A similar frequency analysis of HadSST3, shown in Figure 7, shows that the long term cyclic variation, greater then 100 years, has been severely attenuated.
Not exact matches
Acoustic
analysis revealed why: Those pushier purrs harbored a hidden higher - pitched meow, with a
frequency similar to that of a human infant's cry.
«The results of our acoustic
analyses show that howler monkeys produce roars at a
similar frequency as tigers, which is far lower than we would have predicted from their body size, yet exactly what would be predicted from measuring their giant vocal folds.»
S&W argue that their method eliminates influences of ENSO and volcanoes because their calculated sensitivity in the higher
frequency band is
similar to the one derived by Douglass and Clader (2002) by regression
analysis (0.11 K / Wm -2).
In their
analysis they also in effect compare the amplitudes of two series which have been band - pass filtered in a
similar way, and do not provide convincing evidence that they really are related — there are wiggles of
similar frequencies, as expected when they have been band - pass filetered, but they do not exhibit a convincing one - to - one correspondence (in neither phase or amplitude), and the authors do not discuss the level of statistical significance.
In these
analyses, Ser482 allele
frequencies were very
similar (36.9 % in Spanish vs. 37.5 % in UK Caucasians, P = 0.83), suggesting that confounding by genetic stratification is unlikely to explain the association between Gly482Ser genotype and endurance capacity.
In their
analysis they also in effect compare the amplitudes of two series which have been band - pass filtered in a
similar way, and do not provide convincing evidence that they really are related — there are wiggles of
similar frequencies, as expected when they have been band - pass filetered, but they do not exhibit a convincing one - to - one correspondence (in neither phase or amplitude), and the authors do not discuss the level of statistical significance.
The overall result of the
analysis is
similar to the real - time
analysis with a best estimate of a 59 % increase in event
frequency, but a larger confidence interval that does include no change.
«The authors analyzed malaria statistics that were collected in Finland from 1750 to 2008 via correlation
analyses between malaria
frequency per million people and all variables that have been used in
similar studies throughout other parts of Europe,» including temperature data, animal husbandry, consolidation of land by redistribution and household size... report that «malaria was a common endemic disease in Finland in the 18th and 19th centuries and prevalent in the whole country,» and they say that «mortality during malaria epidemics usually varied between 0.85 and 3 %.»
A
similar pattern of findings emerged when
frequency of contact between the child and his or her primary support was examined in the GEE
analysis (see Table 2).