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long-term and error
The question depended on correct analysis of the lunar motions, and received a further complication with another discovery, around the same time, that another significant long-term perturbation that had been calculated for the Moon ( supposedly due to the action of Venus ) was also in error, was found on re-examination to be almost negligible, and practically had to disappear from the theory.
A frequentist claim is made, that the long-term frequency of VaR breaks will equal the specified probability, within the limits of sampling error, and that the VaR breaks will be independent in time and independent of the level of VaR.
In the case of myopia, however, some believe that such treatments may also have the long-term effect of exacerbating that refractive error — i. e., making the patient even more nearsighted.
Another point of long-term vulnerability is the RAM memory, and often an error correcting memory is used, together with circuitry to periodically read ( leading to correction ) or scrub ( if reading does not lead to correction ) the memory of errors, before the errors overwhelm the error-correcting circuitry.

long-term and formula
Further changes have followed, which have seen the government take back a greater degree of control, but the early demise of the SRA, which was its creation, suggests that the situation is still in flux and the right formula for the long-term health of the rail industry has not yet been found.
FDA reassured caregivers and families whose babies may have consumed recalled products that drinking the formula will not cause long-term health problems.
Although the framers were able to agree on a formula for distribution of the Commonwealth's surplus to the States in the first few years after Federation, they could not agree on a long-term formula.

long-term and is
Aid is a long-term process
The actual mean of 1.07 being about halfway between 0 of complete correlation and 2.0 of no correlation, it is evident that there is a pretty fair degree of similarity in the behavior even of particular individual items of meaning as regards long-term stem displacement.
The principle of `` bills only '', or `` bills preferably '', seems so strongly accepted by the Federal Reserve that it is difficult to envision conditions which would persuade the authorities to depart radically from it by extending their open market purchases regularly into long-term Government securities.
Though now complete, the publication is included in this directory because of its importance and because of the long-term nature of its preparation.
We hope thereby to emphasize that, from a psychological standpoint, the effectual prevention of illegitimacy is a continuous long-term process involving the socialization of the female from infancy through adolescence.
Indication: The long-term trend of turnpike traffic is upward.
It is unclear if costly signaling can indicate a long-term cooperative personality but people have increased trust for those who help.
When looking for a long-term partner more conventional altruism may be preferred which may indicate that he is also willing to share resources with her and her children while when looking for a short-term partner heroic risk-taking, which may be costly signal showing good genes, may be more preferable.
As methodology, ethnography is based upon long-term fieldwork within a community or other research site.
While most everyone has an experience with anxiety at some point in their lives, as it is a common reaction to real or perceived threats of all kinds, most do not develop long-term problems with anxiety.
The emphasis is on social history, and very long-term trends, often using quantification and paying special attention to geography and to the intellectual world view of common people, or " mentality " ( mentalité ).
: The outermost layer, the zona glomerulosa is the main site for production of mineralocorticoids, mainly aldosterone, which is largely responsible for the long-term regulation of blood pressure.
It has been argued that the name " Titus " in 2 Corinthians and Galatians is nothing more than an informal name used by Timothy, implied already by the fact that even though both are said to be long-term close companions of Paul, they never appear in common scenes.
Some doubts have been raised about the long-term effectiveness of antipsychotics for schizophrenia, in part because two large international World Health Organization studies found individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia tend to have better long-term outcomes in developing countries ( where there is lower availability and use of antipsychotics and mental health problems are treated with more informal, community-led methods only ) than in developed countries.
On the long-term average, the Baltic Sea is ice-covered for about 45 % of its surface area at the maximum annually.
However, there is disagreement among expert bodies regarding the long-term use of benzodiazepines for panic disorder.
Although major concerns about benzodiazepine tolerance and withdrawal have been raised, there is no evidence for significant dose escalation in patients using benzodiazepines long-term.
NICE stated that long-term use of benzodiazepines for panic disorder with or without agoraphobia is an unlicensed indication, does not have long-term efficacy, and is, therefore, not recommended by clinical guidelines.
It has been argued that long-term use of hypnotics and overprescribing of these drugs represents an unjustifiable risk, especially to the elderly, and is harmful for the public health in general.

long-term and approximately
By December 1990, a study to estimate the project's cost determined that long-term expenditure would total approximately 450 billion dollars spread over 20 to 30 years.
In 1958, the Kusakabe family reunites when a university professor and his two daughters, Satsuki and Mei ( approximately ten and four years old, respectively ) move into an old house in rural Japan to be closer to the hospital where their mother is recovering from an unnamed, long-term illness.
The prognosis for significant recovery from acute transverse myelitis is poor in approximately 66 % of the cases ; that is, significant long-term disabilities will remain.
Aware of the tremendous challenges in the fields of education and the pursuit of excellence, UDP that same year designed a plan for long-term infrastructural growth, involving the issue of a Security Bond guaranteed by the World Bank for the sum of approximately US $ 25 million, thus becoming the first educational institution to utilize this type of financing.
Active-duty Air Force officers make up approximately 70 percent of the faculty, with the balance long-term civilian professors, visiting professors from civilian universities and instructors from other U. S. and allied foreign military services.
When Hurricane Floyd in 1999 dropped approximately 19 inches ( 480 mm ) of rain in 24 hours on some long-term never-till fields, visual observation showed virtually no erosion.
The axial tilt also exhibits long-term variations as described in the reference article ( a difference of 1 second of arc in the tilt is equivalent to change of approximately 31 metres north or south in the positions of the polar circles on the Earth's surface ).
* Artificial bladders: Anthony Atala ( Wake Forest University ) has successfully implanted artificially grown bladders into seven out of approximately 20 human test subjects as part of a long-term experiment.
Slugs, Limax flavus, have a short-term memory of approximately 1 min and long-term memory of 1 month.
Despite approximately 1, 000, 000 deaths this process was largely successful, and caused long-term industrial growth more rapid than any country in history.
With an annual budget of nearly 300 million Euros and supporting approximately 50, 000 grantees annually, approximately 11, 000 of which are on long-term scholarships, the DAAD is in fact the largest such academic grant organisation worldwide.
When alcohol is consumed at a rapid rate, the point at which most healthy people's long-term memory creation starts to fail usually occurs at approximately 0. 20 % BAC, but can be reached as low as 0. 14 % BAC for inexperienced drinkers.
According to a report in 2008 by the Social Market Foundation there were approximately 100, 000 long-term unemployed persons claiming JSA, at any given time.
Referenda in 1987 and 1989 approved a long-term levy that funded approximately two-thirds of the $ 36 million capital costs of the MUSC.
There were over 500 hospital admissions and approximately 100 long-term residents alone in 2008.
A study of long-term CR practitioners " who had been eating a CR diet ( approximately 35 % less calories than controls ) for an average of 6. 8 ± 5. 2 years ( mean age 52. 7 ± 10. 3 years )" found that they had reduced bone mineral density at the level of hip and spine, in accordance with a previous one-year weight-loss trial, but that after initial weight loss they had achieved a stable, normal level of bone turnover and that the microarchitectural structure of their bones was healthy ; the researchers concluded that " These findings suggest that markedly reduced BMD is not associated with significantly reduced bone quality in middle-aged men and women practicing long-term calorie restriction with adequate nutrition.
Assuming a 60-year plant life and 5 % long-term cost of capital, the depreciation and capital costs not included in the previous marginal cost for Palo Verde are approximately another 1. 4 cents per kilowatt-hour.
ACH was formed following a memorandum of understanding with Ford Motor Company that " intended to assure the long-term viability of Visteon ", it involved the transfer of 18, 000 hourly workers and 5000 salaried workers to the new entity, reducing Visteon to approximately 52, 000 employees worldwide and $ 11 billion USD in annual sales.
One long-term possibility might be an underground extension of another mile or two to a future high-rise housing district, or to a multi-modal transportation hub at Bob Hope Airport in Burbank, a distance of approximately four miles.
According to WHO and Guttmacher, approximately 68, 000 women die annually as a result of complications of unsafe abortion ; and between two million and seven million women each year survive unsafe abortion but sustain long-term damage or disease ( incomplete abortion, infection ( sepsis ), haemorrhage, and injury to the internal organs, such as puncturing or tearing of the uterus ).
UPMC now operates approximately 20 academic, community, and specialty hospitals in Western Pennsylvania, as well as 400 outpatient sites, more than 50 facilities for physical, occupational, speech and specialty therapies, and 14 retirement and long-term care site, along with its international and for-profit ventures.
UPMC currently operates approximately 20 academic, community, and specialty hospitals, as well as 400 outpatient sites, more than 50 facilities for physical, occupational, speech and specialty therapies, and 14 retirement and long-term care site.

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