particular evidence
2.Conclusion The study demonstrated that special measurements such as growth curves, RAPD, isoenzyme electrophoresis and behavior tests are needed in addition to routine examinations to determine specific characteristics of particular mouse strains in time, providing evidence of strain maintenance and avoid occurrence of genetic drift.
3.Legal evidence rules generally hold that how well work is performed should not be the subject of an admissibility hearing because the quality of testing in a particular case goes to the weight of the evidence and not its admissibility.
4.Theoretical models proposed to account for the representational features of bilingual memory generated many interesting studies, which provided evidence for theoretical issues concerned about the relation between language and cognition as well as language and thought? This paper discusses the hypotheses and predictions made by the revised hierarchical model (Kroll & Stewart 1994)? In particular, the discussion centers on the asymmetries of this model with evidence both for and against the model to illustrate the problems of those bilingual memory studies??
5.Kelsoe and colleagues found statistical evidence tying a particular variant of the GRK3 gene to the disease.
6.Kelly which held that "the proponent of the evidence must demonstrate that correct scientific procedures were done in the particular case."
7.2. The judicial authorities shall have the authority to adopt provisional measures inaudita altera parte where appropriate, in particular where any delay is likely to cause irreparable harm to the right holder, or where there is a demonstrable risk of evidence being destroyed.
8.One timing system comes from the evidence of our senses and stomachs, and the periodicity we experience when living in a particular time zone.
9.Then it is focused on three fusion methods of classifying aerial targets based on the D S evidence theory, and results are compared for particular simulation applications.
10.A number of epidemiological studies have reported an association between human cancers and various surrogate measures of power frequency electromagnetic fields (PF-EMF), but the epidemiological studies done in the past 20 years as a whole showed no persuasive evidence on the causal link of interest mainly because of methodological flaws, in particular inadequate exposure assessment and scarcity of exposure parameters, if any, truly associated with cancer.

