... blood and (2) marriage relationships in the family and even in society andin some social and religious relations e Occupations WsDMC in English have many words containing inherent and socio- cultural ... semantic and socio- cultural features of WsDMC in English and Vietnamese 1.2.2 Objectives The study is intended: - To find out the similarities and differences in grammatical, semantic and socio- cultural ... regularly d Kinships: The nouns (kinterms) denoting kinships in English and Vietnamese contain inherent meanings of [male] The words reflect (1) blood and (2) marriage relationships in the family and...
... - Continuing to strengthen and enhance the CHC: investing essential equipments used for comon disease examination and treatment, enhancing training health staffs - Monitoring and supporting CHCs: ... were in charge of fee in some services, enhanced funding for clinics, mobilizing support from organizations and individuals, strengthening the CHC’s abilities in examination, treatment, and health ... characteristics in mind, physical, and emotional knowledge of a society or group in society and it contains, in addition to the literature and the arts, both living and modes of living together, value...
... (Poland Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan) and found to be useful in identifying policy issues and guiding interventions [18-21] We adapted RPAR sampling methods by constructing a targeted sampling ... including religion, were almost unanimously opposed These findings indicated the important role socio- cultural context plays in determining the acceptance of harm reduction, including religious and ... circumcision in southern Chad: origins, meaning, and current practice Social Science and Medicine 1996, 43(2):255-63 Taylor J: Assisting or compromising interventions? The concept of 'culture' in biomedical...
... identity and heritage, and their protection and promotion are closely linked to sustaining and furthering cultural diversity The discussions regarding the protection of knowledge and creativity of indigenous ... with his intriguing analyses of how international lawmaking has reacted to and employed information and communication technologies, and looks into the relation of this policy and of law-making processes ... expansion of modern-day institutions using basic rights, there is no way around reconstructing extrinsic factors using intrinsic definitions, in order to erect internal barriers in the appropriate...
... structured) being transferred is simple, explicit, and independent and when such transfers involve similar culturalcontextsIn contrast, transfer is least effective when the type of knowledge being transferred ... complex, tacit, and systemic and involves dissimilar culturalcontexts (p 204) Table 1: Cross -cultural Implications – Asian (China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Taiwan, Singapore, Japan) and the West Cross-culture ... within the collective Masculinity/Fem ininity Medium Femininity – To deal with a difficult or controversial request, indirect forms of influence are preferred by Asian managers to avoid losing...
... pattern of socioeconomic dominance that has existed since the early colonial period Colonialism expanded rapidly in the nineteenth century, resulting in the marketing and dissemination of cultural ... socialist Cuba was in the midst of a grave crisis My interest in the post-1959 period derives from firsthand exposure to all this, beginning in 1991 While interviewing musicians and working with seventy-year-old ... campaign of capital investment on the island beginning in 1902 that soon placed control of most agricultural and business revenues in their own hands The importance of the U.S ambassador increased to...
... proteins (e.g lactoglobulin bovine, casein bovine) TiO offers increased capacity compared to IMAC resins in order to bind and elute mono-phosphorylated peptides TiO2 exploits the same principle ... normal carbon-12 (12C) When the cells are growing in this medium, they incorporate the heavy arginine into all of their proteins All of the arginine containing peptides are now Da heavier than their ... depicted an integrin-modulated phosphorylation network during cell-ECM protein interactions and revealed novel regulators for cell adhesion and migration, discovering that integrin-ECM interactions...
... described in this edition are being extensively used inmedicalresearchand they find their way into the reports subsequently published in the medical press It is important that the medicalresearch ... an expanding subject, with a continually developing body of techniques, and a steadily growing number of practitioners, especially inmedicalresearch organizations and the pharmaceutical industry, ... the continuity and cohesion of the presentation, and to extend the scope to cover many new ideas now being introduced into the analysis of medicalresearch data We have tried to maintain the modest...
... intervals will include m, whilst in 5% x will be more than 1Á96 standard errors away from m (as in the fourth sample in Fig 4.6) and the interval will not include m Example 4.1, continued In ... other, the latter being achieved by an infinitely long interval in that direction It is customary to use symmetric intervals unless otherwise stated In the following sections, andin Chapter 5, these ... value in modelling certain symmetric frequency distributions or as an approximation to the binomial and Poisson distributions We shall note in §4.2 a central role in describing the sampling distribution...
... variances, s2 =n and s2 In this sense, precision has been gained by combining the information from the data and the prior information These results illustrate various points made in §6.1 First, ... Shrinkage The phenomenon of shrinkage was introduced in §6.2 and illustrated in several of the situations described in that section andin §6.3 It is a common feature of parameter estimation in ... to variance between individuals, and this may be achieved by increasing n In some studies of medical interventions, subjects are selected by preliminary screening tests as having high values of...
... terms being rearranged here so that the factors are introduced in order The main effects of B and C are defined in a similar way 9.3 Factorial designs 253 The two-factor interaction between A and ... easily obtained by multiplying together the coefficients for the corresponding main effects; and those for the three-factor interaction by multiplying the coefficients for A and BC, B and AC, ... of the factors having fixed effects and some having random effects If there is just one random factor (as with blocks in the example in the last paragraph), any main effect or interaction of the...
... of testing interactions in the presence of main effects, and either testing main effects without interactions (if the latter can safely be ignored) or not testing main effects at all (if interactions ... analysis, using a model like (11.57) We shall need two dummy variables, z1 (taking the value in group A and elsewhere) and z2 (1 in group B and elsewhere) Combining the Residual SSqs from the initial ... factors are introduced in a predetermined order; Type II shows the contribution of each factor in the presence of all others except interactions involving that factor; in Types III and IV, any interactions...
... 1, and h post-administration In many studies in the medical literature the reasons behind the timing of observations are seldom discussed, and it may be that this aspect of research involving ... 12.6 Longitudinal data In many medical studies there is interest not only in observing a variable at a given instant but in seeing how it changes over time This could be because the investigator ... estimation and their definition There is considerable merit in viewing the process as estimating random effects rather than as an exercise in extending the definition of a residual in non-hierarchical...
... of individuals and a model containing all main effects and all interactions would fit the data perfectly Thus by definition it would have a deviance of zero and serves as the reference point in ... tetanus in patients receiving antitoxin andin those not receiving antitoxin The treatments were allocated at random, but by chance a higher proportion of patients in the `No antitoxin' group ... forming k separate tables We can distinguish between: (i) row and column factors both nominal; (ii) one factor (say, columns) nominal, and the other ordinal; and (iii) rows and columns both ordinal...
... assessing the effect of adding a covariate, detecting non-linearity or influential points in Cox's proportional-hazards model Aitkin and Clayton (1980) give an example of residual plotting to ... described in Example 18.2 Bounds for the standardized normal deviate (z value) at interim and final inspections Entries in this table are derived from EaSt for Windows (1999) and Geller and Pocock ... value, andin ensuring that the final report of the trial produces convincing evidence of similarity of treatment groups Data-dependent allocation In most clinical trials, patients are assigned in...
... is operating Suppose IP is the incidence of the disease in the population and, as in §19.5, IE and INE are the incidences in the exposed and non-exposed, respectively Then the excess incidence ... the incidences in the groups being compared and is referred to as relative risk (f) Thus, f IE =INE , 19:13 672 Statistical methods in epidemiology where IE and INE are the incidence rates in ... IP uE IE 1 À uE INE uE fINE 1 À uE INE 19:31 INE 1 uE f À 1, where f is the relative risk and the second line is obtained using (19.13) Substituting in (19.30) gives lP ...
... (1987) Interim analyses in randomized clinical trials: ramifications and guidelines for practitioners Biometrics 43, 213±223 Gelman A (1996) Inference and monitoring convergence In Markov Chain Monte ... Oliver and Boyd, Edinburgh Fisher R.A and Yates F (1963) Statistical Tables for Biological, Agricultural andMedical Research, 6th edn Oliver and Boyd, Edinburgh Fitzmaurice G.M., Molenberghs G and ... Statistics inMedical Research: Methods and Issues with Applications in Cancer Research, eds  V Mike and K Stanley, pp 365±401 Wiley, New York Carlin B.P and Louis T.A (2000) Bayes and Empirical...
... Courtesy and common sense promote safety 10 38 Crushed hands or missing fingers may affect your golf swing 39 Dare to be aware 40 Death lurks in confined spaces 41 Dig in your heels against accidents ... theo) 192 Smoking causes ageing of the skin (có hình kèm theo) 193 Smoking causes mouth and throat cancer (có hình kèm theo) 194 Smoking clogs the arteries and causes heart attacks and strokes ... way 286 Think of fire before it starts 287 Think safety and act safely 288 Think safety before you start 289 Think safety! 290 Think safety, because I love you man 291 Think sharp never handle broken...
... kết xây dựng đời sống văn hóa, thực tốt “10 điều quy ước vệ sinh, văn minh đường phố” (http://www.tanphu.hochiminhcity.gov.vn/web/tintuc) 80 Hãy lên tiếng thấy người khác làm bẩn thành phố 81 ... hợp vệ sinh bảo vệ sức khỏe gia đình bạn, góp phần bảo vệ môi trường nguồn nước 65 Bảo vệ môi trường xung quanh xanh-sạch-đẹp bảo vệ sống (http://www.tanphu.hochiminhcity.gov.vn/web/tintuc/default.aspx?cat_id=602&news_id=22) ... Định) NẾP SỐNG VĂN MINH NƠI CÔNG CỘNG 75 Giao tiếp ứng xử lịch sự, nhã nhặn, thân thiện phong cách người văn minh 76 Giữ gìn đường phố đẹp trách nhiệm người 77 Thực nếp sống văn minh đô thị góp phần...
... medicine and education #3 medicine and training #4 medicine and practice #5 medicine and child abuse #6 care proceedings #7 medical practice #8 law and medicine #9 medical values #10 law andmedical ... curriculum (Institute of Medical Ethics, 2009) maintains the close association of medical ethics and law in terms of understanding and awareness of issues inmedical practice and decision-making There ... regarding the law relating to confidentiality, Elger and Harding (2005) found trainees reporting insufficient knowledge and difficulty in understanding and following through on their obligations, in...