enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Eatons Neck Light - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eatons_Neck_Light

    Eatons Neck Light. /  40.954028°N 73.395139°W  / 40.954028; -73.395139. Eatons Neck Light has served as a navigational aid since its construction in 1798. [2] Designed by John McComb, Jr., it is one of only two 18th century lighthouses still standing in New York State, [3] the other is the Montauk Point Light .

  3. Moss Neck Manor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moss_Neck_Manor

    Moss Neck Manor is a historic, antebellum plantation house located at Rappahannock Academy, Caroline County, Virginia, United States. Construction [ edit ] James Parke Corbin (1808-1868) inherited the plantation, which did not have a significant house, from his father, Richard Corbin (1771-1819). [3]

  4. Prism (Prism album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prism_(Prism_album)

    Prism is the debut album by Canadian rock band Prism, [2] released in May 1977 on the Canadian record label GRT. It was produced primarily by Bruce Fairbairn, and the majority of songs were written by Jim Vallance (who also served as co-producer on three tracks). [3] It achieved platinum status in Canada (in excess of 100,000 units sold). [4]

  5. Šidák correction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Šidák_correction

    The Šidák correction is derived by assuming that the individual tests are independent. Let the significance threshold for each test be α 1 {\displaystyle \alpha _{1}} ; then the probability that at least one of the tests is significant under this threshold is (1 - the probability that none of them are significant).

  6. Roof prism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roof_prism

    Roof prism. A roof pentaprism used in Single-lens reflex cameras; the lower right face is the roof ( dach ). A roof prism, also called a Dachkanten prism or Dach prism (from German: Dachkante, lit. "roof edge"), is a reflective prism containing a section where two faces meet at a 90° angle, resembling the roof of a building and thus the name.

  7. Bonferroni correction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonferroni_correction

    The Bonferroni correction compensates for that increase by testing each individual hypothesis at a significance level of , where is the desired overall alpha level and is the number of hypotheses. [4] For example, if a trial is testing hypotheses with a desired overall , then the Bonferroni correction would test each individual hypothesis at .

  8. Holm–Bonferroni method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holm–Bonferroni_method

    Thus, The Hochberg procedure is uniformly more powerful than the Holm procedure. However, the Hochberg procedure requires the hypotheses to be independent or under certain forms of positive dependence, whereas Holm–Bonferroni can be applied without such assumptions. A similar step-up procedure is the Hommel procedure, which is uniformly more ...

  9. Atmospheric correction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmospheric_correction

    Atmospheric correction. Atmospheric correction is the process of removing the scattering and absorption effects of the atmosphere on the reflectance values of images taken by satellite or airborne sensors. [1] [2] Atmospheric effects in optical remote sensing are significant and complex, dramatically altering the spectral nature of the ...