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A Catch in `a Catch in the Reye'

Pediatrics, 1988
To the Editor.— The "Catch in the Reye"1 is not in the data but rather in the authors' interpretation. They incorrectly surmise that finding that only one in 20 patients with Reye syndrome had taken aspirin makes it unlikely that aspirin is a risk factor for Reye syndrome.
P L, Remington, K, Sullivan, J S, Marks
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Catch as Catch Can

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1987
The conclusions drawn by Diggles, Grabiner, and Garhammer (1987) with respect to the differences between skilled and unskilled subjects in catching ability and the consequences of occluding vision of the catching arm on catching errors are questioned on factual and methodological grounds.
H. T. A. Whiting, G. J. P. Savelsbergh
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A Catch in the Reye

Pediatrics, 1988
To the Editor.— Orlowski et al1 raised an interesting question. They presented evidence for the lack of an association between the ingestion of salicylates and the development of Reye syndrome, even though there were no controls in this study and exposure to medications was determined only by reviewing medical records of the patients.
H B, McGee, D G, Sienko
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Catching the Picospams

2005
In this paper, we study the problem of filtering unsolicited bulk emails, also known as spam emails. We apply a k-NN algorithm with a similarity measure called resemblance and compare it with the naive Bayes and the k-NN algorithm with TF-IDF weighting.
Matthew Chang, Chung Keung Poon
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A Catch in the Reye

Pediatrics, 1987
Twenty-six cases of Reye syndrome from The Children's Hospital, Camperdown, Australia, occurring between 1973 and 1982 were reviewed. Of these, 20 cases met the US Public Health Service Centers for Disease Control criteria for the diagnosis of Reye syndrome. Aspirin or salicylate ingestion had occurred in only one of the 20 cases (5%), and paracetamol (
J P, Orlowski, J, Gillis, H A, Kilham
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Catching Ghosts

The Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 2011
There are few psychoanalytically informed, first-person commentaries on the creative process of writing fiction. In this paper, the author, a psychoanalyst with a parallel career as a children's book writer, explores his associations, autobiographical details, and related theoretical constructs as they relate to the writing of one of his published ...
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