersen; K.Saito; L.Herritt; T.McGlynn; A.Rojas; R.Sayre; T.Webber / 24 - 6 / 44 W 26 @ 6th / thru 7/13 Opening 6/13 JR & Jose Parla / Wolkowitz / 505 W 24 / thru 7/12 Rodney Graham / 303 / 507 W 24 (new location) / thru 6/12 Anthony Pearson / Boesky / 509 W 24 / thru 6/8 Yang Yi / Richard / 514 W 24 / thru 6/15 (extended) Extravagant Features curated by Clarissa Dalrymple / C24 / 514 W 24 / thru 6/22 Marisa Merz / Gladstone / 515 W 24 / thru 6/8 (extended) Sara VanDerBeek / Metro Pictures / 519 W 24 / thru 6/8 Kim Dorland / Weiss / 520 W 24 / thru 6/8 Marcia Kure / Inglett / 522 W 24 / thru 6/15 Ellsworth Kelly / Marks / 523 W 24 / thru 6/29 Tim Bavington / Shainman / 524 W 24 (new, second location) / thru 6/29 Wolfgang Tillmans / Rosen / 525 W 24 / thru 6/22 Peter Allen Hoffmann / Freight + Volume / 530 W 24 / thru 7/6 Orly Genger / Goldston / 530 W 24 (temporary location) / thru 6/22 Philip Taaffe / Luhring Augustine / 531 W 24 / thru 6/15 Zak Smith / Fredericks Freiser / 536 W 24 / thru 6/8 Marc Quinn / Boone / 541 W 24 / thru 6/29 James Gortner / Lyons Wier / 542 W 24 / thru 6/6 Lynda Benglis; Sean Bluechel; Jean Dubuffet; Mika Rottenberg; Axel Salto / Rosen / 544 W 24 (second, new location) / thru 6/22 Jeff Koons / Gagosian / 555 W 24 / thru 6/29 Hypnotherapy: John Brill; Llyn Foulkes; Pablo Helguera; David Lynch; Jill Spector / Kent / 210 Eleventh Ave — floor 2 / thru 6/29 Judith Simonian / Thorp / 210 Eleventh Ave — floor 6 / thru 6/8 (extended) Christopher Evans; Daisy Craddock / Fischbach / 210 Eleventh Ave. — floor 8 / 5/30 thru 6/28 Reception 6/5 Edda Renouf / Senior & Shopmaker / 210 Eleventh Avenue — floor 8 / thru 6/8 Dennis Congdon curated by Stanley Whitney / Cue Art Foundation / 137 W 25 (new location) / thru 7/6 Tim Hawkinson / Pace / 508 W 25 / thru 6/22 Richard Misrach / Pace 510 W 25 / thru 6/29 Carl Palazzolo / Lennon, Weinberg / 514 W 25 / thru 6/8 Erin Murray / Margolis / 523 W 25 / thru 6/15 Refuge and Rememberance / Driscoll Babcock / 525 W 25 / thru 6/22 Heide Hatry / Stux / 530 W 25 / thru 6/22 Grant Drumheller / Prince Street / 530 W 25 / thru 6/15 Gerald Ellis / Jaeckel / 532 W 25 / thru 6/29 Yoshitomo Nara / Pace / 534 W 25 / thru 6/29 John Lees / Cunningham / 541 W 25 / thru 6/22 Drew Heitzler; Group Show / Marlborough / 545 W 25 / thru 6/29 Jannis Kounellis / Cheim & Read / 547 W 25 / thru 6/22 Negar Ahkami / Heller / 568 W 25 / thru 7/6 Opening 6/6 Armin Boehm / Harris Lieberman / 508 W 26 (Ground Floor) / thru 6/15 Gedi Sibony / Greene Naftali / 508 W 26 — floor 8 / thru 6/15 Judith Schaechter / Oliver / 513 W 26 / thru 6/29 Luke DiIorio; Razvan Boar; George Little / Cristea / 521 W 26 / thru 6/22 Nicola Lopez / Pace Prints / 521 W 26 / thru 6/8 Montclair MFA Exhibition / MagnanMetz / 521 W 26 / thru 6/22 Opening 6/6 Summer: Justin Allen; Joan Banach; Mark Fox; Yayoi Kusama; C.K.Rajan / Miller / 524 W 26 / thru summer Opening 6/12 Shirley Goldfarb / Howard / 525 W 26 — floor 4 / thru 6/8 Seescape / Adams / 525 W 26 / thru 8/16 Opening 6/5 Hansjoerg Dobliar / Vogt / 526 W 26 — floor 2 / thru 6/15 Floater: C. Jukkala; A.
Timothy Patterson, professor of geology and director of the Ottawa - Carleton Geoscience Centre of Canada's Carleton University, says that «CO2 variations show little correlation with our planet's climate on long, medium and even short - time scales.»
Mike's work, like that of previous award winners, is diverse, and includes pioneering and highly cited work in time series analysis (an elegant use of Thomson's multitaper spectral analysis approach to detect spatiotemporal oscillations in the climate record and methods for smoothing temporal data), decadal climate variability (the term «Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation» or «AMO» was coined by Mike in an interview with Science's Richard Kerr about a paper he had published with Tom Delworth of GFDL showing evidence in both climate model simulations and observational data for a 50 - 70 year oscillation in the climate system; significantly Mike also published work with Kerry Emanuel in 2006 showing that the AMO concept has been overstated as regards its role in 20th century tropical Atlantic SST changes, a finding recently reaffirmed by a study published in Nature), in showing how changes in radiative forcing from volcanoes can affect ENSO, in examining the role of solar variations in explaining the pattern of the Medieval Climate Anomaly and Little Ice Age, the relationship between the climate changes of past centuries and phenomena such as Atlantic tropical cyclones and global sea level, and even a bit of work in atmospheric chemistry (an analysis of beryllium - 7 measurements).
It's the latest research in more than a decade of work producing a climate «hockey stick» — graphs of global or regional temperatures showing relatively little variation over a millennium or more and then a sharp uptick since the middle of the twentieth century (the blade at the end of the stick).
See e.g. this review paper (Schmidt et al, 2004), where the response of a climate model to estimated past changes in natural forcing due to solar irradiance variations and explosive volcanic eruptions, is shown to match the spatial pattern of reconstructed temperature changes during the «Little Ice Age» (which includes enhanced cooling in certain regions such as Europe).
Cochelin et al used a model of intermediate complexity to show that the orbital variations over the next 100,000 years are weak enough that even a little human CO2 remaining in the atmosphere is enough to keep the earth out of an ice age («Simulation of long - term future climate changes with the green McGill paleoclimate model: The next glacial inception»).
In that paper, Kerry and Mike show the combination of global SSTs and regional aerosol forcing are a good predictor of Atlantic tropical SSTs and thereby Atlantic TC counts, and that there is very little Atlantic tropical SST variation left for a multi-decadal cycle to explain.
The importance of variations in the thermohaline circulation has been stressed by other recent research that shows a temporary decline in Gulf Stream velocities may be the main culprit behind the Little Ice Age.
The PCM model in Fig 5.7 shows little pole to pole variation in trends below altitudes corresponding to atmospheric pressures of 500hPa.
«Great faith is placed by both Ferdinand and matty on there apparently being very little difference between emissions and sinks in the past as shown by the relatively narrow range of CO2 variation; but as I show the latter does not prove the former;»
An energy budget calculation shows that the energy trapped by clouds accounts for little of the observed climate variations
CO2 variations show little correlation with our planet's climate on long, medium and even short time scales.
To the extent that the «Little Ice Age» and «Medieval Warm Period» can be meaningfully defined, there has been much work showing that the main variations can be explained in terms of the response of the climate system to natural variability in solar and volcanic events that would have influenced surface temperature.
Wunsh examined temperature records from several individual ice cores, and did a statistical analysis to show that very little of the temperature variation recorded could be explained by Milankovitch cycles.
All of these global climate changes show exceptionally good correlation with solar variation since the Little Ice Age 400 years ago.
Further, it seems to show that global temperatures fluctuate widely and frequently, thus begging the question whether current warming is just a natural variation, an expected increase emerging from the Little Ice Age.
So Dash Charge's idle - charging and under - load charging scores tend to show very little variation.
It shows the discrepancies between perceived and estimated covariance matrices and scores near to zero represents the little bit variations on the observed and estimated scores.
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