Sentences with phrase «small correlations with»

Making more money, which law school you went to, the corresponding debt load, making law review, or the ranking of your law school itself — all of them — «showed zero to small correlations with lawyer well - being.»
The reduced insulin had a small correlation with improved memory (4).
More emotional support had a small correlation with higher PAIV (r =.21, p =.018), and less intrusiveness, insensitivity, and inconsistency (r =.25, p =.004).

Not exact matches

The U.K. Treasury's sponsored analysis of confidential tax records on tax - advantaged share schemes at over 16,000 U.K. firms reported that broad - based employee stock ownership was linked to improved value added and productivity with correlations consistent with those in many studies of smaller numbers of firms.
With correlations being as high as now, the smaller coins are also likely nearing, at least, a short - term buying opportunity.
Investors at some family offices, smaller mutual funds, and traders at hedge funds say bitcoin has helped returns and demonstrated a low correlation with other asset classes.
The starting to advance age is a little concerning to me if he played more as a speed merchant earlier in his career (no idea if that is the case since I have never seen him play, just speculating given his small stature and playing at wide positions) as their production generally declines more quickly in correlation with age.
I said nothing about the size of breasts, large or small, or their correlation with wealth or poverty.
A few epidemiological studies have even found a small correlation between SSRI use during pregnancy and ASD, but that can largely be explained by other factors, such as the severity of a mother's depression, says Lars Henning Pedersen, at Aarhus University in Denmark, who has no affiliations with any antidepressant manufacturers.
The same Swedish team found a correlation between women with the genetic variation who drink three or more cups of coffee a day and smaller breasts.
New findings published in Cogent Business & Management from authors at Cadiz University, Spain, highlight a clear correlation for small and medium - sized enterprises (SMEs) implementing CSR with better Total Quality Management (TQM), or the assumption that every staff member should abide by, and aspire to, superior standards of work and commitment.
The potential correlation of IIV with CCD may previously have gone unnoticed because these are large DNA viruses, not the small RNA viruses commonly considered to be the cause of most bee diseases.
A much larger number of haplogroup H subjects, as well as large cohorts of individuals with other haplogroups, will be necessary to analyze to dissect out other possible correlations or to determine whether or not any of the correlations we detected with a relatively small population are spurious.
When evaluating the correlations between the traits, the Sizer model also exhibited a better agreement in the cortex without needing to assume small variability in any parameter, in contrast with the Timer model (Fig 3B — D).
The finding that higher levels of seafood consumption was associated with higher levels of mercury in the brain was a small but significant correlation, Morris said.
Chen and colleagues reported a significant positive correlation of estradiol and progesterone with breast density at the third week of the menstrual cycle in a small study (N = 24) of Asian women with a mean age of 29.4 years old.
The new test — the one designed with a lower reading load — had a smaller, but still quite notable, correlation of 0.73.
T. Rowe Price Small - Cap Index Fund will seek to match the performance of the Russell 2000 ® Index with a correlation of at least 0.95.
You can diversify further by adding a small allocation to gold, which has a very low correlation with both stocks and bonds.
Their appeal is not only their non-correlation (or even negative correlation) with other parts of the portfolio, but their surprisingly low volatility: as a group, managed futures tend to have lower standard deviation and smaller drawdowns than both stocks and commodities.
Since 1978, the average yearly return in the 30 smallest companies in the S&P 500 has had a higher positive correlation with the Russell 2000 than with the big - cap index.
If you still wanted to trade this setup, since you didn't get any «correlation confirmation» from the other pairs, you could play it smart by reducing your risk and trading with a smaller position size.
But excluding the two smallest sectors, Conglomerates and Transportation, which have noisy data with only 2 % of the total market capitalization, the correlation would be 71.51 %, which would be statistically different from zero with 95 % probability.
Over time, small - cap stocks have provided exposure to a segment of the equity market that has offered faster growth, good risk - adjusted returns, and relatively low correlation with larger - cap stocks and other asset classes.
In contrast to small breed dogs and Labradors, CKCS exhibit correlation between increased cerebellar volume and cerebellar crowding within the caudal CCF, suggesting that CCF growth in CKCS is not keeping pace with the growth of the cerebellum.
In this study, we find that in CKCS, unlike small breed dogs or Labradors, there is a positive correlation between the volume of the cerebellum and degree of crowding in the caudal CCF, which suggests that CM may be due to CCF development not keeping pace with growth of the cerebellum.
«These four artists share the unique obsession with creating a picture by developing an ongoing correlation between its smaller sections.
The ice age orbital correlation is old knowledge; there all those years ago in my high school geology text *, along with the observation that the insolation change is way too small to provide a simplistic explanation.
Large changes in cosmic rays are documented in response to magnetic - field variations (the Laschamp event of about 40,000 years ago is especially prominent) with no corresponding change in climate, so any cosmic - ray influence on the climate must be very small (a weak correlation can be obscured by noise; a strong control is almost always visible «by eye,» and clearly is absent).
At Mauna Loa, the correlation coefficient was 0.62, with negligible probability that the coefficient is zero, at Macquarie Island, Southern Ocean, correlation 0.73, negligible probability that the coefficient is zero, at Izanz, Tenerife, correlation 0.54, negligible probability that the coefficient is zero, at Ascension Island, correlation 0.48, negligible probability that the coefficient is zero, at Cape Ferguson, NE Australia, correlation 0.29, minute probability that the coefficient is zero but metal smelters operating in the vicinity, at Barrow, Alaska, correlation 0.54, small probability that the coefficient is zero, at Cape Kumukahi, Hawaii, correlation 0.67, minute probability that the coefficient is zero, at Cape Grim, NW Tasmania, correlation 0.64, negligible probability that the coefficient is zero, at Casey Base, Antarctica, correlation 0.19, 2 % probability that the coefficient is zero, temperature too cold for microbial activity?
Thanks — but your comment about SE Australia conflicts with your previous comment on atmospheric circulation, as such a small area is unlikely to have a meaningful relationship between heat and rain however statistically significant your negative correlation may be (what is the t?).
In fact a strong negative correlation exists between population growth and development, as the most developed countries have a small population growth rate, so that a flattening global population is consistent with global development leading to higher fuel consumption per capita.
These were used to quantify correlations and lags of heavy / extreme rain with extremes in small - scale wind convergence / divergence.
Do these very small changes alter the temperature of the earth?Some claim that the Sun alters wind patterns such as the jet stream if it does then it is obvious that it will have some correlation with the length of day.How do you fit solar cycles so precisely to the length of day?
The southern Pacific is kind of boring to watch, but it seems to have a better correlation to solar, very small of course, but a big ocean with a small change can do big things.
Hunter, All that you say may be true but the combined effect of all of these factors is so small that, as is shown, an excellent correlation with the measured average global temperatures is obtained when they are ignored and the only factors considered are time - integral of sunspots and a temperature oscillation (the oscillation is probably from ocean turnover).
Only if you believe, and I'd like to see the evidence, that these recent trees are a small subset of those cored, and data from those cores not included gave little correlation with temperatures.
Now if you aren't happy with the Oppo use consider that ENSO is a very small area of the equatorial Pacific known to have a high correlation with «global» weather.
The same jumping to (wrong) conclusions was made by others, comparing temperature trends with the variability of the year by year increase of CO2: these have a quite good correlation, as there is a short term response of CO2 increase speed to temperature changes, but a only a small influence of temperature on the CO2 trend itself.
For stratospheric water vapor, the analysis suggests a small negative correlation with the error from the long - run cointegrating relation, but the negative sign is inconsistent with the warming effect of stratospheric water vapor.
All correlations are small in absolute size, with none statistically significant.
As previously noted, when considering large - scale averages the Kriging process described here is largely insensitive to the details of the correlation function, so it is expected that small changes in the correlation structure with location or orientation can be safely ignored.
The same hurricane damage database that is too small a sample to show a correlation with the Atlantic basin, annual total PDI is perfectly able to show a very strong statistical relationship with another climate index, the annual ASO Nino 3.4 temperature anomaly index.
The rates of thermosteric sea level changes are closely correlated with those of reconstructed sea level changes with correlation coefficients larger than 0.8, but the former has smaller amplitudes than the latter, indicating contributions to total sea level change from processes other than upper ocean temperature changes examined here.
This may be totally off, since I know squat about climate science & the high - powered statistical programs used, but when there is a dearth of data in the social sciences (not enough to give low enough p values on correlations & regressions, simply due to small numbers of data, which is sometimes due to loading in too many control variables), we sometimes turn to chi - square & log - linear analysis to see if actual data reveal patterns incongruent with expected patterns.
I will simply compute some correlation coefficients, and the variable with the smallest value will be my recommendation (I will explain then how these correlation coefficients work).
Pearson and ICC between AQoL - 8D and other MAU instruments resulted in above average coefficients, with the former technique and the highest average correlation using the ICC; however, differences were generally small.
Many of the scales demonstrated weak psychometrics in at least one of the following ways: (a) lack of psychometric data [i.e., reliability and / or validity; e.g., HFQ, MASC, PBS, Social Adjustment Scale - Self - Report (SAS - SR) and all perceived self - esteem and self - concept scales], (b) items that fall on more than one subscale (e.g., CBCL - 1991 version), (c) low alpha coefficients (e.g., below.60) for some subscales, which calls into question the utility of using these subscales in research and clinical work (e.g., HFQ, MMPI - A, CBCL - 1991 version, BASC, PSPCSAYC), (d) high correlations between subscales (e.g., PANAS - C), (e) lack of clarity regarding clinically - relevant cut - off scores, yielding high false positive and false negative rates (e.g., CES - D, CDI) and an inability to distinguish between minor (i.e., subclinical) and major (i.e., clinical) «cases» of a disorder (e.g., depression; CDI, BDI), (f) lack of correspondence between items and DSM criteria (e.g., CBCL - 1991 version, CDI, BDI, CES - D, (g) a factor structure that lacks clarity across studies (e.g., PSPCSAYC, CASI; although the factor structure is often difficult to assess in studies of pediatric populations, given the small sample sizes), (h) low inter-rater reliability for interview and observational methods (e.g., CGAS), (i) low correlations between respondents such as child, parent, teacher [e.g., BASC, PSPCSAYC, CSI, FSSC - R, SCARED, Connors Ratings Scales - Revised (CRS - R)-RSB-, (j) the inclusion of somatic or physical symptom items on mental health subscales (e.g., CBCL), which is a problem when conducting studies of children with pediatric physical conditions because physical symptoms may be a feature of the condition rather than an indicator of a mental health problem, (k) high correlations with measures of social desirability, which is particularly problematic for the self - related rating scales and for child - report scales more generally, and (l) content validity problems (e.g., the RCMAS is a measure of anxiety, but contains items that tap mood, attention, peer interactions, and impulsivity).
This is in keeping with the small (albeit significant) correlation (r =.24) obtained between self - reported vision and performance on the visual acuity test.
For example, as expected, the scales for optimism, self - concept, and satisfaction with life correlated strongly positively with each other, and negatively with sadness and worries, whereas the scales of empathy and prosocial behavior exhibited correlations of small effect size with sadness and worries, and small to moderate ones with optimism, self - concept, and satisfaction with life.
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