Existing guesstimates are extracted and extrapolated from hospital and mortuary records, media reports and some military data. |
|
This confidence cannot be extrapolated to other situations of much larger glucocorticoid exposures in the perinatal period. |
|
For, those women who did develop heart disease, it was assumed that the results of male-only studies could be extrapolated to them. |
|
These results may not be extrapolated to a normal menopausal population due to the presence of chemotherapeutic medication. |
|
The axon counts were extrapolated by using the area algorithm to estimate the total number of axons for each nerve. |
|
Safe exposure is extrapolated from tests on rats so their relevance to humans is debatable. |
|
I have yet to see a successful prediction about the physical world that was inferred or extrapolated from the content of any religious document. |
|
Is it that the original statistic was an over-generalization, extrapolated from information that we can't find after the fact? |
|
The 98,000 figure is extrapolated from an excess of 44 deaths reported since the invasion. |
|
Data about them, however, must be extrapolated from demographic information compiled by the Australian and New Zealander governments. |
|
Many others disagree, claiming that many of the characteristics of communities are unique and cannot be extrapolated from the species level. |
|
In the process of unpicking his feelings about the issue, he has extrapolated a model of the relationship between created work and selfhood. |
|
His abhorrence for these brands of nationalism can be extrapolated from his attitude toward the peasantry. |
|
Whether these results can be extrapolated to large radial scars detected by mammography is unresolved and requires further investigation. |
|
Therefore, results cannot be extrapolated to pharmacy students nationwide or to student populations in other degree programs. |
|
Thus, it cannot be assumed that results from secondary care can be extrapolated to primary care. |
|
The intercept of the extrapolated regression line and x-axis was taken to be an estimate of the presentation time. |
|
Lines represent regressions of linear portion of each curve extrapolated to the y-axis. |
|
The result is extrapolated to 60 seconds and reported in liters per minute. |
|
The trajectory could then be plotted and extrapolated backwards so that its position could be located. |
|
|
We can choose to trust in it, even if we find some of the beliefs extrapolated from it to be unbelievable. |
|
They then extrapolated back along the bat family tree to calculate how big the brain of the common ancestor of living bats was. |
|
However, they caution that this model should not be extrapolated to asymptomatic patients in whom risk factors play a much greater predictive role. |
|
Densities of shorebirds and passerines were calculated as the mean number of birds per plot, which was then extrapolated to birds per square kilometre. |
|
The data from Cheshire was then extrapolated to the UK, taking into account rural and urban differences. |
|
In the past, they were often extrapolated from infection rates in pregnant women who are, by definition, sexually active. |
|
Can tests performed in a laboratory be extrapolated to practical application? |
|
Spawning escapement was extrapolated to the whole river based on the ratio of the number of redds above and below the fence. |
|
Results extrapolated taking account of the importance of the branches of activity and the size distribution of the enterprises in each branch. |
|
The Commission notes that the Court found a single error of 3.5 million euro identified in a sample of 39 contracts which was extrapolated. |
|
The series can also be extrapolated for at least one year by using the model. |
|
The available information on children of foreigners can be extrapolated to all children suffering from social and cultural handicaps. |
|
Furthermore, full-year estimates sometimes had to be extrapolated, based on the information available for a few months. |
|
And I think you have indeed extrapolated the four themes that have come out of our discussion to date. |
|
The pace of negotiations cannot simply be extrapolated from the number of chapters dealt with. |
|
These have been derived from interest rate swaps, and extrapolated where necessary. |
|
The findings cannot be extrapolated to other population groups or health care sectors. |
|
The book is of broader relevance than just the tea industry, however, and the problems identified and the methods suggested can certainly be extrapolated to other situations. |
|
Some figures in that Annex had been extrapolated until the end of the year. |
|
Although trials showing the benefits of these drugs have excluded patients above this age, evidence suggests that these data may reasonably be extrapolated to older patients. |
|
|
Granted, scientific analysis is necessary in any particular event, but it should not be made a fetish of and extrapolated to entirely different situations. |
|
Cycles of recognition, repression or suppression and recovery of truth can be extrapolated both from the course of individual analytic treatments and social struggles. |
|
The study population was selected according to respiratory symptoms and, therefore, the results cannot be extrapolated to the general child population. |
|
The results of a retrospective analysis are specific to the observed variation in the vital rates, and can be extrapolated to other situations only with great care. |
|
For example, investigators should stress that conclusions drawn from experience in one group of patients should not be extrapolated to all other groups. |
|
Using this relationship, we extrapolated the estimated time of divergence from adjusted measures of pairwise differences between Dendropoma species. |
|
From the combination of the relative absorbances and relative fluorescence quantum efficiencies of the two substances, a relative quantum yield could be extrapolated. |
|
We also measured the diameters of our living experimental trees, and extrapolated age based on the correlation between annual rings and circumference of the trunk sections. |
|
However, once a Markov model is fitted to this data, replacement frequencies characteristic for distantly related sequences can be extrapolated from the model. |
|
For this reason, the sales volume at the end of the period is extrapolated for the OTB calculation of the current period. |
|
These may be biased or extrapolated from data obtained at the subnational level. |
|
Dont get afraid by such or such survey, extrapolated curbs, or lugubrious predictions based on manipulated figures. |
|
The vocal lines, tailored to the soprano voice of Heidi Grant Murphy, are characterized by wide pitch fluctuations, melismas, and extrapolated sounds. |
|
Because part of the sample was selected judgmentally, results cannot be extrapolated directly to the overall population of contracts. |
|
Posture and kinaesthetic awareness are trained by means of various exercises and extrapolated to everyday situations. |
|
Such forecasts need to be taken with a bucketload of salt: tiny shifts in today's birth rate extrapolated over 90 years produce huge changes. |
|
Not since my first and final term of grad school have I taken a morsel of foreign information and extrapolated it into a moderately coherent essay. |
|
This spectral signature was then extrapolated throughout the image, or to another image, in search of other spectrally similar areas. |
|
The endothermic effect at an extrapolated onset temperature of 573°C is due to the structural? |
|
All Irian Jaya really has in common with the rest of Indonesia is that, between 1898 and 1949, it was occupied by the same colonist, an argument which if extrapolated would in 1961 have allowed India to annex Malaysia. |
|
|
When we went back a few years and extrapolated with the population, I compared the numbers I could find for Alberta and worked them out with the rest of the country and it worked out pretty close. |
|
Caution should be exercised in how the data from the latter study described above are extrapolated to the traceback scenario, since traceback is a different circumstance than the question explored in that study. |
|
Nork wrote that the names of the three sons of Mannus can be extrapolated as Ingui, Irmin, and Istaev or Iscio. |
|
These values are typically extrapolated with conventional simulation software, which opens the door for inaccuracy in flow prediction. |
|
Ratings may be interpolated but should not be extrapolated. |
|
In vitro results can not be extrapolated to human being just like that. |
|
Although the topics below deal with the key principles of a typical international standardization committee such as those of ISO, the information can be extrapolated and applied to other standardization-like activities. |
|
What is taken as the surface charge is the apparently linear portion of the adsorption isotherm extrapolated to zero polymer concentration. |
|
A time-dependent dielectric breakdown test showed that the capacitor has an extrapolated life of more than 100 years. |
|
The total number of females therefore no longer had to be extrapolated from the rate of presence on calving grounds, thereby eliminating one correction factor. |
|
Risk was underpriced because, among other things, financial market participants largely extrapolated ongoing trends and the very low levels of volatility in financial markets and in the real economies going forward. |
|
Estimates of plague victims are usually extrapolated from figures from the clergy. |
|
This research can be extrapolated to the field to understand metamorphic processes and the conditions of crystallization of igneous rocks. |
|
The boundaries of endemicity are extrapolated from the sample. |
|
Degradation was ten times faster than extrapolated values from elongation to break data. |
|
In the absence of such reference centres, or while appropriate strengthening takes place, information from neighbouring countries may be cautiously extrapolated for similar settings. |
|
Then, after the measured values are extrapolated to the design pressure of the brake system, whether the brake system can brake the fully laden vehicle is assessed. |
|
Livezey extrapolated a weight of 113 g from measurements of femora and tibiotarsi. |
|
This example of humanitarian aid can be extrapolated to other actions of NGOs, whether it is providing legal services to those accused of terrorism, or providing other benign non-governmental advice or services. |
|
The methodology behind this claim was also dubious as it derived from a 2002 study that extrapolated from the number of cameras spotted on two streets in Wandsworth in London. |
|
|
In order for these findings to be extrapolated to Canada, the normative assumptions would have to be confirmed by data on the behaviour of non-resident parents in this country. |
|
While recent intelligence suggests that imports will reach a higher figure than the above extrapolated figure, no reliable data is yet available to confirm this. |
|
For other extrapolated series, there was not a significant difference between the growth rate of the series in question and the extrapolator series. |
|
In light of this history, the CINC team decided to develop a technique that estimated civilian labor budgets entirely on execution data extrapolated forward. |
|
Gustavo Duque, a bone mineral specialist at McGill University in Montreal, said data on osteosarcomas in rats should not be extrapolated to humans. |
|
Using a survey of consumers done in April by eNation, a national online research service, LIMRA extrapolated the results from nearly 150 retirees. |
|