词汇 | example_english_confounding-factor |
释义 | confounding factorcollocation in Englishmeanings of confoundand factorThese words are often used together. Click on the links below to explore the meanings. Or, see other collocations with factor. confound verb[T] uk /kənˈfaʊnd/ us /kənˈfaʊnd/ to confuse and very much surprise someone, so that they are unable to explain or deal with ... See more at confound factor noun[C] uk /ˈfæk.tər/ us /ˈfæk.tɚ/ a fact or situation that influences the result ... See more at factor Examples of confounding factorThese examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. Another confoundingfactor is the lack of rigour in assaying the endpoint of maturation - the production of a fertilizable egg. This increase was expected to improve the power of statistical tests, albeit at the cost of introducing year-to-year variation as a confoundingfactor. The case mix of patients in some reviews includes some unstable anginas, which constitutes a potential confoundingfactor in our review. Survivorship bias is another potential confoundingfactor when interpreting these results. One potential confoundingfactor for this discrepancy lies in the diverse scales used to evaluate the negative symptoms. Here, we evaluated whether local variability in parasite communities can be a confoundingfactor in the identification of fish stocks. Assumptions like a direct and positive correlation between adult stature/canopy position, mechanical stability and shade intolerance may be a confoundingfactor. A confoundingfactor is that differences between cognitive states (of the same psychological type) are differences in their intentional objects ("contents"). Another confoundingfactor is long-term participation in longitudinal studies. To avoid this potential confoundingfactor, we preferred a simple yes/ no paradigm. This confoundingfactor would have to be removed before one could be sure that children were making a metalinguistic judgement. It is, therefore, a strong confoundingfactor in the analysis of costs of innovative health technologies involving learning effects. Another confoundingfactor is that syndromes with similar symptoms may previously have been indistinguishable, even though their genetic basis is different. Thus, the broad definition is unlikely to be a major confoundingfactor. A final potential confoundingfactor in the present study was overall severity of illness in manic versus depressed patients. Another confoundingfactor on the generalizability of trials is the drug's eventual applicability in different ethnic populations. We conclude from our data that partial volume effects were not a confoundingfactor in our analysis. Nevertheless, the insignificance of these effects in our data suggests that environmental similarity was not a confoundingfactor in our genetic analyses. As social deprivation is also a predictor of poor reading comprehension, it is potentially a confoundingfactor in the association of noise exposure and reading comprehension. Since the size (or age) of the host can also be ruled out as a confoundingfactor, these results point toward a role of competition in helminth community structure. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. Want to learn more? Go to the definition of confound Go to the definition of factor See other collocations with factor |
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