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Medical Statistics From A To Z A Guide For Clinicians And Medical Students 3rd Brian S Everitt

  • SKU: BELL-38572926
Medical Statistics From A To Z A Guide For Clinicians And Medical Students 3rd Brian S Everitt
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Medical Statistics From A To Z A Guide For Clinicians And Medical Students 3rd Brian S Everitt instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cambridge University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 5.36 MB
Pages: 305
Author: Brian S. Everitt
ISBN: 9781108826464, 1108826466
Language: English
Year: 2021
Edition: 3rd

Product desciption

Medical Statistics From A To Z A Guide For Clinicians And Medical Students 3rd Brian S Everitt by Brian S. Everitt 9781108826464, 1108826466 instant download after payment.

Clinicians, research workers in the health sciences, and even medical students often
encounter terms from medical statistics and related areas in their work, particularly
when reading medical journals and other relevant literature. The aim of this guide is
to provide such people with nontechnical definitions of many such terms.
Consequently, no mathematical nomenclature or formulae are used in the definitions.Those readers interested in such material will be able to find it in one of the
many standard statistical texts now available and in The Cambridge Dictionary of
Statistics. In addition, readers seeking more information about a particular topic
will hopefully find the references given with the majority of entries of some help;
whenever possible, these involve medical rather than statistical journals, and introductory
statistical texts rather than those that are more advanced. (References are
not given for terms such as mean, variance and critical region for which further
details are easily available in most introductory medical statistics texts.)
Several forms of cross-referencing are used. Terms in Courier New appear as aseparate headword elsewhere in the dictionary, although this procedure is used in a
relatively limited way with headwords defining frequently occurring terms such as
random variable, probability and sample not referred to in this way. Some entries
simply refer readers to another entry. This may indicate that the terms aresynonymous or that the term is discussed more conveniently under another entry.
In the latter case, the term is printed in italics in the main entry. Entries are in
alphabetical order using the letter-by-letter rather than the word-byword
convention.

In the third edition of Medical Statistics from A to Z, I have added nearly 150 newdefinitions, many describing topics that have appeared in the medical statistical
literature in the last five years or so.

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