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||
| HALO | Halotestin |
|---|---|
| DIT | Diet Induced Thermogenesis = Thermic Effect of Food = Specific Dynami... |
| EAE | Early Asthmatic Effect |
| LAE | 1) Late Asthmatic Effect 2) Left Atrial Enlargement |
| SE | Side Effect |
| HALO | Hours After Light Onset |
|---|---|
| HALO | after light onset |
| ADE | Alcohol deprivation effect |
| AEF | Allogeneic effect factors |
| CRE | Cumulative Radiation Effect |
| halo effect | The effect (usually beneficial) that the manner, attention, and caring of a provider have on a patient during a medical encounter, regardless of what medical procedure or services the encounter involves, the influence upon an observation of the observer's perception of the characteristics of the individual observed (other than the characteristics under study) or the influence of the observer's recollection or knowledge of findings on a previous occasion. (05 Mar 2000) |
|---|
| anaemic halo | Pale, relatively avascular areas in the skin seen around vascular spiders, cherry angiomas, and sometimes in acute macular eruptions. (05 Mar 2000) |
|---|---|
| glaucomatous halo | A yellowish white ring surrounding the optic disk, indicating atrophy of the choroid in glaucoma. Synonym: glaucomatous ring. A halo surrounding lights, caused by corneal oedema in glaucoma. Synonym: rainbow symptom. (05 Mar 2000) |
| halo | <radiobiology> The cold, dense plasma formed outside the last closed flux surface during a vertical displacement event. The large currents which flow through this plasma stop the displacement and transfer the force to the vacuum vessel. If care is not taken in design, the halo currents can be large enough to threaten the structural integrity of the vacuum vessel or in-vessel components. Whereas the centre of a tokamak plasma is too hot for material probes to survive, probes (such as magnetic-field coils) can sometimes be placed in the halo, and can measure things such as the halo current. See: vertical instability. (09 Oct 1997) |
| halo blight | Halo blight is a fatal plant disease which attacks legumes and is caused by the bacteria Pseumonas phaseolicola. The plant develops yellow-ringed, water-soaked spots, then withers and dies without rotting. (09 Oct 1997) |
| halo cast | A cast applied to the shoulders in which metal bars are set that extend over the head to a halo, from which traction may be applied to the head by means of tongs or a halter. (05 Mar 2000) |
| halo current | <radiobiology> Currents in the halo region of a plasma discharge. See: halo. (09 Oct 1997) |
| halo melanoma | <tumour> A rare condition in which a melanoma is surrounded by an irregular area of depigmentation. (05 Mar 2000) |
| halo nevus | A benign, sometimes multiple, melanocytic nevus in which involution occurs with a central brown mole surrounded by a uniformly depigmented zone or halo. Synonym: leukoderma acquisitum centrifugum, Sutton's disease, Sutton's nevus. (05 Mar 2000) |
| halo sign | <radiology> Narrow, radiolucent ring surrounding breast lesion, indicates benign tumour, rare exceptions: intracystic carcinoma, papillary carcinoma, carcinoma arising in fibroadenoma (12 Dec 1998) |
| halo sign of hydrops | A discredited roentgenographic sign of foetal hydrops caused by scalp oedema so that a definite corona surrounds the skull. (05 Mar 2000) |
| halo traction | Application of skeletal traction to the head by means of a halo device. (05 Mar 2000) |
| halo vision | A condition in which coloured or luminous rings are seen around lights. (05 Mar 2000) |
| senile halo | Circumpapillary halo seen in choroidal atrophy of the aged. (05 Mar 2000) |
| abscopal effect | A reaction produced following irradiation but occurring outside the zone of actual radiation absorption. (05 Mar 2000) |
| additive effect | <biochemistry, chemistry> An additive effect is the overall biological effect two chemicals acting together and which is the simple sum of the effects of the chemicals acting independently. Compare: antagonism. (15 Jan 1998) |
| halo effect |
Bias created by an observer's tendency to rate, perhaps unintentionally, certain objects or persons in a manner that reflects what was previously anticipated.
Ãâó: www.ojp.usdoj.gov/BJA/evaluation/glossary/glossary...
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|---|---|
| halo effect |
Faint shadow sometimes surrounding halftone dots printed. Also called halation. The halo itself is also called a fringe.
Ãâó: www.c-latitude.com/glossary.asp
|
| halo effect |
Rating a person high or low on all items because of one characteristics on a performance appraisal.
Ãâó: www.crfonline.org/orc/glossary/h.html
|
| halo effect |
The extra business an agency gives the airline that owns the CRS system it uses, above and beyond what that airline might expect to get based on it's share of the overall market. Industry observers consider the halo effect a result of the agent's tendency to trust the CRS system's accuracy, as well as what critics call the CRS system's "architectural bias" (qv). The system lists the owner-airline's flights first, which some say leads to more bookings of those flights.
Ãâó: www.hometravelagency.com/dictionary/ltrh.html
|
| halo effect |
The result of a hint of circulation on a coin that may otherwise appear uncirculated ie. as judged by markings, etc. When the coin is rotated in good lighting there appears to be a slight dullness or halo around the monarch's bust in the open fields. The lustre that is protected by the letters near the periphery is distinctly different. The same is true for mirrorlike fields, ie. the quality of the mirror effect is much better in the protected areas. ...
Ãâó: www.canadiancoin.com/diction/h.htm
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