| random w.’s |
brain waves showing irregular changes in potential and no fixed frequency.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| random |
Term applied to ranges beyond point-blank, or to firing at such ranges. Accuracy -- a relative term at best -- of smoothbore artillery began to drop off sharply as a gun was elevated and could not be predicted with anything like certainty except in such leisurely circumstances as siege or garrison work, hence the very literal use of the word random in references to shooting at longer ranges. ...
Ãâó: www.history.navy.mil/cannons/cannons55.html
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| randomization |
[RAN-dum-uh-ZAY-shun] The process of assigning patients to two or more treatment options, where each patient has an equal chance of receiving each treatment. Retina [REH-tim-uh] The nerve tissue which lines the inside of the eye and acts like the film inside a camera.
Ãâó: www.macular-degeneration.org/Glossary/GlossMain.ht...
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| randomization |
a technique of assigning patients to treatmentand control groups that is based only on chance distribution. It is usedto diminish patient selection bias in clinical trials. Proper randomizationof patients is an indifferent yet objective technique that tends to neutralizepatient prognostic factors by spreading them evenly among treatment andcontrol groups. Randomized assignment is often based on computer-generatedtables of random numbers.
Ãâó: www.sbu.se/Filer/Content0/publikationer/1/literatu...
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| random error |
The error produced in a measurement process due to causes that are indeterminate or non-assignable.
Ãâó: www.atlab.com/LIMS/glossaryp-t.html
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