Sentences with phrase «uncertainty of collecting»

The term is typically used to reflect an investor's uncertainty of collecting returns and the potential for monetary loss.

Not exact matches

Receiving a bouncing ball on the corner of the penalty area, with little time to think, Saúl controls the ball with his thigh before using the outside of his left boot to swerve a sumptuous cross into Griezmann's path, playing the ball into the «corridor of uncertainty», where the keeper is unable to come to collect and the defenders fear deflecting the ball goalwards.
Those data, to be collected this year and next, could improve climate models, which account poorly for these atmospheric interactions and contain «horrific» uncertainties about the levels and behaviour of water vapour at stratospheric altitudes, Austin says.
In order to make this work, the authors describe necessary steps of a rigorous informed consent process that outlines the risks and uncertainties, close involvement of institutional review boards, and multicenter trials to collect data.
To address this uncertainty, the science, education, computing and engineering communities provided input to NEON's design, with the shared goal of creating a long - term ecological observatory that collects and provides a diverse suite of comparable and consistent ecological data at multiple spatial and temporal scales.
These uncertainties usually begin with a lack of transparency and knowledge about how data are being collected and used by both edTech vendors and institutions.
The foundational work on the psychology of decision - making under uncertainty has been collected into several volumes: «Judgment Under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases,» by Daniel Kahneman, Paul Slovic, and Amos Tversky (Cambridge, 1982), «Choices, Values, and Frames,» by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky (Cambridge, 2000), «Heuristics and Biases,» by Thomas Golovich, Dale Griffin, and Daniel Kahneman (Cambridge, 2002), and «The Perception of Risk,» by Paul Slovic (Earthsuncertainty has been collected into several volumes: «Judgment Under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases,» by Daniel Kahneman, Paul Slovic, and Amos Tversky (Cambridge, 1982), «Choices, Values, and Frames,» by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky (Cambridge, 2000), «Heuristics and Biases,» by Thomas Golovich, Dale Griffin, and Daniel Kahneman (Cambridge, 2002), and «The Perception of Risk,» by Paul Slovic (EarthsUncertainty: Heuristics and Biases,» by Daniel Kahneman, Paul Slovic, and Amos Tversky (Cambridge, 1982), «Choices, Values, and Frames,» by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky (Cambridge, 2000), «Heuristics and Biases,» by Thomas Golovich, Dale Griffin, and Daniel Kahneman (Cambridge, 2002), and «The Perception of Risk,» by Paul Slovic (Earthscan, 2000).
GaryM, «initially collected data with wide ranges of uncertainty can be processed using statistics to provide a more accurate measurement on a much larger scale.»
You claim that initially collected data with wide ranges of uncertainty can be processed using statistics to provide a more accurate measurement on a much larger scale.
Choice 3: Can we devise a carbon tax flexible enough to deal with the above uncertainties that: a) is fully refunded to every citizen and exporters, b) collected from importers, c) rises exponentially with future temperature change, d) responds to the willingness and effectiveness of other nations to limit their emissions, and e) provides reasonable economic incentives to reduce emissions if the IPCC's central estimates are correct?
What we see in the evidence collected about how humans reason while assessing risk in the face of uncertainty, in polarized contexts, is that the logic you're presenting is endemic.
We did so by estimating monthly fluxes and their uncertainty over a one - year period between June 2009 and May 2010 from 1) observational data collected in existing networks of surface CO2 measurement sites (GLOBALVIEWCO2 2010; extrapolated to the year 2010) and 2) both the surface observations and column - averaged dry air mole fractions of CO2 (XCO2) retrieved from GOSAT soundings.
New solo attorneys had to brave a career fraught with uncertainty as necessary skills required for that li ne of work — such as setting up the required paperwork, collecting fees, advertising,
Because of the inherent uncertainty and risk that the law firm takes when charging a flat fee, they tend to be higher than if the law firm merely collected a trust advance.
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