Methionine -- chemistry : Controlling Maillard pathways to generate flavors / [edited by] Donald S. Mottram, Andrew J. Taylor ; sponsored by the ACS Division of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Method acting -- Study and teaching : Objectives, Obstacles, and Tactics in Practice : Perspectives on Activating the Actor / Edited by Valerie Clayman Pye and Hillary Haft Bucs
2019
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Method acting -- Technique : Creating a role / Constantin Stanislavski ; translated by Elizabeth Reynolds Hapgood ; edited by Hermine I. Popper ; foreword by Robert Lewis
A theorem in probability theory named for Thomas Bayes (1702-1761). In epidemiology, it is used to obtain the probability of disease in a group of people with some characteristic on the basis of the overall rate of that disease and of the likelihood of that characteristic in healthy and diseased individuals. The most familiar application is in clinical decision analysis where it is used for estimating the probability of a particular diagnosis given the appearance of some symptoms or test result
Enumerations of populations usually recording identities of all persons in every place of residence with age or date of birth, sex, occupation, national origin, language, marital status, income, relation to head of household, information on the dwelling place, education, literacy, health-related data (e.g., permanent disability), etc. The census or "numbering of the people" is mentioned several times in the Old Testament. Among the Romans, censuses were intimately connected with the enumeration of troops before and after battle and probably a military necessity. (From Last, A Dictionary of Epidemiology, 3d ed; Garrison, An Introduction to the History of Medicine, 4th ed, p66, p119)
Systematic gathering of data for a particular purpose from various sources, including questionnaires, interviews, observation, existing records, and electronic devices. The process is usually preliminary to statistical analysis of the data
A method of studying a drug or procedure in which both the subjects and investigators are kept unaware of who is actually getting which specific treatment
A method of studying a drug or procedure in which both the subjects and investigators are kept unaware of who is actually getting which specific treatment
A bone fixation technique using an external fixator (FIXATORS, EXTERNAL) for lengthening limbs, correcting pseudarthroses and other deformities, and assisting the healing of otherwise hopeless traumatic or pathological fractures and infections, such as chronic osteomyelitis. The method was devised by the Russian orthopedic surgeon Gavriil Abramovich Ilizarov (1921-1992). (From Bull Hosp Jt Dis 1992 Summer;52(1):1)
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Method in theology Lonergan, Bernard J F : A discerning church : Pope Francis, Lonergan, and a theological method for the future / Gerard Whelan, SJ ; foreword by Robert M. Doran, SJ
Methods used for the chemical synthesis of compounds. Included under this heading are laboratory methods used to synthesize a variety of chemicals and drugs
Summarizing techniques used to describe the pattern of mortality and survival in populations. These methods can be applied to the study not only of death, but also of any defined endpoint such as the onset of disease or the occurrence of disease complications
In statistics, a technique for numerically approximating the solution of a mathematical problem by studying the distribution of some random variable, often generated by a computer. The name alludes to the randomness characteristic of the games of chance played at the gambling casinos in Monte Carlo. (From Random House Unabridged Dictionary, 2d ed, 1993)
Here are entered works on the group of mathematical equations used to evaluate electric power networks based on the degree of symmetry of sequences of fluctuating currents or voltages