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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a study that counted" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a research study that involved quantifying or measuring something significant.
Example: "The researchers published a paper detailing a study that counted the number of species in the area over a decade."
Alternatives: "a study that measured" or "a study that quantified".
Exact(2)
Four years ago, Stride ran a study that counted and categorized every incident of cheating during the 2010 World Cup.
You wouldn't dream of producing a study that counted "men only" or "whites only," at least not without specific, clearly stated reasons for dividing the data.
Similar(58)
This intolerable toll looms darkly in a federal study that counted 896,000 abused and neglected foster children in the same year.
The latest round of funding supported ADNI 2, which recruited ~700 new participants to the longitudinal study that, counting those participants retained from ADNI 1 and ADNI-GO, constitutes a cohort of about 1,100 participants.
Earlier studies that counted neural tube defects among newborns indicated a drop of 19percentt, a smaller change than had been predicted.
Specifically, whereas Kazantzis defined "objective" as an electronic marker of homework compliance, our analysis considered "objective" to mean studies that counted the number of homeworks turned into therapists.
According to animal studies that counted the number of phagosomes at different day times the incidence of phagocytosis can be significantly different throughout the day [ 14].
Furthermore, these rates also match those from previous studies that counted chromosomes out on the spindle (Xiang and Hawley 2006), which we now know were still in prometaphase I.
Together, these results suggest that researchers may compare prevalence estimates from studies that count different ICPC-2 chapters, ICD-10 chapters or CIRS domains affected by chronic conditions.
That's why scientists like O'Connor want a study that goes further than counting cases, to measuring contaminants in residents' blood.
To this end, we are reminded of a study that showed decreased leukocyte count and IL-6 in the peripheral blood in a group of expedition members who traveled from a more polluted Japanese metropolitan to the Antarctica that has the particulate number density <1% of that measured in Japan [ 62].
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com