Sentence examples for implicit evidence from inspiring English sources

The phrase "implicit evidence" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to evidence that is not directly stated but can be inferred from the context or surrounding information.
Example: "The implicit evidence in her argument suggested that she had prior knowledge of the situation."
Alternatives: "implied evidence" or "tacit evidence".

Exact(6)

Some implicit evidence suggests that the dedicated room is helpful; one or more additional classrooms were created at 16 of the institutions, and 2 institutions indicate that they would like to have additional classrooms.

Neither policy document analysis nor interviews provided information on whether explicit or implicit evidence or citable research evidence was really influencing policies or whether implicit evidence was informed by research evidence.

It was found that implicit evidence, such as common knowledge, facts, and practices, were primarily used in the policies.

The specialist focus on the 'social' market was presented as implicit evidence of lack of profiteering, alongside the explicit social mission.

The proposed semantic mechanism of inferring gene associations can process implicit evidence in order to identify and prioritize novel predictions of genes' functional relationships.

Depiction of buffalo figures in both Mesopotamia and Indus Valley iconography shows animals with crescent type horn and at times this morphological feature is taken as implicit evidence that these animals would have been of swamp type.

Similar(54)

The model evidence is crucial, not only for determining the relative weighting of the priors (through implicit evidence-maximization), but also when one wants to select between sets of priors.

¥Accepted surrogates = all the recommendations with surrogate acceptability classified as: yes (e1) = implicit yes "evidence 1"; yes (e2) = implicit yes "evidence 2"; yes (used) = implicit yes "used before"; yes (ref) = implicit yes "reference"; yes (e) = explicit yes; N/S = no statement; N/A = not applicable.

§ Not-accepted surrogates = all the recommendations with surrogate acceptability classified as: no (e2) = implicit no "evidence 2"; no (ref) = implicit no "reference"; no (e) = explicit no "evidence 1"; no (e1 + e2) = explicit no "evidence 1" and implicit no "evidence 2".

"Implicit Stereotypes: Evidence from Teachers' Gender Bias". HKS Faculty Research Working Paper Series RWP18-034, July 2018.

The selection of an implicit negative evidence class -- a "neighborhood" -- appropriate to a given task has strong implications, but a good neighborhood can target the objective of grammar induction to a specific application.

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