Sentence examples for confusing patterns from inspiring English sources

Exact(6)

He became an indefatigable worker on atomic spectra, energetically untangling the confusing patterns of spectral lines for elements like titanium and yttrium.

Among these were poor ventilation and confusing patterns on the pool floor that made it difficult to judge how far they were from the pool's walls, throwing off their timing on turns.

This provides some surprisingly simple explanations for otherwise confusing patterns, such as the association between fecundity and substitution rates.

However, we should nevertheless remain vigilant to the onus in science being rejection of the null hypothesis, and, in the face of confusing patterns of association which may be explicable by heterogeneity, should have explicit criteria for what constitutes replication.

Their current classification as polytypic species reflects the complex and confusing patterns of variation in the region; first, the assumption that populations are connected in the lowlands, and second, the historical preference of avian taxonomists to use polytypic species concepts and trinomials in classification.

In fact, we argue that the rather confusing patterns reported in the literature are due to the use of single measures of sperm length, and that accounting for the balance between drag from the head and thrust from the flagellum will allow us to extend our understanding of the link between sperm form and function.

Similar(54)

An ordinate pattern of Schwann cells and the absence of scarring exclude the possibility of confusing this pattern with a newly formed neuroma [ 18– 20].

The waves off the Jersey coast — born of wind and water far out in the Atlantic, grown to their full height through the energy of the winds — form a confused, irregular pattern known as a "sea".

Subsequent loss of genes has confused this pattern.

All these forces probably vary among butterflies species, which may have confused the pattern of diversity in FST.

In addition, students appear to confuse the pattern of dominance in genetics with predominant, meaning "most common".

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