These cues varied systematically in their perceptual salience relative to the primary task in which it was embedded. |
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A second characteristic that distinguishes markets in which valuation is difficult is the heightened salience of product category boundaries. |
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He constructs a fictional world in which the class struggle has special salience. |
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It has a particular salience since he was sometimes suspected of anti-Semitism. |
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Rather than comparing a behavior or therapy characteristic to a norm, it is compared for its salience relative to the other items. |
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The salience of the local press, often assumed to have diminished during the war, in fact increased dramatically. |
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On the security front, we have observed the decline in the salience of strategic nuclear weapons. |
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Such work sheds light on re-enactment as a popular cultural phenomenon with a salience in the present. |
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The salience of what researchers have seen and heard has to be impressed on the audience. |
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The broad realm of their telecommunications policy has acquired a salience it never had in the past. |
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I don't think of myself as a declinist, but the salience of the alliance we are leading is fading fast. |
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Traditional geographic groupings will increasingly lose salience in international relations. |
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Since the end of the cold war, nuclear issues have had little political salience in Britain. |
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No research reviewed for this project has explored the salience of these issues. |
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We are also ready to multilateralize our no-first-use commitment so as to reduce the salience of nuclear weapons in the strategic realm. |
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This month's meeting takes on far greater salience in the light of the rapidly unfolding events in the Middle East. |
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We endeavour to provide high-quality research material available on issues of growing policy salience. |
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The ease with which he could jump from a crisis of British farming to the spectre of biological warfare highlighted the salience of fear as a political resource today. |
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Many news sites have realized the increased salience of emailed links. |
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These patronage disputes had both local salience and national resonance. |
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As a consequence, the same person might identify herself or himself in different ways for different purposes, depending upon the salience of the identification and arrangement for her or him. |
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Canada supports the reduced salience of nuclear weapons and the significant reduction of NATO nuclear forces that has taken place since the end of the cold war. |
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Dissociable intrinsic connectivity networks for salience processing and executive control. |
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In general, we found that arguments against the hunt have lost some salience since 1992 while some arguments in favour of the hunt have increased in salience. |
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A visit by Erwin Chargaff to England in 1952 reinforced the salience of this important fact for Watson and Crick. |
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Strikingly, also, article 290, paragraph 1's reference to serious harm to the marine environment as a basis for provisional measures also underscores the salience of the approach. |
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The goal of the complete elimination of nuclear weapons, in a systematic and progressive manner, will also be facilitated by reducing the salience of nuclear weapons in the security doctrines of the nuclear-weapon States. |
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The centrality of nursing in current Nunavut healthcare and the salience of midwifery in the provision of maternity care for Inuit communities suggest that both need to be considered in addressing maternity care. |
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This may reduce salience, if voters perceive that they have little influence over which parties are included in the coalition. |
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Some have disputed the salience of Vietnam for the Afghan strategy debate. |
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The question of quality education has been no stranger to UNESCO's debates and activities over the course of many years, but it has undoubtedly acquired a higher salience lately. |
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While the Gulf of Mexico oil spill is a stark reminder of the topic's salience, the ongoing global economic crisis provides a potential brake on the enthusiasm. |
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Given the salience of the issue, in the preparation of this report special attention was paid to listening to the views and the concerns of the social partners. |
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Indeed, the debate in Canada about the relative salience of policy and administrative roles in the Public Service has rarely followed polarized lines. |
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Therefore, reducing the salience of nuclear weapons in strategic and security doctrines and policies is essential for realizing the goal of complete elimination of nuclear weapons. |
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But for me, the very things that give small charities their allure – greater autonomy, freedom from bureaucracies, salience of the founding vision – can also be their greatest limitations. |
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Members who are rising on points of order to simply debate the facts, the quality of the speech, the salience of examples used in the speech are beyond a point of order. |
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The economy, on which the Conservatives are more trusted than Labour, has been losing salience in the polls, while a troubled health service, on which the opposition enjoys the advantage, edges towards centre-stage. |
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On some levels, the increased use of ICTs both increases the salience of these trends and, in some areas, also provides scope for new policies to improve the integration of working life into the rest of our lives. |
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Franklin argues that salience, the perceived effect that an individual vote will have on how the country is run, has a significant effect on turnout. |
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He presents Switzerland as an example of a nation with low salience. |
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Voters' perceptions of fairness also have an important effect on salience. |
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