Sentences with phrase «highly significant associations»

One Austrian research group, for instance, found highly significant associations between diabetes and 123 separate diseases.
The analysis showed a highly significant association between the mutation and the presence of Alzheimer's disease.
A highly significant association between infecting RFLP type in skin and the presence of spirochetemia was found (P <.001).
A highly significant association was found between infecting RFLP type in skin and blood culture positivity (P <.001).
A highly significant association was also found between child attachment security and child RF, thus replicating the results of the CRFS validation study (Ensink, 2004).

Not exact matches

Chi - squared tests showed that all of these observed variations were highly statistically significant (p < 0.01 for all of the associations shown in Table 2).
«Both unadjusted and risk - adjusted mortality showed a highly statistically significant association between volume and mortality,» he said.
Their discovery in that location was highly significant: it marked the first secure association of fat ladies with burial sites instead of shrines or temple altars.
Most of these associations were highly statistically significant, but a few were marginally significant even after adjusting for a variety of factors including a nursing home's extent of hospice use.
Our conclusion that the observed effect was not simply a chance association is strengthened both by the observed, substantial improvement in RR when cancers occurring early in the trial were excluded and by the highly significant predictive effect of both the baseline and the 1 - y serum 25 (OH) D values in addition to the intervention itself.
The museum has declined to comment on the claims made by a co-founder of the Association of The Ovaherero Genocide, Barnabas Veraa Katuuo, who reviewed the remains, and described the possible find as «a highly significant event» that reveals the extent of the genocide's impact.
[5] Other examples are not so commonly predicted (if, indeed, they are predicted at all), yet are no less significant: business models that facilitate free legal services, the use of non-legal (notably industry and business) knowledge and experience to increase client trust in and comfort with the firm and with legal services more generally, the collection of knowledge about the legal issues of individual clients in the same industry for use by a trade association to assist and defend the rights of all in that industry on a collective basis, a severely injured client's reassurance and comfort in knowing that in selecting a certain legal services provider the client is not just receiving highly specialized advice but also benefitting an association that helps others with the same type of severe injury, the development of a legal research establishment for experimentation with different ways of providing legal services.
66 They also used LIWC to measure plain language by calculating the inverse of the average words per sentence.67 Both were positively associated with the percentage of brief language adopted in the Court's opinion and the associations were highly significant.68 Our study builds on this multi-factor approach to measuring readability.
Feldman found that readability was positively associated with both the likelihood of success and the percentage of language adopted, and that both associations were highly significant.62
For example, Feldman analyzed the quality of Supreme Court merits briefs using a composite of features such as passivity, wordiness, sentence length, and tone.63 He found that brief readability was positively associated with the percentage of brief language adopted in the opinion and that the association was highly significant.64 Similarly, Collins et al. analyzed the «cognitive clarity» and plain language of Supreme Court amicus briefs.65 They measured cognitive clarity using the dictionary - based Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count program (LIWC), which relied on an index of categories that relate to cognitive clarity such as «causation, insight, discrepancy, inhibition, tentativeness, certainty, exclusiveness, inclusiveness, negations, and the percentage of words containing six or more letters.»
While Dutch researchers have failed to replicate this association [97, 98], parental genetic data and family - based analyses in the Hungarian sample showed a highly significant non-transmission of the 7 - repeat allele (and the -521 T ~ 7 - repeat haplotype) to securely attached infants, as well as a trend for preferential transmission to disorganised infants [95].
It appears that the reasons for existing as a highly respected and appreciated small association are not so significant in a difficult market.»
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