The Collaborative International Dictionary
Statistically \Sta*tis"tic*al*ly\, adv. In the way of statistics.
Wiktionary
adv. 1 In a statistical way. 2 From a statistical point of view. 3 From statistical evidence.
WordNet
adv. with respect to statistics; "this is statistically impossible"
Usage examples of "statistically".
Statistically, most of the women I glimpsed must have been members of some parthenogenetic clan.
Second, it would identify variables, or specific characteristics, that may be useful in profiling sexual murderers and for which organized and disorganized sexual murderers differ statistically.
By the end of first grade, a black child is underperforming a statistically equivalent white child.
But to reinforce that, it appears statistically almost impossible that two of our boomers could be lost as the result of an engineering casualty in this manner.
From the 1970s on, the conventional wisdom was that his data were unreliable or statistically unsound, and newer methods and models became popular.
Thus if a new-born baby in Chicago consumed, statistically, three times the food of one new-born in India, it was considered only just and decent to limit the number of newborn Chicagoans, and the same with Londoners, Muscovites, babies of Peking and Tokyo.
Mutations are caused by radioactivity in the environment, by cosmic rays from space, or, as often happens, randomly-by spontaneous rearrangements of the nucleotides which statistically must occur every now and then.
His wired reflexes and muscles would then respond accordingly and hit or miss in a statistically appropriate manner.
Preliminary predictive databasing indicates posiĀtive ozonation yields without statistically significant shifts in lateral ecosystem equilibria.
They may run test decipherments, simulating rotors wired in various ways and turning in various periods, and print out the test solutions at rates up to 600 lines per minute, starring those solutions that statistically most resemble plaintext.
That same capability advantage remains statistically differentiable even today, although the capabilities of increasingly advanced psychotronic circuitry and software have improved to a point at which the speed with which Bolos process information, even linearly, has very largely overtaken the human ability to process it intuitively.
Mounting an aggressive hearts-and-minds campaign that derided the 'passivity' of hundreds of millions of viewers forced to choose nightly between only four statistically pussified Network broadcasters, then extolled the 'empoweringly American choice' of 500-plus esoteric cable options, the American Council of Disseminators of Cable was attacking the Four right at the ideological root, the psychic matrix where viewers had been conditioned (conditioned, rather deliciously, by the Big Four Networks and their advertisers themselves, Hal notes) to associate the Freedom to Choose and the Right to Be Entertained with all that was U.
The SBMs were intercepted in scores, but statistically a few had to get through, and fireballs marched across the sullen PDCs, vaporizing rock and ice, shaking the ice-crusted continental mass with their fury.
Jamey was a young man by now - seventeen or eighteen - and statistically ripe both for the onset of schizophrenia and for drug abuse.
But I suggest each of the three holds substantial improbabilities, and when all of them are combined the likelihood of truth is statistically slight.