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Probit Analysis (3rd ed).
J. A. Lewis,D. Finney +1 more
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This article is published in Applied statistics.The article was published on 1972-01-01. It has received 3368 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Probit model.read more
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Differential Permethrin Susceptibility of Head Lice Sampled in the United States and Borneo
Richard J. Pollack,Anthony E. Kiszewski,Philip M. Armstrong,Christine Hahn,Nathan D. Wolfe,Hasan A. Rahman,Kayla F. Laserson,Sam R. Telford,Andrew Spielman +8 more
TL;DR: Head lice in the United States are less susceptible to permethrin than are those in Sabah, and these relatively safe over-the-counter preparations may remain the pediculicides of choice for newly recognized louse infestations.
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Influence of demographics and inhalation injury on burn mortality in children.
TL;DR: Inhalation injury remains one of the primary contributors to burn mortality in burned children, however, children under the age of 3 years are at a higher risk both with and without inhalation injury.
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Oxidative stress and genotoxic effect of zinc oxide nanoparticles in freshwater snail Lymnaea luteola L.
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that ZnONPs induce genotoxicity in digestive gland cells through oxidative stress, and Freshwater snail L. luteola may be used as suitable test model for nanoecotoxicological studies in future.
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Evaluation of mosquitocidal activity of essential oil and sesquiterpenes from leaves of Chloroxylon swietenia DC.
S. Ravi Kiran,P. Sita Devi +1 more
TL;DR: The present study indicates that the oil and the isolated compounds of C. swietenia displayed remarkable mosquitocidal activity suggesting that the method could be extended for future field trials in various mosquito control programmes, and the results are compared with synthetic insecticides.
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Speed discrimination of motion-in-depth using binocular cues
TL;DR: 4D speed discrimination was now very poor, suggesting that the rate of change of disparity is not a good cue for 3-D speed, and whether observers were able to use the monocular motion cue from one eye to perform the speed discrimination task, or whether there had to be a comparison of the two eyes' monocular cues.