Results 291 to 300 of about 43,291,481 (361)
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LONGITUDINAL STUDY OF LYMPHOCYTES

Age and Ageing, 1984
Longitudinal investigations of the peripheral lymphocytes of 91 healthy individuals were made over a period of six years. It was found that in aged subjects degenerative changes occurred in the mitochondria of the T cells. The number of subjects with damaged mitochondria in the lymphocytes increased significantly between 60 and 80 years of age.
Edit Beregi, Otto Regius
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A LONGITUDINAL STUDY OF SCHIZOPHRENIA

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1960
We were not able to demonstrate significant trends or relationships between the onset and course of the disease on the one hand, and the present status on the other, in a group of schizophrenics, many of whom might be classified as chronics. Age at breakdown, acute onset of symptoms, developmental factors, in themselves or in toto, do not appear to be ...
G. H. Hutton   +3 more
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The Longitudinal Study [PDF]

open access: possible, 2010
Where do new ideas come from? Our view is that building new ideas is a process; new ideas come from old ideas that are revisited, reviewed, extended, and connected (Davis, 1984; Maher & Davis, 1995). Building new ideas also involves the retrieval and modification of representations of existing ideas.
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A longitudinal study of the genetics of personality.

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1976
A longitudinal twin study was conducted to determine whether personality traits with significant heritability in adolescence remain so in adulthood. A subsample of a group of twins who had been administered in Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory and the California Psychological Inventory in adolescence was readministered the same two ...
Barbara W. Burke   +3 more
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Interpretation of Longitudinal Studies: An Overview

American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 1996
In their introductory overview, Weiss and Ware (1) list six advantages of longitudinal research. Three of these seem particularly important in relation to interpretation and, to some extent, these three subsume the other strengths: (1) understanding the temporal order of events; (2) observation of individual patterns of change; and (3) assessment of ...
Ira B. Tager, Jan P. Schouten
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Longitudinal Study of Teachers

2017
The longitudinal study of teachers gives a time perspective on the life and work of teachers, instead of just a snapshot at a particular point. The time period in question may be just a few intense months, as in some ethnographic research, or several decades, as in some life-history research.
Elizabeth A. Rosales   +2 more
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A longitudinal study of balance in migraineurs

Acta Oto-Laryngologica, 2011
Balance in migraineurs, even in those without vestibular symptoms, deteriorates slightly over 1 year in the most challenging test conditions, when measured with posturography.To discover by a longitudinal study of a group of migraineurs and their controls, whether the well-known, mild imbalance found on posturography in migraineurs is static or ...
ÖZTÜRK, VESİLE   +4 more
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A longitudinal study of climates

Journal of Organizational Behavior, 1988
AbstractThe construct of climate and its relationship to various work outcomes over time was examined. Based on perceptual agreement of various work setting characteristics, collective climates were formed. Climates were traced longitudinally 10 understand the bases of perceptual agreement.
Ellen F. Jackofsky, John W. Slocum
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A Longitudinal Study of Moral Reasoning

Child Development, 1989
Several issues concerning Gilligan's model of moral orientations and Kohlberg's models of moral stages and moral orientations were examined in a longitudinal study with 233 subjects (from 78 families) who ranged in age from 5 to 63 years. They participated in 2 identical interviews separated by a 2-year interval.
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Analysis of longitudinal studies

BMJ, 2013
A randomised controlled trial investigated whether a low glycaemic index diet in pregnancy reduced the incidence of macrosomic (large for gestational age) infants. Participants were an at risk group—women without diabetes, in their second pregnancy, who had previously given birth to an infant weighing more than 4000 g.
Philip Sedgwick, Louise Marston
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