194,858 research outputs found

    Martha Watt, Northaw Place, [Hertfordshire], to James Edward Smith

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    Touched by Smith's letter regarding her father [John Ellis (c 1710-1776), zoologist]. Would like to see Smith's collections when she is next in London. [On the reverse of this letter is a note by Pleasance Smith stating that Mrs Watt was the only child of John Ellis FRS, "illustrous as the author of a work on Corallines" and direction to an additional letter in the "Memoirs and Correspondence of Sir James Edward Smith" [see RelatedMaterial below]

    Martha Watt, Northaw Place, [Hertfordshire], to James Edward Smith

    No full text
    Touched by Smith's letter regarding her father [John Ellis (c 1710-1776), zoologist]. Would like to see Smith's collections when she is next in London. [On the reverse of this letter is a note by Pleasance Smith stating that Mrs Watt was the only child of John Ellis FRS, "illustrous as the author of a work on Corallines" and direction to an additional letter in the "Memoirs and Correspondence of Sir James Edward Smith" [see RelatedMaterial below]

    Watt, C H, NX18031

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/424401Surname: WATT. Given Name(s) or Initials: C H. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX18031. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 7613.252264 Item: [2016.0049.56662] "Watt, C H, NX18031

    [Telegram from J. Watt Page to T. N. Carswell - July 1, 1942]

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    A Western Union telegram sent to Thomas N. Carswell c/o Burnet County Local Board No. 1 from J. Watt Page, State Director, Austin, Texas dated July 1, 1943. Page advises Carswell of a change in the "procurement authority number for transportation request"

    Network Meta-Analysis.

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    There are often multiple potential interventions to treat a disease; therefore, we need a method for simultaneously comparing and ranking all of these available interventions. In contrast to pairwise meta-analysis, which allows for the comparison of one intervention to another based on head-to-head data from randomized trials, network meta-analysis (NMA) facilitates simultaneous comparison of the efficacy or safety of multiple interventions that may not have been directly compared in a randomized trial. NMAs help researchers study important and previously unanswerable questions, which have contributed to a rapid rise in the number of NMA publications in the biomedical literature. However, the conduct and interpretation of NMAs are more complex than pairwise meta-analyses: there are additional NMA model assumptions (i.e., network connectivity, homogeneity, transitivity, and consistency) and outputs (e.g., network plots and surface under the cumulative ranking curves [SUCRAs]). In this chapter, we will: (1) explore similarities and differences between pairwise and network meta-analysis; (2) explain the differences between direct, indirect, and mixed treatment comparisons; (3) describe how treatment effects are derived from NMA models; (4) discuss key criteria predicating completion of NMA; (5) interpret NMA outputs; (6) discuss areas of ongoing methodological research in NMA; (7) outline an approach to conducting a systematic review and NMA; (8) describe common problems that researchers encounter when conducting NMAs and potential solutions; and (9) outline an approach to critically appraising a systematic review and NMA

    Sports management and administration (2nd Edn.) / Watt, David C.

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    Sports management and administration (2nd Edn.) / Watt, David C

    L'activité du Centre:

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    Watt D. C. L'activité du Centre:. In: Politique étrangère, n°1 - 1957 - 22ᵉannée. pp. 82-106

    Authors' response to commentaries: Do image descriptions underlie word recognition in reading?

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    This article is a response to commentaries on our original article 'The utility of image descriptions in the initial stages of vision: A case study of printed text' (Watt & Dakin, 2010)

    Photograph of Dr GF Story, c. 1870 - 1880

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    A photograph of Dr George Fordyce Story, Tasmania c.1870-1880. The photograph was taken in John Watt Beattie's studio in Hobart Town. From the George Musgrave Parker Collection P1/35 (231
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