The only real downside is that the process of convergence is likely to be messy. |
|
All this was made possible by the convergence of several trends half a century ago. |
|
Much later Donsker gave a full proof of the convergence of random walks to Brownian motion. |
|
Despite the apparent convergence with Western juvenile prostitution, clear differences remain that should not be ignored. |
|
Mountain ranges are created by diverse tectonic processes, including convergence of plates and volcanic activity. |
|
In addition, you can have thermals combining with the anabatic flows up a slope for convergence. |
|
In both theories, these opinion leaders have well-established reputations and hence create convergence. |
|
When at sea, they eat zooplankton and other small creatures that rise to the surface at convergence zones. |
|
The British Isles lie at the convergence zone between the warm southwest antitrades and the cold polar easterlies. |
|
These were brought together and placed in a linear narrative sequence in a process of historical convergence. |
|
New, much more aggressive models are needed, and unfortunately we will pay a heavy penalty in run-times and convergence. |
|
Perched on its edge is the tented oasis, a convergence of date palms and tamarinds, hot springs and Bedouin hospitality. |
|
Similarities between primates and avians could be more attributable to homology than to convergence. |
|
Given the terrestrial intermediates in the evolution of cetaceans, this is a remarkable case of convergence in axial systems. |
|
The convergence of holiness and physical passion carries as strong a charge in this gem-like painting as it does in The Song of Songs itself. |
|
This convergence has important implications for research and teaching in business schools. |
|
The next generation mobile networks will be based on the convergence of mobile telephony and IP computer networks. |
|
The convergence point marks a plume centre and possible breakup of a continental fragment from the eastern margin of the Superior Province. |
|
One example of retail convergence is the cross-selling of insurance products between banks and insurance companies, known as bancassurance. |
|
This means local convergence areas with resultant major cloud developments, i.e. thunderclouds, is more than just a possibility. |
|
|
That pattern of morphological convergence includes larger bills, reduced rust coloration in plumage, and increased melanism or dark coloration. |
|
Rather, we give you the handful of interesting links that will, in time, make you a titan of convergence. |
|
The weblog explores the convergence of the metaverse with the real life practice of architecture. |
|
This convergence of government officials does not happen when a meteor falls to Earth. |
|
Similarly, neurofeedback signals a convergence of psychiatry and neurology in bioelectrical approaches to treating affective disorders. |
|
Increasing proximity to a subduction zone during plate convergence is indicated by the appearance of felsic tuff. |
|
In the brave new world of convergence, the distinctions are becoming blurred. |
|
This set of political beliefs arose as an undesigned, unaimed for convergence of beliefs between me and my friends, as described. |
|
Another unelected committee monitors member states' compliance with the convergence criteria. |
|
The seismic section shows upwarped reflectors in the upper crust which may be related to this convergence. |
|
At sea, they gather at upwellings and convergence zones where food is brought to the surface. |
|
They can often be found in areas with upwellings or convergence zones that bring food to the surface. |
|
The GAD vaccine originated at UCLA from an unexpected convergence of studies in neurobiology and immunology. |
|
This convergence of results across studies using different, complementary methods attests to the validity of the findings. |
|
In the case of data from cutthroat trout and steelhead trout described in the following section this convergence occurs very rapidly. |
|
His research concentrated on convergence, in particular convergence of series of orthogonal functions. |
|
There's simply too much convergence between the hexagrams received and the life situations I'd asked about for it to be a coincidence. |
|
When convergence rate and subduction rate differ, the trench migrates with respect to a fixed point in the overriding plate interior. |
|
She touted a grand vision of the convergence of television and the information superhighway. |
|
This convergence of cells results in a palpably swollen feeling and appearance. |
|
|
It looked like there was a convergence line ahead paralleling highway 33 on the west side. |
|
Another technique, p-code, increases the order iteratively until convergence, with error estimates available after one analysis. |
|
Finally, a political party is the convergence of a group of people based on their political ideals and ideologies. |
|
They compellingly argue for and show the importance of the increasing convergence between strategy and entrepreneurship scholars. |
|
What new tools to improve human performance will emerge from the convergence of nanotech, biotech, infotech and cognitive science? |
|
This is the convergence of the real and the abstract, the Platonic ideal and its inferior shadow, matter and energy. |
|
The interplay between text messaging and radio is as improbable as the convergence of cameras and phones. |
|
Mass consumption, stimulative consumer policies, and revolutions in wholesaling and retailing led to the convergence of regional economies. |
|
While these two lines rarely intersect, one point of convergence is the issue of digital preservation. |
|
At the same time, even the processes of weak convergence that we documented remain far from complete. |
|
The literature laying out the case for convergence likewise deserves critical scrutiny, however. |
|
The researcher looks for patterns of convergence to develop or corroborate an overall interpretation. |
|
For what his data show is a powerful process of convergence, far from complete in extent but unequivocal in direction. |
|
At the same time, the advances that have made convergence possible are the products of individual creativity. |
|
Yet some critics equate convergence with a loss of jobs, heavier workloads for journalists, and monolithic news and opinion. |
|
A much more interesting question is how convergence impacts business models. |
|
The convergence of politics, business, culture, law and higher education are its strengths. |
|
The other vantage seemed to be from some sort of map, and there were lines of convergence between many points that were marked in various colors. |
|
Alternatively, the similarity in adaptive response is a matter of convergence. |
|
Third, is there evolutionary convergence in the types of amino acid substitutions that characterize adaptation to temperature? |
|
|
Such a discovery could also provide a compelling explanation for evolutionary convergence. |
|
So there is nothing in the mere fact of convergence that calls evolutionary theory into doubt. |
|
The area where this is going on is called the Intertropical convergence zone. |
|
The low-density surface water moved shoreward over the upwelled water, forming a convergence zone at the front. |
|
The convergence of isochromatic lines demonstrates the loss of a fundamental mechanism in dichromatic vision. |
|
The searches were initiated with a single query sequence and iterated until convergence. |
|
In a paper published three years later, Farkas examined the convergence of more general iterative methods. |
|
The most striking feature of this preparation is the convergence of great masses of corticofugal fibers from extensive areas of cerebral cortex. |
|
It stressed the need for convergence of fiscal and monetary policies to serve as a foundation for a monetary union. |
|
His work led him to study the acceleration of convergence of Fourier series and the approximate solutions to differential equations. |
|
I'm pretty sure, however, that such a convergence of misfortune was a freak event and it won't happen again. |
|
The aim of these notes was to construct the analytical continuation of a power series outside its circle of convergence. |
|
Might I suggest you gander at a map of lower Manhattan, where you will see a convergence of snakes crossing the water from Jersey and Brooklyn. |
|
A variety of economic and geopolitical factors are causing a noticeable convergence of French and German positions. |
|
Such a complete technological convergence on to a single platform would spell the death of print, radio, and television. |
|
The probability of this convergence happening by chance tends to zero as the number of experimental procedures increases. |
|
Included in this work on accelerating convergence is a discussion of De Moivre's methods. |
|
This quality would be judged by five economic tests which purportedly measured economic convergence with Euroland. |
|
Personally, I think that the two pendulums, convergence and divergence will continue to swing. |
|
The book is filled with countless examples of companies that tried convergence instead of divergence, and were unsuccessful. |
|
|
Is this convergence of tastes proof that Canada's CEO is, after all, a real Everyman? |
|
The main drawback of a global fitting strategy is the time needed to reach convergence. |
|
Even in the age of convergence, this is still an essential component to getting out the news. |
|
In short, different areas of Europe became involved in the processes of convergence and integration at very different times, and from very different backgrounds. |
|
The presence of extremely large upper canines in an herbivorous kangaroo is a unexpected example of evolutionary convergence with Tertiary and even extant ungulates. |
|
The convergence of a static camera and movement in depth also provides the film with one of its stranger allusions, and certainly its most unexpected lesson. |
|
The assumption is that a strong convergence zone appeared in the skies above central Namibia which was the cause of the downpours of the last two weeks. |
|
Plato said that you can never have agreements between unequals, and consequently, without economic convergence, the EU will never strike a fair balance with the East. |
|
Thanks to the convergence of the information and genome sciences revolution, we are already on the threshold of isolating and characterizing virtually all useful genes. |
|
Progress has been made in speech recognition and automatic translation engines, and a convergence with search engines is just beginning to be discernible. |
|
The convergence of the irreverent prince of potty humor and the cringe-worthy captain of schlock must be one of the signs of the impending Apocalypse. |
|
Osgood's main work was on the convergence of sequences of continuous functions, solutions of differential equations, the calculus of variations and space filling curves. |
|
The popular denim retailer Diesel is also using art to sell its sportswear and is taking the convergence concept even further than its couture competitors. |
|
Others saw a fluke convergence of interests that would not be duplicated in the near future. |
|
The cats are arranged so they create patterns, like a kaleidoscope, forming mirror images of one another, folding and unfolding along lines of convergence. |
|
It was this complete convergence of events and really kismet, what happened to marge Gunderson. |
|
The convergence of grunge with high fashion in the 1990s was an indication of the growing tension between the style sought by wealth and mass-marketing necessity. |
|
This looks nearer to reality as convergence on a rebased basis is clear. |
|
Masar represents a site of cultural convergence where Afro-Islamic populations, such as the Hausas, interact with other African and non-African populations. |
|
The inevitable convergence of such findings with religion makes it impossible for a sceptic, atheist and man of science to swallow such phenomena. |
|
|
This convergence with the Internet is creating the perfect storm. |
|
It was also realised that globalisation is not a homogeneous process, but contains a striking paradox in that it brings about both convergence and divergence. |
|
She believes the mural depicts a celebration of the convergence of the sidereal and tropical zodiacs and the ingress of the vernal point into Pisces. |
|
The thing that's different now of course is the convergence and the conveyance, the delivery and the way that different media interact and intercept. |
|
In 1881 Gyula Farkas published a paper on Farkas Bolyai's iterative solution to the trinomial equation, making a careful study of the convergence of the algorithm. |
|
The cold front sequence of the past week received a boost as the upper trough introduced moister air, the necessary convergence was amply present and light rain ensued. |
|
Components of the corona radiata and internal capsule are displayed, showing the convergence of corticofugal fibers as they descend to brainstem levels. |
|
Even if detailed studies of molluscan anatomy were forthcoming, the shell of molluscs would be of little use in cladistic analysis because of rampant convergence. |
|
The third part of the work is on summands with a common distribution function and includes discussion of principal limit theorems and convergence to the normal law. |
|
Blue-throated Hummingbirds show convergence with oscines in vocal complexity, song organization, song function, and possible learning of some song elements. |
|
Recent posts include a look at the oil, housing and technology bubbles and the convergence of the Nikkei and the Dow. |
|
Constitutions demonstrate the processes of emulation and convergence. |
|
Republican political operatives say the gains the GOP is set to make are due to a convergence of causes. |
|
Construct validity is assessed by convergence and by discriminability. |
|
Causation and convergence were still operative, but they functioned more subtly, and the audience was no longer enthralled in hypothesis building. |
|
Yet there were degrees of convergence on several particulars, discoveries of mutual advantage, occasions of friendship, and family. |
|
When located within a monsoon region, this zone of low pressure and wind convergence is also known as the monsoon trough. |
|
Language contact occurs in a variety of phenomena, including language convergence, borrowing and relexification. |
|
Therefore, greater convergence in macroeconomic conditions is being enacted to improve conditions and confidence in a common currency. |
|
The strains caused by plate convergence in subduction zones cause at least three different types of earthquakes. |
|
|
Elongated areas of low pressure form at the monsoon trough or intertropical convergence zone as part of the Hadley cell circulation. |
|
The convergence problem probably represents the most spinous issue of cosmography. |
|
We use backpropagation techniques with an adaptive learning rate algorithm to train the model to specified level of convergence. |
|
In this work, a two step iterative formula is proposed in which the order of convergence is quartic. |
|
Next Generation Networks, VoIP, cheaper calls, new IT applications, voice, data and video convergence, VPN, IP networks. |
|
Convergence dysfunction was defined by patients' near point of convergence amplitude. |
|
They start focusing on objects, develop convergence, stereopsis and colour vision. |
|
Ltd, a global leader in digital media and digital convergence technologies, announced today extension of its partnership with Trigon. |
|
When the diffusion coefficient is spatially variable, the usual approach of determining the convergence factor is no longer straightforward. |
|
At its best, Unstoppable is a wonkish rallying cry for a much needed left-right convergence against the corrupt corporatist center. |
|
Meanwhile, Chinese scholars began to observe and counteractively analyze China's media convergence using Western research for reference. |
|
The last stage of basin development, arc convergence, began in the Upper Pliocene with the northward vergence of the Sunda magmatic arc. |
|
Loss of fusional vergence with partial loss of accommodative convergence and accommodation following head injury. |
|
It is this convergence, company officials say, that positions Peapod for the future and makes it a company worth watching. |
|
Already in these cases there is convergence in Banach spaces that are not only infinite-dimensional but nonseparable. |
|
Helper and Sako did detect some convergence in the way U.S. and Japanese carmakers work with suppliers. |
|
What makes cyberfashion possible today is the convergence of several technologies. |
|
The results show a fairly gracilized body build both in males and females, and a morphological convergence of the proportions of the two sexes. |
|
The objective of a common market is most often economic convergence and the creation of an integrated single market. |
|
The Balkan sprachbund even features areal convergence among members of very different branches. |
|
|
The convergence of political and economic or cultural power is by no means universal. |
|
According to the convergence principle, we tend to change our language style to that of people we like and admire. |
|
It has recently taken on the nature of wholesale language shift, sometimes also termed language change, convergence or merger. |
|
According to the convergence principle, language style tends to change to that of people who are liked and admired. |
|
The framework of its phylogeny shows that repeated life habit states derive from evolutionary convergence and parallelism. |
|
Turtles spend most of their first five years in convergence zones within the bare open ocean that surround them. |
|
A range of algal morphologies is exhibited, and convergence of features in unrelated groups is common. |
|
Anolis ecomorphs have become a model system in evolutionary biology for studying convergence. |
|
In between, there is a convergence, where vegetation patterns such as sahel and steppe dominate. |
|
A pattern which resulted in northward Sverdrup transport in divergence regions and southward in convergence regions. |
|
In the early Carboniferous movement of Gondwana to the north and its convergence with the Euramerica basin decreased in size. |
|
Additionally, the convergence tends to increase the concentration of plankton in and around the Agulhas. |
|
The formation of AAIW can be explained very simply through the Ekman transport process and the divergence and convergence of water masses. |
|
The movement of the monsoon trough, or intertropical convergence zone, brings rainy seasons to savannah climes. |
|
This convergence leads to treacherous sailing conditions, accounting for numerous wrecked ships in the area over the years. |
|
The wave pattern created by this water movement causes a convergence of longshore drift on the opposite side of the island. |
|
This paper provides the detailed proof of the convergence of the two-grid method for the nonlocal model of peridynamics. |
|
The convergence of these signs lit Morris up like a firecracker. |
|
Correlation between asthenopic symptoms and different measurements of convergence and reading comprehension and saccadic fixation eye movements. |
|
Special attention will be given to the formerly planned economies and the reasons for their slow convergence to the western economies. |
|
|
It is generally admitted that convergence of the Lanczos process for Hermitian matrices is well understood. |
|
There is an odd convergence of themes around the festival of shavuot. |
|
We will now try to find a geometric connection to the above algebraic formula using a geometry sketch pad convergence of a sequence. |
|
The National Convergence Alliance was created to facilitate and expediate the growth of the convergence industry. |
|
In new communication age of media convergence, this single-authority is immerging and restructuring. |
|
The ranch sits at what was a convergence point between the ancient Puebloan, Mogollon, and Sinaguan cultures, so the possibilities are numerous. |
|
The main task of the expedition was to study the flow of time in the field of convergence of all timezones. |
|
This year's event focused on testing multi-vendor interoperability to achieve fixed mobile convergence supporting the IMS service framework. |
|
Over the years and under different names statistical convergence has been discussed in the theory of Fourier analysis, ergodic theory and number theory. |
|
All these islands lie in the cold seas below the Antarctic convergence. |
|
In coastal mixing zones, pore water throughput is facilitated by the convergence of two forces, gravity drive from meteoric water and density drive from seawater. |
|
The appendix is usually present singlely with the base located at the convergence of taeniae along inferior aspect of the ceacum while its tip lies at various locations. |
|
The convergence of Baltica with the Avalonia microcontinent started in the Late Ordovician and might have affected the water exchange of the Baltic Basin with the ocean. |
|
On the technological side, the increase of broadband services and microminiaturization became the base for the introduction and expansion of convergence. |
|
Also, we consider the concept of general differentiability for fuzzy functions and we plot the h-curve to illustrate the region of convergence in different levels. |
|
Adaptive convergence in the lizard superspecies Sceloporus undulatus. |
|
The study of the relationship between the taxa has been confounded by the recurrence of similar morphologies due to the convergence of species occupying similar niches. |
|
There is a great deal of parallelism and convergence among rodents caused by the fact that they have tended to evolve to fill largely similar niches. |
|
There are several methods used to deal with singular integrands, and all are deterministic, adaptive strategies that will speed the convergence and integration process. |
|
Numerical methods for partial differential equations use different discretizations of space and time and have different mathematical properties, like convergence and accuracy. |
|
|
Triple play was the first business model designed to deliver the newly integrated products that are the result of industry changes and convergence. |
|
In this paper we ask why this is the case by looking at environmental events as actants that potentially drive convergence of social and political engagement. |
|
Although the rate of investment in the model is exogenous, under certain conditions the model implicitly predicts convergence in the rates of investment across countries. |
|
The northern part of the state as well as the higher mountain areas, are convergence zones between lowland evergreen tropical forests and more temperate flora and fauna. |
|
Sampling without replacement from a large population is considered, and convergence of the emerging hypergeometric distributions to the binomial one is formally proved. |
|
Although the convergence results apply only for the case of real distinct eigenvalues, we also perform numerical tests involving complex conjugate pairs. |
|
The Gibraltar Arc is located at the western end of the Mediterranean Alpine belt and formed during the Neogene due to convergence of the Eurasian and African plates. |
|
Heating of the earth near the equator leads to large amounts of upward motion and convection along the monsoon trough or intertropical convergence zone. |
|
The convergence or divergence of the rays falling on the pupil. |
|
Rather, they should find their proper places in a dialectics of mutual checking and balancing toward forming a convergence and universalization of feelings. |
|
Relative depth may be controlled by the age of the lithosphere at the trench, the convergence rate, and the dip of the subducted slab at intermediate depths. |
|
The Venturi effect incorporates the Bernoulli principle by incorporating an entrainment port at the site of the convergence of the funnel-shaped tube. |
|