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Rock heterogeneity in the sample may lead to an incorrect estimation of relative permeability.
The unobserved heterogeneity in the characteristics of women in the sample may lead to unobserved selection bias.
Thus, the excess amount of potassium present in the water sample may lead to nervous and digestive disorder (Tiwari and Mishra 1985).
A higher sodium intake may cause hypertension, congenial heart diseases and kidney problems (Singh et al. 2008) and the excess amount of potassium present in the water sample may lead nervous and digestive disorder (Tiwary 2001).
Anatomical variability between subjects in the sample may lead to a debatable controversy: what to do if an anatomical trait (e.g., a cusp, a ridge on a tooth, a ruga on the palate) is absent in one of the individuals?
Although, as shown in Fig. 2e, f, the apparent contrast between the exposed area and unexposed area of Ti film indicates the appropriate exposure laser power has been used, the much rough surface of the sample compared with that of the GSBT sample may lead to a challenge for getting small feature size in the following fabrication processes of the semiconductor nanostructures.
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PCR inhibitors, which are often present in clinical samples, may lead to false negative test results.
Moreover, this highlights the fact that stringent statistical testing, such as this, with high sampling may lead to rejecting the power-law hypothesis and so rejecting the criticality hypothesis even when the system is critical.
As mentioned above a limited taxon sampling may lead to an incorrect topology due to assuming models that are not consistent with the evolution.
It is well established that variations in experimental procedures and uncontrolled conditions (e.g. socio-geographical origin of samples) may lead to systemic measurement biases.
However, such multiple samples may lead to another problem: sample dependence of outputs [ 26].
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com