Results 271 to 280 of about 1,700,049 (319)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Detection of Fetal Risk in Postmaturity

Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1979
SummaryNinety‐seven postmature pregnancies were monitored by amnioscopy or amniocentesis (to determine presence or absence of meconium), oxytocin challenge tests (OCT), 24‐hour urinary oestriol estimations and fetal movement counts. The colour of the amniotic fluid and the result of the OCT predicted almost all cases of fetal distress in labour and ...
R, Homburg, A, Ludomirski, V, Insler
openaire   +2 more sources

The risk of detection

Journal of Quantitative Criminology, 1990
The clearance rate is often used as an indicator of the risk of detection, in spite of the fact that these are different matters. This article suggests a method to make estimates of the risk of detection based on information from the Swedish crime statistics. The risk of detection is expressed as a function of the dark figure.
Jan Ahlberg, Johannes Knutsson
openaire   +1 more source

Automated Risk Classification and Outlier Detection

2007 IEEE Symposium on Computational Intelligence in Multi-Criteria Decision-Making, 2007
Risk assessment is a common task present in a variety of problem domains, ranging from the assignment of premium classes to insurance applications, to the evaluation of disease treatments in medical diagnostics, situation assessments in battlefield management, state evaluations in planning activities, etc.
Naresh Iyer, Piero P. Bonissone
openaire   +1 more source

Detecting the health risks of radiation*

Medicine, Conflict and Survival, 1999
Radiation can cause both non-stochastic (cell-killing) effects, leading to burns, epilation, immune system damage and lens opacities, and mutational or stochastic effects due to low dose damage to single cells. If the latter are followed by clone formation or fertilization, the mutants are not recognized by the immune system, and there is no competing ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Risk-sensitive quickest time detection

2004 43rd IEEE Conference on Decision and Control (CDC) (IEEE Cat. No.04CH37601), 2004
We consider the quickest time detection problem with risk-sensitive costs. First, the detection of a change point with a geometric distribution is analyzed and a threshold policy is obtained. Next, we establish a consistency relationship between the risk-sensitive detection and the detection based on risk-neural costs.
Minyi Huang, Vikram Krishnamurthy
openaire   +1 more source

Cancer risk and early detection assessment

Seminars in Oncology Nursing, 1993
Nurses and physicians form an ideal corps for implementing cancer prevention and early detection efforts: providing health education, promoting health enrichment, defining high-risk groups and identifying patients who belong to them, and providing screening to ensure early diagnosis and prompt treatment.
L N, White, M R, Spitz
openaire   +2 more sources

Hyperhomocysteinemia: detection, risk assessment, and treatment

Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension, 1997
Homocysteine is formed by the demethylation of methionine in the course of its normal metabolism. Hyperhomocysteinemia is an independent risk factor for vascular disease. It develops most commonly from folate deficiency, genetic abnormalities, and chronic renal failure. Current models favor direct angiotoxicity involving endothelial and vascular smooth
V W, Dennis, S, Nurko, K, Robinson
openaire   +2 more sources

Descriptors for the Detection of the Chemical Risk. [PDF]

open access: possible, 2015
We propose an experience on the automatic detection of sentences conveying the notion of chemical risk. Our objective is to study which resources are useful for the automatic detection of such sentences. Lexical, semantic and opinion-oriented content of the sentences is studied.
Grabar, Natalia, Hamon, Thierry
openaire   +1 more source

The detection of at‐risk drinking in a teaching hospital

Medical Journal of Australia, 1988
We studied a sample of 302 inpatients from all medical and surgical wards of Westmead Hospital. Twenty-six per cent of patients (47% of men and 4% of women) were identified as past or current "at-risk" drinkers. Current drinkers preponderantly were male and were more likely to be admitted to hospital with trauma.
J, Bell   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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