Exact(4)
The method seems very promising.
The iterative method seems very useful for quick assessment of a wing in ground proximity condition.
The result of the proposed method seems very impressive given that the AC coefficient selection scheme requires small additional computation when compared with [19].
This method seems very attractive in complexity; however, it should be noted that the magnitude of each coefficient in fact cannot be ensured 'proportional' to the similarity/correlation between the corresponding particle and the query object.
Similar(56)
The normal dilution method seemed very sufficient and yielded clear solution after dilution.
Although the method seemed very efficient when applied to both phosphoproteins and phosphopeptides (especially to multiply phosphorylated peptides), it was not verified on a wider spectrum of models.
This method seemed very promising, since the phosphopeptide binding in the soluble phase was more efficient than the binding to solid-phase TiO2 or to IMAC resins, so the phosphopeptide recovery was higher.
For past bottlenecks, the method seemed very efficient when population size remained small after the bottleneck (Fig. 3B), would miss detection with a probability of about 0.20 for relatively ancient bottleneck (Fig. 2C,D), and lack efficiency for quite ancient events (Fig. 2E,F).
As the amount of the WF-JDGSVD and WG-JDGSVD methods is not much larger than that of the F-JDGSVD and G-JDGSVD methods, and as the weighted methods need less iterations to convergence, the parallel version of the weighted methods seems very interesting.
In this respect, least-squares spectral element methods seem very powerful since they combine the generality of finite element methods with the accuracy of the spectral methods and also have the theoretical and computational advantages of the least-squares methods.
These methods seem very promising for reliably identifying recently diverged lineages.
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