Sentences with phrase «subsample means»

Subsampling means that instead of collecting every word a person types, Apple will only use a smaller sample of them.

Not exact matches

3) The authors do not actually put forth «moral licensing» as their favored explanation of the non-eco behaviors of the climate - believing subsample: they give equal weight, at least rhetorically, to the possibility that the «Highly Concerned» «felt that federal policies were the more effective means of addressing climate change (vs. individual pro-environmental behaviors).»
We recommend separating the data into possible subsamples then analyzing (i) the raw chronologies, (ii) the mean curves after age realignment, and (iii) the relationship of the mean versus the age of individual series.
Sony's own Super Bit Mapping technology has been upgraded to a 16 - bit iteration, which means it'll smooth out unwanted colour banding before upscaling to 2160p / 60, with 4:4:4 colour subsampling.
Descriptive statistics included mean, median, count of subsample size, lower 95 % confidence interval, and upper 95 % confidence interval.
Importantly, the pattern of mean differences for treatment groups 1 and 2 vs treatment group 4 for PINS records on the subsample of children who lived in Chemung County for their entire lives corroborated the pattern of the children's reported arrests.
Abstract: In a cross-sectional study with 541 German students (mean age: 12.61 yrs) and (for a subsample of N = 350) one of their parents, developmental conditions for a particular resource of self - regulation («Flexibility of Goal Adjustment»; Brandtstädter & Renner, 1990) are investigated.
Using a total sample (N = 2,572) and subsample (n = 441) of children ages 3 — 18 years old, the purpose of this study was to assess whether cumulative types of family violence lead to higher mean externalizing behavior scores and to examine the effects of single types of indirect and direct family violence on children's mean externalizing behavior scores.
Finally, as suggested by Bryk and Raudenbush (1992), continuous predictor and outcome variables were centered around the mean of each subsample to facilitate data interpretation.
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