Sentences with phrase «useful predictions»

Understanding the dynamics of such phenomena is essential for our ability to make useful prediction of climate change.
If the simulations prove more or less accurate in this respect, they can also provide useful predictions for the future.
But tests that can make useful predictions are not yet on the horizon.
Their pursuit of Id4 as a biomarker for patients with GBM continues in hopes of making useful predictions of tumor invasion and survival.
But some ocean patterns in the climate system can persist much longer, and understanding them can help make useful predictions for regional and global averages that don't depend so much on specific weather patterns.
He adds that, in Boston at least, VAMs «generate useful predictions of school quality.»
Although it is limited to analyzing fix - rate mortgages, it can be very handy for analyzing your current state, and making useful predictions in case you want to sell your home later.
But some ocean patterns in the climate system can persist much longer, and understanding them can help make useful predictions for regional and global averages that don't depend so much on specific weather patterns.
There's still a lot of work to be done in making useful predictions, however, which is why I think it's perfectly reasonable to say both «anthropogenic climate change is a thing» and «we still shouldn't take any drastic actions to combat it until more is known about the consequences».
Machine learning, on the other hand, results in predictable responses and useful predictions.
There are also limitations to using binary options in Singapore; some of these limitations arise from the technical part of the activity and the requirement for general information regarding the trends in global finance market prices to make better and useful predictions.
It's a well - established theory that makes useful predictions that are widely used in fluid dynamics.
As far as being actually periodic (in the sense that knowledge of the last few «cycles» enables us to make some useful prediction of the next, or the next few, «cycles»), I believe that they're not.
The problem may be that we still won't be able to make useful predictions — when, where, how much...
The IPCC link you gave seems to show that the models were not accurate to carry out any useful predictions.
At that time (and particularly the early to mid 70's) climate science was ambiguous about predicting the future, although the 1975 NAS report summarised the state of the science pretty well: that we didn't know enough to make useful predictions and needed to study more.
See also this article in Nature on why we can't make useful predictions.
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