Home About us Contact | |||
Linear Regression Techniques (linear + regression_techniques)
Selected AbstractsThe causes, consequences and detection of publication bias in psychiatryACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 4 2000Simon M. Gilbody Objective: Publication bias threatens the validity of published research, although this topic has received little attention in psychiatry. The purpose of this article is to produce a systematic overview of the causes and consequences of publication bias and to summarize the available methods with which it is detected and corrected. Method: Empirical evidence for the existence of publication bias is reviewed and the following methods are applied to an illustrative case example from psychiatry: funnel plot analysis; the ,file drawer method'; linear regression techniques; rank correlation; ,trim and fill'. Results: Small studies are particularly susceptible to publication and related bias. All methods to detect publication bias depend upon the availability of a number of individual studies with a range of sample sizes. Unfortunately, large numbers of studies of varying sample size are not always available in many areas of psychiatric research. Conclusion: Where possible researchers should always test for the presence of publication bias. The problem of publication bias will not be solved by anything other than a prospective trials register. [source] Conoscopic holograms analysis using variations of the Hough transformINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF IMAGING SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGY, Issue 1 2009Julius Butime Abstract The analysis of holograms obtained using a Conoscopic setup is a very complex subject, given their nature. Holograms contain the 3D depth information about an object whose surface is to be measured and later reconstructed. The recovery of depth information has so far been carried out using mathematical transforms in combination with linear regression techniques. Here the Hough transform, a useful Computer Vision technique for detecting features in images is adapted to the analysis of holograms in order to establish distance relationships for a given object. The captured images of holograms are pre-processed and subsequently analyzed for characteristic patterns that are later used in finding the distance to an object. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Imaging Syst Technol, 19, 10,13, 2009 [source] Wear in molded tibial inserts: Knee simulator study of H1900 and GUR1050 polyethylenesJOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH, Issue 2 2008Riichiro Tsukamoto Abstract Hi-fax 1900Ô tibial inserts were used in the IB-1 total knee replacement (TKR) beginning 1978, soon followed by the AGC design. Such direct compression molded (DCM) inserts was relatively immune to oxidation. Unfortunately the Hi-fax 1900Ô resin (H1900) was taken off the market in year 2004. As an alternate, GUR1050 was introduced in the VanguardÔ TKR. However there appeared to be little or no wear comparisons of molded inserts. Therefore the study aim was to compare wear performance of GUR1050 to the historical H1900. The hypothesis was that Hi-fax and GUR1050 would show comparable wear performance. The VanguardÔ was a posterior-cruciate sacrificing design (Biomet Inc.). All tibial inserts were sterilized by gamma-radiation (3.2 Mrad) under argon. A 6-channel, displacement,controlled knee simulator was used with serum lubricant (protein concentration 20 mg/mL). Wear assessments were by gravimetric methods and linear regression techniques. The gross weight-loss trends over 2.5 Mc duration demonstrated excellent linear behavior with good agreement between TKR sets (<±10%). Fluid sorption artifacts in control represented less than 5% of gross wear magnitudes. Thus suitable corrections could be made in determining net wear. The H1900 and GUR1050inserts demonstrated net wear-rates of 3.6 and 3.4 mm3/Mc, respectively. This difference was not found to be statistically significant. This wear study demonstrated that GUR1050 inserts were indistinguishable from the Hi-fax 1900 in terms of laboratory wear performance, proving our hypothesis. Given the excellent clinical history of DCM Hi-fax 1900, the GUR1050 should be an ideal candidate for TKR. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl Biomater, 2008 [source] Simulation of the mean urban heat island using 2D surface parameters: empirical modelling, verification and extensionMETEOROLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, Issue 3 2009Bernadett Balázs Abstract The spatial distribution of the annual mean urban heat island (UHI) intensity was simulated applying empirical models based on datasets from urban areas of Szeged and Debrecen, using simple and easily determinable urban surface cover variables. These two cities are situated on the Alföld (Great Hungarian Plain) and have similar topographic and climatic conditions. Temperature field measurements were carried out, Landsat satellite images were evaluated, and then one- and multiple variable models were constructed using linear regression techniques. The selected multiple-parameter models were verified using independent datasets from three urban settlements. In order to obtain some impression of the mean UHI patterns in other cities with no temperature measurements available, the better model was extended to urban areas of four other cities situated in geographical environments similar to Szeged and Debrecen. The main shortcoming of typical empirical models, namely that they are often restricted to a specific location, is overcome by the obtained model since it is not entirely site but more region specific, and valid in a large and densely populated area with several settlements. Copyright © 2009 Royal Meteorological Society [source] |