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A basketball player makes the 5th rebound of the night,
A tennis player in the middle of a game.
1.4
600
A helicopter is getting ready to take off.
The plane is getting ready to take off.
2.8
601
A man doing a jumping bike trick surrounded by trees.
A boy riding a green trick bike over some steps outdoors.
3
602
Three guys in speedos have their feet up on the railing of a boat getting a tan.
A few men on the deck are dropping another man into the water
1.6
603
A group wading across a witch
A group wading across a ditch
2.8
604
A woman jumps and poses for the camera.
A woman poses for the camera.
4
605
A man is on a rooftop
A man is holding a microphone in a room.
0.8
606
There are two men near a wall.
Three women are sitting near a wall.
2
607
The two men are wearing jeans.
The two men are wearing pants.
4.4
608
The man without a shirt is jumping.
The man jumping is not wearing a shirt.
4.6
609
The woman is holding the hands of the man.
The woman is checking the eyes of the man.
2.4
610
A man walks his dog on the beach.
A man with his dog on the beach.
4.4
611
The child is the woman's kid.
There is a boy and a girl.
0.8
612
A soccer player is kicking the ball.
The soccer player gave the ball a high kick.
3.8
613
Two boys in black swimming trunks are holding another boy by his arms and legs on a beach.
Man in white shirt flipping young boy in the water with four other boys surrounding them.
1.4
614
The player shoots the winning points.
The basketball player is about to score points for his team.
2.8
615
A motorcross driver going by during a race
A race car driver performs in the race of his life.
3
616
The gate is blue.
The gate is yellow.
1.6
617
A dog walks along a beach with breaking waves.
A boy with an oar walks out of the surf and onto a beach.
1
618
A pair of men walk along the beach.
Two men standing in the surf on a beach.
2.6
619
Blond woman in a tunnel.
The couple kissing is near a blond woman.
1.6
620
The raven droned as is hopped along the grass.
The skinny dog with the long tail is traveling through the field.
0.2
621
the man is catching a ball
A man is kicking a ball.
3
622
Two men are sitting in the room.
Two men are standing in a room.
3
623
The woman is waiting for her date.
The woman is on her way to a date.
3.2
624
You'll need to check the particular policies of each publisher to see what is allowed and what is not allowed.
If you need to publish the book and you have found one publisher that allows it.
3
625
I am not aware of any university run participant pools.
At the universities I've worked in North America, human-subject studies (esp.
0.6
626
Apart from admission (which normally should not be related to age), there is something that's related to your question.
Age is not a PhD admission facor in the continental Europe, too.
1
627
This post refers to research in the STEM fields, and may not be applicable to other research topics.
This is about my experience in computer engineering I found that reading for breadth was the more important approach.
0.6
628
If you don't want to pay for Adobe Acrobat Pro, as @schultem mentions, LaTeX can do this with embedded hyperlinks.
If you don't mind hosting your files online, SlideShare is a good solution.
0.8
629
I don't think there are likely to be any standards that address this issue specifically.
You're going to find answers all over the map for this one (i.e., there probably aren't "standards").
2.4
630
My answer would be depending on which GRE are you referring to?
The problem I see with the GREs is that the scoring range is highly compressed.
1
631
If you have access to it, you can very easily do that with Thomson Reuters’ Web of Science portal.
You can have a look at the arXiv cultoromics website at http://arxiv.culturomics.org, which however searches in articles on the arXiv.
0.2
632
In general there are a number of different distinct workflows that lead to a poster.
For completeness, Apple's Pages has quite a few nice poster layouts.
0.6
633
It is perfectly okay to ask for the figure knowing well that the other person may not give.
You can always ask, then it is the choice of the author to accept or not.
3.6
634
The academic year does start around September in the USA and I think most European countries.
I would not accelerate things, to avoid getting worse grades that you want.
0.2
635
I will advise exactly the contrary of what bravo just said in another answer : go for A !
You could defer admission, but it's a little unusual to defer for a year.
0.2
636
Edit, again: The question seems to have changed, yet again.
I can think of three reasons why a faculty member might reveal how a student performed on a qualifying examination.
0
637
I agree with Seteropere completely, "Network Science" is a very broad subject.
I would say you are approaching it in the wrong way.
0
638
Supporting an ideology in an ostentatious manner (rather than privately or discreetly) is a personality problem.
I think for an appropriate answer I'd need to know exactly what the 'bad' ideology is.
1.2
639
This does not fully answer your question, but it is certainly one consideration.
I am a PhD student in Computational Science, which is an interdisciplinary major spanning mathematics, computer science, and engineerning.
0
640
A few possible problems: 1) Such an ID system seems a little intrusive.
In mathematics, we already have a database of this sort - two them, in fact, with in MathSciNet and Zentralblatt MATH.
0.4
641
As an complement to the other answers, let me address the question of why planets tend towards tidal locking.
The other answers here are fantastic at explaining in a technical sense.
0.4
642
Stars are rotating, but that's not the cause for their stability.
Stars rotate due to the angular momentum of the gas they formed from.
3
643
It indeed appears the Andromeda galaxy (M31) and The Milky Way (MW) are en route to a collision.
In a few billion years, the Milky Way and Andromeda will collide.
4.4
644
The short answer is: we are made from the "stuff" contributed by many stars.
It is highly unlikely that we're made out of stuff from only one star.
3.2
645
All we know is this : Distant objects are receding from us at a rate proportional to their distance from us.
The expansion of space means that objects in cosmological distances are receding away from each other.
3.4
646
Like Chris said above, stars rotate to conserve their angular momentum.
Stars are rotating, but that's not the cause for their stability.
3.4
647
According to this website the peak visible magnitude will be about 10.5 around February 2nd.
The AAVSO data seems to indicate that it might have already peaked, at around 10.5 (visual).
3.6
648
All of these effects are related to the 11 year solar cycle.
I will be specific to answering the part regarding the prediction of solar flares.
0.8
649
We are moving "... relative to the comoving cosmic rest frame ... at some 371 km/s towards the constellation Leo".
There is no 'still' that is not relative to some other object.
0.8
650
Yes, it's true that the apparent size of the Moon is 30 arcmin.
When you gaze at the moon "live", you are not seeing a still image.
1
651
Let us assume the data for a globular cluster to be equivalent to that of M13.
Globular clusters occupy an interesting place in the spectrum of composite stellar systems.
1.6
652
Why is the speed of light 299,792,458 m/s, and not (for instance) 3,1 or 4,3 x 10^44 m/s?
Speed of light being finite is one of the fundamentals of our Universe.
1
653
As per your definition, a star formed in a binary system (hence near some gravitating body) is a generalised planet.
The main flaw with your definition of a "generalised planet" would be the boundary between stars and planets.
3.2
654
A method used to calculate the distance between stars is 3 Dimensional trigonometry.
You only need two-dimensional trigonometry if you know the distances to the two stars and their angular separation.
2
655
The farther away, the faster the galaxies move away from us.
Here is my answer to a similar question posted on the physics stack exchange website.
0
656
Stars form in star-formation regions, which itself develop from molecular clouds.
It may be possible for a solar system like ours to exist outside of a galaxy.
0.6
657
A black hole (briefly), is nothing more than a dead star whose mass was more than 3 solar masses.
I think you mean to ask, "What is the local sidereal time of Greenwhich?".
0
658
Yes, but it does not stay in the same constellation.
Constellations are human constructs to make sense of the night sky.
1.4
659
Asteroids are what are called minor planets - small inner solar system rocky bodies.
The objects you are refering to are actually two different objects: asteroids and comets.
2
660
Here is a lexical decision task I wrote years ago using PHP and Javascript (github link).
Just for reference, I ended up writing simple web-based lexical decision task software myself.
2.6
661
It's pretty difficult to imagine a person with Social Anxiety Disorder being an extrovert.
On the surface, it does seem like social anxiety disorder and extroversion shouldn't both exist in the same person.
4.2
662
It is hard to delineate emotion completely from thoughts or sensations, because emotion can contain both.
Technically speaking, an emotion is not different from thought the way it is processed in brain, both involve neurotransmitters.
2.8
663
I've found an additional concept that may be related to the original question: prototype theory.
According to current models of human concept learning, the answer to your question is both.
0
664
There are individuals who possess extraordinary memory ability, sometimes called eidetic memory.
There are many arguments for why this is not the case.
0
665
Spike trigger is a specific type or you could say a sub-set of reverse correlations, covariance and probabilities.
There's the naïve version of spike triggered averaging, and the sophisticated version.
2
666
As mentioned in the other comments, ANOVA is problematic when mixing types of predictor variables.
I like to think of multitasking as rapid task switching.
0
667
Q: What is the reason for people to implicitly trust their peers in extreme (or not) situations?
One human-being reliance on other(s) awareness is defined by the level of trust between the humans.
2.6
668
Intrinsic reward is the emotional pay-off that you get by completing an activity.
According to Frederick Herzberg's two-factor theory of motivation, intrinsic rewards are motivators (e.g.
2.6
669
Presumably the decision of drivers to slow down in response to work zone signage is influenced by many factors.
This short talk deals with issues of "cheating slightly" :Dan Ariely: Our buggy moral code.
0
670
When studying adult IQ, general adult norms are often used.
Basically, what you do is you compare each age group IQ to the standardization sample.
2.6
671
Some ancient historical precedent exists for preferring $10$, but also for $6$, so that's mixed support from Wikipedia on perfect numbers.
This is indeed possible, but I haven't seen it done experimentally for reasons other than feasibility.
0
672
These are interesting studies, but the bottom line is: yes, environment affects cognitive abilities.
I'm not sure what you mean by cognitive capacity, but I absolutely believe that language shapes the way we think.
1.6
673
Since this is a relatively new problem for behavioral researchers, I don't know that there is a common consensus.
I'll address just the first of your three sub-questions, the others have been answered by Chuck Sherrington.
0
674
If non-human animals do have intelligence too, why is their intelligence not as advanced as humans?
Your own theory is bad because it seems to follow from a Lamarkian interpretation of evolutionary theory.
0.6
675
The Hare Psychopathy Checklist is often used to assess psychopathy in clinical settings.
From an article entitled Can You Call a 9-Year-Old a Psychopath?
1.8
676
I wrap steaks individually in freezer paper, then put them into ziploc freezer bags.
Wrap well in plastic (individually) and then put in a freezer bag.
3.8
677
In addition to oil, make sure the grill is nice and hot before you start cooking.
I'd been using paper towels to oil the grill, and I just discovered that newspapers work a lot better.
1.6
678
The best way I have found is to soak the ears in husk for several hours before grilling.
Soak whole ears in the husk in a bowl of water.
3.2
679
There are actually quite a few differences between the different types of flour.
The difference is the amount of protein contained in the flour which can range from 5% to 15%.
2.6
680
I've never adjusted the length of time based on number of eggs.
I don't boil eggs enough to keep a feel for the timing...
3
681
I just hold the cheese closer to the edge away from the grater.
By the wording of the question, I'm pretty sure you're using one of those pyramidal graters or a "sheet" grater.
1.4
682
I've stored pancakes in the freezer for over two month and not had any freezer burn.
Its going to depend on the type of packaging and also the freezer.
1.6
683
Break the bulb into cloves, breaking off the bottom and the dry stick that goes up the middle.
lay down a knife horizontaly on the cloves and hit it.
1.6
684
I managed to find this recipe, I think this is where I got the idea.
I've only made a couple of bbq sauces, but they've always come out really well.
1
685
I believe one cannot taste the difference between minced(canned) and fresh garlic once it is cooked.
In my experience, fresh garlic is great for when you want texture, or to slow down the flavour infusion.
1.8
686
I grill salmon that I get with the skin on.
Salmon is a great choice and it's readily available pretty much everywhere.
1.8
687
The recipe I work from has you put the meat in the freezer, then pan sear it.
Starting with a whole chilled piece of meat, I quickly pour boiling water over all the outside surface.
1.4
688
They don't taste identical at all, and even more important, they don't smell the same.
Black pepper and white pepper are differing preparations of the fruit of the Piper nigrum plant.
2.6
689
This depends on the shelf life of the cultivar of tomato you purchased.
Tomatoes will last longer if kept in the fridge, but I actually recommend against keeping them there.
2
690
Coagulated egg proteins in combination with gluten give baked goods the supporting structure they need.
There are basically two types of cakes: butter and sponge (or Génoise).
1
691
A common one is haddock and is in season pretty much year round.
White fish are, as a rule, more delicately flavored than darker fleshed fish.
1.4
692
Good cheddar has little chunks of calcium lactate on/in it - could it be that?
I have two suspicions: One, you're undercooking your roux, the flour and butter mixture, and not fully incorporating the flour.
0.6
693
Copper can be useful for certain tasks due to the its metallic properties (heats quickly, distributes heat evenly, etc.
Probably subjective, but ... Good clad stainless steel will give you much better cooking performance per dollar than copper.
1.4
694
She obviously has a legit excuse, although she could have been more responsible and "have" told you in advance.
The first have covers both been more responsible and told you in that sentence.
0.4
695
In some cases the implication could even be that Tom does not love her.
There is no implication about Tom whatsoever in such a sentence.
1.8
696
I agree with others (and yourself) in that I have never heard this phrase in English.
I have never heard or seen the phrase you mention.
4
697
The assertion is false, at least as you've restated it here.
"I had mainly been" is fine, in the context you're using it.
0.6
698
I'd suggest you look to the constructions of the native language(s) of your students.
As bikeboy389 said, you can learn a lot by looking at students' native languages.
2.8
699