If the average deviation is to vanish, the total polarization summed over the two types of inclusion must vanish.
2.
Concussion was also associated with a greater total number of saccades and larger average deviations of saccade endpoint distances from number targets.
3.
Inequality, then, refers to deviations of the " r " " j " from 1.0; the greater the average deviation, the greater the inequality.
4.
Measures of inequality, then, are measures of the average deviations of the r _ j = 1 from 1; the greater the average deviation, the greater the inequality.
5.
Measures of inequality, then, are measures of the average deviations of the r _ j = 1 from 1; the greater the average deviation, the greater the inequality.
6.
He did not observe the expected shift; the greatest average deviation that he measured ( in the northwest direction ) was only 0.018 fringes; most of his measurements were much less.
7.
When one retailer audited every item on hand at a new store, it found that the inventory system had the wrong quantities for 29 percent of the SKUs, with an average deviation from actual supplies of 25 percent.
8.
Leaving out the highest outlier each, the average deviation of the rest of the bematists's measurements would be 1.9 % with Pliny and 1.5 % with Strabo at a measured distance of 1, 958 respectively 1, 605 miles.
9.
While the average deviation between the daily closing price and the daily NAV of ETFs that track domestic indices is generally less than 2 %, the deviations may be more significant for ETFs that track certain foreign indices.
10.
If the variances are bounded, then the law applies, as shown by Chebyshev as early as 1867 . ( If the expected values change during the series, then we can simply apply the law to the average deviation from the respective expected values.