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correlation coefficient A measure of association that indicates the degree to which two variables have a linear relationship; this coefficient, represented by the letter r, can vary between +1 and -1; when r = +1, there is a perfect positive linear relationship in which one variable relates directly with the other; when r = -1, there is a perfect negative linear relationship between the variables.
(05 Mar 2000)
rank-difference correlation The relationship between paired series of measurements, each ranked according to magnitude, which yields a coefficient known as rho; the value of rho varies from zero (no relationship) to +1.00 (perfect relationship).
(05 Mar 2000)
McArdle-Schmid-Pearson disease Glycogenosis due to muscle glycogen phosphorylase deficiency, resulting in accumulation of glycogen of normal chemical structure in muscle.
Synonym: McArdle's disease, McArdle's syndrome, McArdle-Schmid-Pearson disease, myophosphorylase deficiency glycogenosis.
(05 Mar 2000)
Pearson, Karl <person> English mathematician, 1857-1936.
See: Poisson-Pearson formula, McArdle-Schmid-Pearson disease.
(05 Mar 2000)
Poisson-Pearson formula A formula to determine the statistical error in calculating the endemic index of malaria: let N = total number of children under 15 years in a locality; n = total number examined for the spleen-rate; x = number found with enlarged spleen; (x/n)100 = spleen-rate; e% = percentage of error; the percentage error will be, by this formula:
(05 Mar 2000)
correlation <statistics> most generally, the degree to which one phenomenon or random variable is associated with or can be predicted from another.
In statistics, correlation usually refers to the degree to which a linear predictive relationship exists between random variables, as measured by a correlation coefficient. Correlation may be positive, i.e., both variables increase or decrease together or negative or inverse, i.e., one variable increases when the other decreases.
(18 Nov 1997)
product-moment correlation A statistical procedure which yields the correlation coefficient referred to as r (-1.00 to +1.00) and involves the actual values, rather than the ranks (rank order) of the measurements.
(05 Mar 2000)
Neyman-Pearson statistical hypothesis A formal conjecture about the numerical value of a parameter to be tested exclusively in the light of an immediate set of data without attention to prior knowledge or convictions and ignoring other sets of evidence treated in a similar fashion. The answer is a statement not about whether the hypothesis is true but whether it is an acceptable explanation of the data or should be rejected in favour of another hypothesis.
(05 Mar 2000)
absorption coefficient <physics> Measures the degree of wave absorption defined as the fraction of wave energy lost as the wave travels a unit distance.
See: absorption.
(15 Jan 1998)
activity coefficient <chemistry> The factor by which the value of a concentration of a solute must be multiplied to determine its true thermodynamic activity.
(06 May 1997)
attenuation coefficient 1. <radiobiology> Compton: The fractional number of photons removed from a beam of radiation per unit thickness of material through which it is passing as a result of Compton effect interactions.
2. Linear: The fractional number of photons removed from a beam of radiation per unit thickness of material through which it is passing due to all absorption and scattering processes.
3. Pair Production: That fractional decrease in the intensity of a beam of ionising radiation due to pair production in a medium through which it passes.
4. Photoelectric Effect: That fractional decrease in the intensity of a beam of ionising radiation due to photoelectric effect in a medium through which it passes.
(16 Dec 1997)
biological coefficient Rarely used term denoting the energy expended by the body at rest.
(05 Mar 2000)
Bunsen's solubility coefficient The milliliters of gas STPD dissolved per milliliter of liquid and per atmosphere (760 mm Hg) partial pressure of the gas at any given temperature.
(05 Mar 2000)
velocity coefficient The rate of transformation of a unit mass of substance in a chemical reaction.
(05 Mar 2000)
recombination coefficient <radiobiology> The rate of recombination of positive ions with electrons (or negative ions) in a gas, per unit volume, divided by the product of the particle densities of the two species (positive ions and electrons/negative ions) involved.
(09 Oct 1997)
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