Sentence examples for prevalence of statistical from inspiring English sources

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Exact(5)

However, we do confirm the prevalence of statistical differences in the verbal comprehension subscale, as previously reported [17], even though all the other verbal subtest (vocabulary, similarities, information) scores, except the arithmetic subtest, were significantly lower in our MoA patients than in the control group.

The prevalence of statistical learning in visual tasks suggests that attentive tracking may be similarly influenced by learning.

Statistically significant estimates of effects of treatment in either direct or indirect comparisons may be expected to be associated with higher prevalence of statistical inconsistency.

Only in the AJP and BJP did 'description of statistical procedures' have a statistically significant positive association with the number of citations received (Mann-Whitney test, p < 0.05) Table 3 compares the prevalence of statistical errors in the four journals.

If authors of systematic reviews did not do or report the indirect comparison because of perceived inconsistency, we may have overestimated the prevalence of statistical inconsistency in our study.

Similar(55)

Several studies have looked at the prevalence of different statistical methods in specific journals, or groups of journals, generally with the goal of identifying the statistical knowledge needed for specific identifiable groups.

To examine the prevalence of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition psychiatric disorders in youth with chest pain compared with a control sample with innocent heart murmur.

For example, when analysing the prevalence of AIDS, traditional statistical methods mainly examine the correlation between HIV/AIDS and other factors (economy, inputs and outputs) in terms of temporal change, whereas spatial statistics can analyse correlations in time and space, that is, the research perspectives of the two methods are different.

Using this survey, Lampe and colleagues (2003) estimated the 12-month prevalence of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) SAD as 2.3%, with 1.4% of the population meeting diagnostic criteria in the month prior to the survey.

To determine the prevalence in the neonatal literature of statistical approaches accounting for the unique clustering patterns of multiple births and to explore the sensitivity of an actual trial to several analytic approaches to multiples.

Overall, these studies have shown up to 40-fold difference in prevalence rates, reflecting high degree of statistical heterogeneity (I 2  > 96 %).

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