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  • JrId: 26698
    JournalTitle: journal of the American Bar Foundation.
    MedAbbr: Law Soc Inq
    ISSN: 0897-6546
    ESSN:
    IsoAbbr:
    NlmId: 101083956
  • JrId: 26925
    JournalTitle: Laws / passed by the ... General Assembly of the state of Illinois at their ... session ... Illinois.
    MedAbbr: Laws Ill
    ISSN:
    ESSN:
    IsoAbbr:
    NlmId: 101133469
  • JrId: 26926
    JournalTitle: Laws of the state of Oregon / enacted during the ... session of the Legislative Assembly, begun ... concluded ... Oregon.
    MedAbbr: Laws State Or Or
    ISSN:
    ESSN:
    IsoAbbr:
    NlmId: 101133473
  • JrId: 26946
    JournalTitle: Laws of Puerto Rico annotated. Puerto Rico.
    MedAbbr: Laws P R Annot P R
    ISSN:
    ESSN:
    IsoAbbr:
    NlmId: 101135768
  • JrId: 29638
    JournalTitle: Law and policy in international business.
    MedAbbr: Law Policy Int Bus
    ISSN: 0023-9208
    ESSN:
    IsoAbbr:
    NlmId: 101124074
CancerWEB ¿µ¿µ ÀÇÇлçÀü À¯»ç °Ë»ö °á°ú : 15 ÆäÀÌÁö: 5
Weber's law The intensity of a sensation varies by a series of equal increments (arithmetically) as the strength of the stimulus is increased geometrically; if a series of stimuli is applied and so adjusted in strength that each stimulus causes a just perceptible change in intensity of the sensation, then the strength of each stimulus differs from the preceding one by a constant fraction; thus, if a just perceptible change in a visual sensation is produced by the addition of 1 candle to an original illumination of 100 candles, 10 candles will be required to produce any change in sensation when the original illumination was one of 1000 candles.
Synonym: Fechner-Weber law, Weber's law.
(05 Mar 2000)
Weigert's law The loss or destruction of a part or element in the organic world is likely to result in compensatory replacement and overproduction of tissue during the process of regeneration or repair (or both), as in the formation of callus when a fractured bone heals.
Synonym: overproduction theory.
(05 Mar 2000)
Wilder's law of initial value The direction of response of a body function to any agent depends to a large degree on the initial level of that function.
Synonym: law of initial value.
(05 Mar 2000)
Williston's law As the vertebrate scale is ascended, the number of bones in the skull is reduced.
(05 Mar 2000)
Plateau-Talbot law When successive light stimuli follow each other sufficiently rapidly to become fused, their apparent brightness is diminished.
(05 Mar 2000)
Wolff's law Every change in the form and the function of a bone, or in its function alone, is followed by certain definite changes in its internal architecture and secondary alterations in its external conformation.
(05 Mar 2000)
Muller's law Each type of sensory nerve ending, however stimulated (electrically, mechanically, etc.), gives rise to its own specific sensation; moreover, each type of sensation depends not upon any special character of the different nerves but upon the part of the brain in which their fibres terminate.
Synonym: law of specific nerve energies.
(05 Mar 2000)
Coppet's law Solutions having the same freezing point have equal concentrations of dissolved substances.
(05 Mar 2000)
Poiseuille's law In laminar flow, the volume of a homogeneous fluid passing per unit time through a capillary tube is directly proportional to the pressure difference between its ends and to the fourth power of its internal radius, and inversely proportional to its length and to the viscosity of the fluid.
(05 Mar 2000)
coulomb's law <radiobiology> Force law governing the electrical interaction between charged particles. Force is proportional to (charge of first particle) (charge of second particle) / (square of separation between particles). Constant of proportionality depends on system of units used. (In SI units, it is 1/(4piepsilon_0), where epsilon_0 is the permittivity of free space, approx. 8.854 x 10^-12)
(09 Oct 1997)
Courvoisier's law Enlargement of the gallbladder with jaundice is likely to result from carcinoma of the head of the pancreas and not from a stone in the common duct, because in the latter the gallbladder is usually scarred from infection and does not distend.
Synonym: Courvoisier's sign.
(05 Mar 2000)
criminal law A branch of law that defines criminal offenses, regulates the apprehension, charging and trial of suspected persons, and fixes the penalties and modes of treatment applicable to convicted offenders.
(12 Dec 1998)
Haeckel's law The theory formulated by E.H. Haeckel that individuals in their embryonic development pass through stages similar in general structural plan to the stages their species passed through in its evolution; more technically phrased, the theory that ontogeny is an abbreviated recapitulation of phylogeny.
Synonym: biogenetic law, law of biogenesis, Haeckel's law, law of recapitulation.
(05 Mar 2000)
Halsted's law Transplanted tissue will grow only if there is a lack of that tissue in the host.
(05 Mar 2000)
Hamburger's law Albumins and phosphates pass from red corpuscles to serum and chlorides pass from serum to cells when blood is acid; the reverse occurs when blood is alkaline.
(05 Mar 2000)
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law The unique code that identifies the law which is authorizing the enforcement action or being violated. (The list of possible laws are presented in the section below.)
Ãâó: www.epa.gov/echo/case_report_dd.html
law of definite proportions The notion that the ratio by mass of compounds consumed in a chemical reaction is always the same.
Ãâó: xenon.che.ilstu.edu/genchemhelphomepage/glossary/l...
law of large numbers a statistical principle about the properties of large numbers. "The larger the number of chance-determined repetitious events considered, the closer the alternatives will approach predictable ratios."
Ãâó: www.mhhe.com/mayfieldpub/ct/ch11/glossary.htm
lawn Bacteria immobilized in a nutrient agar, used as a field to test for the presence of viral particles.
Ãâó: depts.washington.edu/~genetics/courses/genet372/w2...
law An Act of Congress or local legislative body that has been signed by the President or executive officer, or has been passed by Congress over a veto.
Ãâó: www.gmhc.org/policy/activism/political_glossary.ht...
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  • prohibition law
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  • public international law
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  • public law
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  • right-to-work law
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law (of groups) not violent or disorderly
law an act punishable by law
law persons who make or amend or repeal laws
law someone who violates the law
law room in which justice is administered according to the laws
law conformable to or allowed by law
law authorized, sanctioned by, or in accordance with law
law having a legally established claim
law according to custom or rule or natural law
law by law
law in a manner acceptable to common custom
law born in wedlock
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