Results 171 to 180 of about 2,646,514 (218)
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Imprecise Incidents of Incidence

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1974
ABSTRACT To the Editor.— Dr. Lester's letter entitled "The Suicide Capital of America" (228:1637, 1974) represents another example of the many imprecise incidents of incidence in the medical literature. To the epidemiologist, the term incidence has a very specific meaning, namely, the number of new cases of a particular disease reported over a given ...
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Neuroepidemiology

Archives of Neurology, 1977
Neuroepidemiology is concerned with the study of incidents of neurological disease occurring in a community. It deals with the distribution and dynamics of neurological disease in human populations and the factors that affect these patterns. To estimate the magnitude of the disease burden in the population, the neuroepidemiologist calculates indices of
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Imprecise Incident of Incidence

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1975
To the Editor.— The imprecise incident of incidence written about by Dr. Schoenberg (229:1724, 1974) is itself quite imprecise. In attempting to clarify an area fraught with confusion, he has unfortunately confounded the matter still further by using incidence and incidence rates synonymously and interchangeably. I offer the following example to help
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Incidence of cancer

The Lancet, 2001
Item does not contain ...
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Incident response

Network Security, 1999
Extensive logging of events is regularly done by security devices such as firewalls and routers. Significant time is spent reviewing these logs to determine if systems are under attack, and funds are spent in purchasing event correlation software to readily combine the output of separate sources in the hope of detecting attacks missed by the separate ...
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Incidence and Deviation

2005
Up to this point, the relationships developed for a turbomachinery stage have been strictly correct for given velocity diagrams with known inlet and exit flow angles. We assumed that the flow is fully congruent with the blade profile. This assumption implies that the inlet and exit flow angles coincide with the camber angles at the leading and trailing
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The Saturday incident

Accident and Emergency Nursing, 1998
In this final paper on the work of Accident and Emergency (A & E) nurses, a specific incident is used to illustrate the ways in which initial assessment is accomplished. In particular, the need to act upon impressions gained, as a result of knowing the case, will be shown to be a fundamental part of A & E nursing work.
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The Incidence of Retinoblastoma

American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1975
Data from the Third National Cancer Survey indicate that the annual incidence of retinoblastoma in the United States is 11.0 new cases per million children under the age of 5 years. In response to a reported excess of mortality among blacks, rates were computed by race.
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The Incidence of Malvaria

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1965
Hoffer and Mahon (2), using an extraction method of their own, have shown that certain compounds, separated on paper chromatograms, give a mauve colour. This colour comes on slowly over 30 minutes as a pink area which slowly turns mauve and then within a half to 1 hour has a typical mauve appearance.
M. Ernest, P. O. O'reilly, G. Hughes
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Incidence Functions and Incidence Matrices

1968
We now introduce into our structure the concept of the direction of a branch of a network. This is accomplished by means of a function called an incidence function of a set of branches. This incidence function leads to a matrix called an incidence matrix of a set of branches. Most of this Chapter is devoted to properties of such incidence matrices.
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