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    Cryptomnesia Case Study

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    1. I started the activity on 9/9/16 at 3:06 pm and completed it on 9/11/16 at 5:45 pm. 2. I had to look up cryptomnesia, which is when one forgets to cite a source because of losing track of a source and then remembering the thought as an original idea (Cryptomnesia, 2011). 3. I know that the source is scholarly and credible because it was published by a well-known and respected journal and has the authors’ credentials. 4. The author is a respected authority on the topic and has published…

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    which have their usage in controlling and adjusting the split criterion and dead criterion. S is the initial population size and S^i is the current population size. It should be taken into consideration that the population size will increase by one if a bacterium undergoes reproduction and decrease by one if a bacterium faces lethat consequences. As a result, the population size may change in the searching and foraging process. At the beginning of the algorithm, as S equals to S^i, the…

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    Critical analysis is defined as a systematic evaluation utilized to recognise the strengths and weaknesses of a scientific article in order to assess the usefulness and validity of research results.1,2 It is an essential skills that all researchers should have in order to distinguish deceptive information and filter out any low-quality research.3 The purpose of this paper is to critically analyze a scientific research article entitled “Time to manage: patient strategies for coping with an…

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    Ankle Sprains

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    In Willems et al’s study of proprioception deficits among athletes with high rates of recurring lateral ankle sprains, they found that almost all of their subjects tended to under shoot the needed ankle during the test (Willems et al., 2002). In this study they had 4 groups of athletes to study. The control group were individuals who had no prior ankle injuries (Willems et al., 2002). The Instability group were individuals that had suffered from more than three inversion sprains and complained…

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    Growing up in the United States is not the same every child. Some parents expect more out of their children than others. The Academic article “The duty to succeed: honor versus happiness in college and career choices of East Asian students in the United States” written by, Lauren Dundes, Eunice Cho and Spencer Kwak tests the hypothesis that parents from East Asian decent are harder on their kids and expect more out of them compared to white parents. The article was written for college…

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    each domain will be selected according to the distribution of the threshold values across the latent scale and the discrimination value; item that has threshold values cross the whole latent scale and high discrimination value will be selected. Sample Size Graded response IRT model requires 250 subjects to be estimated. However, approximately 500 subjects are recommended to get more accurate estimation of the model parameters [56]. We have more than 500 subject in the database that we are…

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    Field Research Strengths

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    According to the course text, here are many strengths and weakness of field research. These strengths and weakness include: validity, reliability, and generalizability. Conducting field studies of behavior is more appropriate than trying to measure behavior through surveys. For example, the counts of seatbelts use or theft by shoppers obtain through observation are not subject to the effects of social desirability that we may expect in survey questions about those specific behaviors. Next,…

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    The Avastin Study

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    a) Sample selection size varies for each experiment, depending on how large the whole group under investigation is or how much time it would take to sample a certain group (Rathburn, MacConnadchie, Zizler, Hill, & Moorman, 2012, p. 72) . Sample selection is important part of a studies experimental design because it usually decides how valid a study is. The validity of the sample size and study is usually decided through the peer-review process, which is one of the reasons why the peer review…

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    1. “When investigating a large population, it is often impractical and usually unnecessary to measure all the elements in the population of interest. Typically, a relatively small number of subject or cases is selected from the larger population.” (McMillian, 2012, p.96) According to McMillian (2012), population is a target you want to study to develop knowledge and to create action plans to assist those individuals. An example is when a researcher use a group of students with autism to find out…

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    a) The sample size in this survey should be large enough so that it can encompass the whole population. The sample size if too small can lead to misleading and inaccurate conclusions. The more people surveyed the more accurate the representation of the general population will be. b) 3% is an excellent random sampling because out of 17,000 people 3% would be 500 people, which is a fairly large sample size. c) The margin of era is .045 and the sample proportion…

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