Results 281 to 290 of about 12,031,704 (340)
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Statistically Significant vs Clinically Significant Differences

Anesthesia & Analgesia, 1984
Rajinder K. Mirakhur   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Least Significant Difference Test

1987
When the F-ratio determined by analysis of variance indicates a significant difference between sample means, it is desirable to determine which means are significantly different. The Newman-Keuls test (Procedure 36) is applicable for this purpose. When the sample sizes are equal, additional tests (besides Newman-Keuls) may be used.
Ronald J. Tallarida, Rodney B. Murray
openaire   +1 more source

'No Statistically Significant Difference'

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1987
In many scientific communications, we are confronted with data showing "no statistically significant difference" between two groups (populations) with respect to a certain variable. The authors often conclude that the two groups are not different regarding that variable.
openaire   +1 more source

Significances of Two Different Mr Caldesmons

1989
Regarding the Ca2+-dependent regulatory mechanism of the smooth muscle and nonmuscle actin-myosin interaction, the myosin-linked regulation based on phosphorylation of myosin by Ca2+- and calmodulindependent myosin light chain kinase and dephosphorylation by myosin phosphatase has been well documented (1–3). Despite the accumulation of several findings
K, Sobue, Y, Fujio
openaire   +2 more sources

‘But is the difference clinically significant?’

Clinical Rehabilitation, 2005
The statement that a difference or change found in a research study is statistically significant is frequently met with the response, ‘but is it clinically significant?’. This question seems entirely reasonable and uncontentious until one asks how to determine or define clinical significance.
openaire   +2 more sources

Making Differences Significant

2018
The dominant transdisciplinary view of cognition and communication is the info-computational paradigm, relying on a statistical objective concept of information in combination with Alan Turing’s general idea of computational process. This view, including Gregory Bateson’s ecological “mind”, constitutes a mechanization of mind, leaving out important ...
openaire   +1 more source

Nanofluidics for osmotic energy conversion

Nature Reviews Materials, 2021
, Liping Wen, Lei Jiang
exaly  

Difference-in-Differences with multiple time periods

Journal of Econometrics, 2021
Brantly Callaway
exaly  

The fundamentals and applications of ferroelectric HfO2

Nature Reviews Materials, 2022
Uwe Schroeder   +2 more
exaly  

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