This is one of several dubious indicators that, while it may appear to be accurate, teaches us more about the fallibility of
statistics than the behavior of the market.
Not exact matches
The researchers aim to develop a real - time intervention that could stop unhealthy
behaviors and reduce obesity, which affects more
than one - third of adults and 17 percent of all children and teens in the United States, according to federal health
statistics.
It's at least more credible
than Hansen's «runaway greenhouse» nonsense, which can be dismissed on rather elementary grounds (without clouds at least), but I think Tamino's post before about «changing the dice» a bit to land more higher numbers, and possibly a few 19's and 20's, is a much more appropriate analogy
than the argument that the system
behavior will deviate substantially from smoothly varying
statistics
Bruised feelings, rude jabs and hallway shoves have always been a part of the preteen and adolescent landscape, but a growing body of dispiriting
statistics confirms that bad
behavior is on the rise and more psychologically harmful
than what was endured by earlier generations.