scholarly journals Is age during bronchiolitis the most important predictor of post‐bronchiolitis outcome?

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matti Korppi
Keyword(s):  

2007 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 163-163
Author(s):  
W MULLENS ◽  
H SKOURI ◽  
Z ABRAHAMS ◽  
R STARLING ◽  
D TAYLOR ◽  
...  


Diabetes ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 69 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 2144-PUB
Author(s):  
MARIUSZ DABROWSKI ◽  
TADEUSZ DEREZINSKI ◽  
ALEKSANDRA URUSKA ◽  
DOROTA ZOZULINSKA-ZIOLKIEWICZ




2021 ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Xiaohui Jia

Abstract This study aims to examine the predictors of professional commitment of the Chinese new generation, divided into post-80s and post-90s cohorts. A questionnaire survey was employed to collect data from Chinese seafaring officers of these cohorts. The results through hierarchical regression analysis present the two cohorts as having both similar and different predictors. The main difference is that company management and policies positively drive the post-80s cohort to work at sea but not the post-90s. The main similarity is that the work itself is the most important predictor for both cohorts. This study contributes to helping maritime companies to estimate the possibility of Chinese new generation officers quitting sea jobs and can be of value to both managers and authorities as they seek to comprehend the generational dynamic features to better cope with the problem of shortage of younger qualified officers.



2021 ◽  
pp. 026565902199554
Author(s):  
Lynn Dempsey

Planning intervention for narrative comprehension deficits requires a thorough understanding of a child’s skill in all component domains. The purpose of this study was to examine the validity of three methods of measuring pre-readers’ event knowledge, an important predictor of story comprehension. Thirty-eight typically developing children (12 males; 26 females) between the ages of 30–59 months ( M = 42.05 SD = 7.62) completed three measures – verbal account, enactment, picture-sequencing – that tapped their knowledge of two different events before listening to stories based on each of those events and completing story comprehension tasks. Scores for verbal account and enactment, but not for picture sequencing, (1) were moderately correlated with comprehension scores for the corresponding story; (2) reflected differential knowledge of the two events, though not in the expected direction; (3) were moderately correlated with one another in the case of each story. In general measures for the same event were more highly correlated with one another than with measures of the other event. Overall, results suggest that verbal account and enactment may yield information useful for clinicians planning intervention for children with narrative comprehension deficits.



2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hanna Bäck ◽  
Jan Teorell ◽  
Alexander Von Hagen-Jamar ◽  
Alejandro Quiroz Flores

Abstract Why do some foreign ministers stay longer in office than others? Are they punished when the country loses a war? Several scholars have focused on the tenure of leaders as an important predictor of foreign policy outcomes, such as war onset, creating an interest in leadership survival. We here shift the focus to the survival of other important politicians in cabinet—foreign ministers, hypothesizing that their tenure depends on their performance in office. For example, we expect that foreign ministers stay longer in office when the country experiences an armed conflict resulting in a win or in a compromise agreement. We evaluate and find support for several of our hypotheses using an original historical dataset, which comprises all foreign ministers of the world's thirteen great powers from the early modern period to the present, covering about 1,100 foreign minister-terms of office.



2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tae Jun Kim ◽  
Eun Ran Kim ◽  
Sung Noh Hong ◽  
Young-Ho Kim ◽  
Dong Kyung Chang ◽  
...  


2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Augusto Soares da Silva ◽  
Susana Afonso ◽  
Dafne Palú ◽  
Karlien Franco

Abstract Se constructions designate a set of polysemous constructions along a transitivity continuum marked by the clitic se that perform various functions: reflexive/reciprocal, middle, anticausative, passive, and impersonal. A counterpart of these constructions without the clitic – the null se construction – is also attested. Based on an extensive usage-feature and profile-based analysis, and using multivariate statistical methods, we analyze, considering Cognitive Grammar, the conceptual, structural, and lectal factors that determine the choice between overt and null se constructions. The results of the study show that the null constructions are far more frequent in Brazilian (BP) than in European Portuguese (EP). In BP, the focus on the moment of change is a crucial factor for the overt/null variation in reflexive/reciprocal, middle, anticausative, and impersonal constructions. If the moment of the change of state is profiled, the overt se construction is usually produced. If the moment of change is not profiled, the null se construction is preferred. External factors also play a role in the variation. Register is an important predictor for the observed variation of the anticausative construction, and the only predictor for the overt/null variation in the case of the passive construction. In EP, the null se variant is mainly limited to anticausative constructions. In all cases of null constructions, there is a shift to an absolute construal, which has an impact on the way that the transitivity continuum is conceptualized.



1987 ◽  
Vol 65 (3) ◽  
pp. 827-836
Author(s):  
Donald Siegel

The purpose of the present study was to determine whether initial measures of impulse (i.e., area under the force-time curve) could be used to predict peak force (PF) in hand grip responses of 5- and 10-kg amplitude executed as rapidly as possible. 12 subjects performed 75 practice and 25 test contractions in each condition, with and without visual feedback. The time to peak (PT) for the 5-kg responses was 41 msec., while the 10-kg condition averaged 56 msec. Analyses demonstrated no effect for visual feedback. Correlational analyses of cumulative impulse sections from 5 msec., to PF within conditions showed that early measures of force within a response were not very good predictors of final force amplitude. Indeed, for both conditions upwards of 85% of a reponse needed to have occurred before 50% of PF variance could be predicted. Analyses across conditions demonstrated that 50% of PF variance could be predicted between 15 and 20 msec. PT was also an important predictor variable. By using PT along with cumulative impulse 50% of the variance in PF could be predicted prior to 10 msec., at 5 kg (25% of PT) and at about 15 msec., for 10 kg (27% of PT). Across conditions, 85% of the variance in PF was predictable by 5 msec. Such results suggest that either more refined response indices are needed in predicting response outcome or that even for very rapid responses some lower level “tuning” probably occurs after initiation.



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