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The crazy-paving pattern is initially described as the pathognomonic sign of alveolar proteinosis.
Here, the pattern is initially defined on a stamp as a 3D-relief structure.
The watermark pattern is initially constructed in the DCT domain as a rectangular patch of size that is related to the size of the normalized image (e.g., 64 × 64 for a normalized image of size 512 × 512, as in our examples).
Although the pattern is initially surprising, scenarios of female bias from Europe or male bias from Africa accord with the phenomenon depicted in Figure 5.
A similar binding pattern is initially observed with the nonspecific ns274 substrate, and the evolution of an ∼10 S complex is apparent; however, this undergoes a transition to a distinct, very slowly sedimenting ∼2.5 S species that appears at IHF concentrations of ≥100 nM.
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In this experiment, a checker-box pattern was initially captured and unwrapped into cuboid panoramic view.
This pattern was initially described for panbronchiolitis, which is a rare entity affecting mainly Japanese and Korean middle-aged men.
The drainage pattern was initially derived from the toposheets and later updated using linearly stretched False Colour Composite (FCC) of IRS-1C LISS 3 satellite data.
Figure 7 confirmed that the ZnO pattern was initially a ring pattern and toward the center from an edge or corner of a rectangle, the seed layer was completely filled with the ZnO nanorods within 2 h.
The crazy-paving pattern was initially described as a pathognomonic sign of alveolar proteinosis; however, nowadays, this pattern has been reported in a variety of acute and chronic diseases as summarised in Table 1 [2, 5, 6, 7, 8].
This pattern was initially described in alveolar proteinosis, which typically presents bilateral ground-glass opacities associated with smooth septal thickening in a patchy and geographic distribution [25] (Fig. 15).
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