Exact(5)
This issue is salient because of the current concern over globally declining bee populations.
However, if the target in the image was more salient because of the combination of local low spatial frequencies, it should have been more easily categorized in the saccadic task, considering the hypothesis of Bar.
Fears of being blamed were particularly salient because of her lifestyle, leading Shawna to believe that there was no-one out there that she could turn to: Being a drug, intravenous drug user, then you're like, that's your fault.
Outcomes after an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) are particularly salient because of three reasons: it is common (in the USA alone, an estimated 360 000 people suffer from it annually), highly morbid (only 9.5% will survive to hospital discharge) 9 and can serve as an indicator of health system performance more broadly.
Applying these theories to super users in EHR implementation, these theories suggest that the behaviors of super users – who are salient because of their formal role in a large change effort – influence the beliefs and EHR use of their peers, particularly in the early stages of the implementation process when employees are first learning how to use the EHR system in their day-to-day work.
Similar(55)
It is interesting that Kannan's fixed point theorem is very salient because the author of [7] proved that Kannan's theorem describes the completeness of the metric.
In stereo contrast model, the small cap is detected as the salient region because of the pop-out effect.
Errors can be seen as salient events because of their infrequent occurrence and their usefulness as imperative learning signals, since in the presence of an unwanted self-produced response error, an internal monitoring signal has to be generated, timely informing the organism of behavioral changes that need to be made.
The coincidence of findings is more salient because it is the blockade of the ON-response (with LAA) that interferes selectively with ocular growth and refractive compensation to –ve lens defocus.
Direct discrimination involves the imposition of disadvantages "based on" or "on account of" or "because of" membership in some salient social group.
Under the hypothesis of the salience effect discussed above, the target in the Reverse condition could either be experienced as 'less salient' as compared to the looming standards, or 'more salient' because it differs from the sequence of standard stimuli.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com