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confidence interval

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interval

 [in´ter-val]
the space between two objects or parts; the lapse of time between two events.
AA interval the interval between two consecutive atrial stimuli.
atrioventricular interval (AV interval)
2. in dual chamber pacing, the length of time between the sensed or paced atrial event and the next sensed or paced ventricular event, measured in milliseconds; called also atrioventricular or AV delay.
cardioarterial interval the time between the apical beat and arterial pulsation.
confidence interval an estimated statistical interval for a parameter, giving a range of values that may contain the parameter and the degree of confidence that it is in fact there.
coupling interval the distance between two linked events in the cardiac cycle.
His-ventricular (H-V) interval an interval of the electrogram of the bundle of His, measured from the earliest onset of the His potential to the onset of ventricular activation as recorded on eight of the intracardiac bipolar His bundle leads or any of the multiple surface ECG leads; it reflects conduction time through the His-Purkinje system.
lucid interval
1. a brief period of remission of symptoms in a psychosis.
2. a brief return to consciousness after loss of consciousness in head injury.
PA interval the interval from the onset of the P wave on the standard electrocardiogram (or from the atrial deflection on the high right atrial ECG) to the A wave on the His bundle ECG; it represents intra-atrial conduction time.
postsphygmic interval the short period (0.08 second) of ventricular diastole, after the sphygmic period, and lasting until the atrioventricular valves open.
P–R interval in electrocardiography, the time between the onset of the P wave (atrial activity) and the QRS complex (ventricular activity).
presphygmic interval the first phase of ventricular systole, being the period (0.04–0.06 second) immediately after closure of the atrioventricular valves and lasting until the semilunar valves open.
QRST interval (Q–T interval) in the electrocardiogram, the length of time between ventricular depolarization (the Q wave) and repolarization (the T wave); it begins with the onset of the QRS complex and ends with the end of the T wave.
VA interval [ventricular-atrial interval] the interval between a ventricular stimulus and the succeeding atrial stimulus; it is equal to the AA interval minus the atrioventricular interval.
Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.

con·fi·dence in·ter·val (CI),

a range of values for a variable of interest, constructed so that this range has a specified probability of including the true value of the variable.
Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

confidence interval

A measure of the precision of an estimated value, which corresponds to a range of values consistent with the data that have a high probability (± 95%) of encompassing the "true" value. The confidence interval is expressed in the same units as the estimate. Wider confidence intervals indicate lower precision; narrower intervals indicate greater precision.
Segen's Medical Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All rights reserved.

confidence interval

Statistics A range of values for a variable of interest–eg, a rate, constructed so that the range has a specified probability of including the true value of the variable. See Confidence limits.
McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

con·fi·dence in·ter·val

(CI) (konfi-dĕns in'tĕr-văl)
Range of values for a variable of interest, constructed so that this range has a specified probability of including the true value of the variable.
Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing © Farlex 2012

confidence interval (CI)

A statistical term that quantifies uncertainty. In a clinical trial, the 95% confidence interval (the interval usually employed) for any relevant variable is the range of values within which we can be 95% sure that the true value lies for the entire population of people from which those patients participating in the trial are taken. The greater the number of patients on which the confidence interval is based the narrower it becomes.
Collins Dictionary of Medicine © Robert M. Youngson 2004, 2005
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References in periodicals archive
When a "Next Interval" is clicked, a new sample of the specified size is drawn; the corresponding confidence interval is constructed and displayed on the chart.
Many published estimates [[rho].sup.2] of have used sample sizes, perhaps based on misleading rules of thumb, that were too small to produce an informatively narrow confidence interval for [[rho].sup.2].
Let [MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] be the coverage probability of fuzzy confidence interval [L([[??].sup.L.sub.[alpha]]), U([[??].sup.L.sub.[alpha]])] and [L([[??].sup.U.sub.[alpha]]), U([[??].sup.U.sub.[alpha]])], respectively.
ANOVA two factors were controlled: SR based VARIETY; STRESS Analysis of variance for senescence rate Source DL SC CM F P VARIETE 3 1344 448 1,14 0,347 STRESS 4 11209 2802 7,15 0,000 Erreur 32 12544 392 Total 39 25097 Confidence interval 95% STRESS Moyenne N1 6,7 ( * ) N2 5,3 ( * ) N3 23,0 ( * ) N4 32,5 ( * ) N5 50,0 ( * ) 0,0 20,0 40,0 60,0 Confidence interval 95% VARIETE Moyenne BIDI 23,5 ( * ) GTA 32,4 ( * ) VITRON 16,3 ( * ) WAHA 21,7 ( * ) 10,0 20,0 30,0 40,0 Annex 3
For each simulation, we compute Student's t-test of independent groups (t-test), Yuen-Welch's t-test (Wilcox, 2005), the nonparametric Mann-Whitney U-test, the mean confidence intervals, the trimmed mean confidence interval, the medians confidence interval from the standard error (Kendall, 1945), the binomial median confidence intervals, the medians confidence interval based on the standard error from the McKean and Schraeder method (1984), the Marizt and Jarret method (1978) and the adaptive-kernel density estimation (Wilcox, 2005).
About p values, confidence intervals, and effect sizes.
However, deriving a more analytic relationship between k, n, and [theta] to optimize the coverage of the resulting confidence interval encounters a number of difficulties.
Odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals for smoking were adjusted for age and study.
Some generic AEDs had confidence intervals for AUC or [C.sub.max] ratios that were much less or much greater than a ratio of 1, meaning that for some switches one would expect slightly lower blood concentrations of the active ingredient and for other switches one would expect slightly higher blood concentrations.
With induced percentile left censoring for improved model fitting, bootstrapping methods are employed for better estimating the upper percentiles and confidence intervals for strand thickness.
researcher might report a 95 percent confidence interval for P equal to
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