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Table 1. Study Design for Genomewide and HLA Analysis of Genotype Data from Twin Samples

in ARTICLE HLA and Genomewide Allele Sharing in Dizygotic Twins
by Grant W. Montgomery, Gu Zhu, Jouke Jan Hottenga, David L. Duffy, Andrew C. Heath, Dorret I. Boomsma, Nicholas G. Martin, Peter M. Visscher

Table 2a Twin Correlation Coefficients in the Young Dutch Twin Sample

in Heritabilities of apolipoprotein and lipid levels in three countries
by Marian Beekman, Bastiaan T. Heijmans, Nicholas G. Martin, Nancy L. Pedersen, John B. Whitfield, Ulf Defaire, G. Caroline, M. Baal, Harold Snieder, George P. Vogler, P. Eline Slagboom, Dorret I. Boomsma 2002
"... In PAGE 4: ... This was also the case for the other apolipoprotein and lipid levels. In the young Dutch twin pairs ( Table2 a), the correla- tion coefficients for total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol in DZ men, but not in women, are relatively low. However, it is unlikely that this low correlation reflects an error in the LDL cholesterol measurements of the young Dutch DZ men, since the phenotypic measurements were performed randomly over the young Dutch sample.... In PAGE 5: ...( Table2 b) are higher than the DZ correlations for all pheno- types, indicating that genetic factors influence these traits. In the Australian sample (Table 2c), the correlation coef- ficients in DZ twins of opposite sex for apolipoprotein B, total cholesterol, LDL, HDL and triglyceride level seem to be lower than the correlation coefficients of DZ twins of the same sex.... In PAGE 5: ...(Table 2b) are higher than the DZ correlations for all pheno- types, indicating that genetic factors influence these traits. In the Australian sample ( Table2 c), the correlation coef- ficients in DZ twins of opposite sex for apolipoprotein B, total cholesterol, LDL, HDL and triglyceride level seem to be lower than the correlation coefficients of DZ twins of the same sex. This may indicate that different genes affect these traits in men and women.... In PAGE 5: ... This may indicate that different genes affect these traits in men and women. In the Swedish men ( Table2 d), the DZ corelations are more than twice as low as the MZ corelations, which could indicate that dominant genetic factors might influence these traits. Structural Modelling Figure 1 shows the proportion of the variances estimated under the conditions of the most extensive model, includ- ing a separate aditive genetic, comon and unique 91 Twin ResearchApril 2002 Heritabilities of Apolipoprotein and Lipid Levels in Three Countries Table 2a Twin Correlation Coefficients in the Young Dutch Twin Sample... ..."
Cited by 2

Table 1 Characteristics of the Australian and Dutch Samples in the Twin-Family Studies of Intelligence

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2005
Cited by 6

Table 2 Hand Preference Frequencies in the Transsexual Sample and in the General Dutch Population

in Elevated Sinistrality in Transsexuals
by Jacob F. Orlebeke, Dorret I. Boomsma, Louis J. G. Gooren, Anton M. Verschoor, Marianne J. M. Van, Den Bree, Jacob F. Orlebeke Et Al
"... In PAGE 3: ...alculated in a 2 (male vs. female) X 2 (left- vs. right-handed) frequency table. MTF and FTM frequencies were therefore pooled to test the difference between the prevalence of left- handedness in the present sample of transsexuals (who came from all over the Netherlands; about 95% of all Dutch transsexuals receive treatment at the Vrije Universiteit hospital) and the aged-matched pan of the Dutch population survey conducted by Van den Brekel (1986), comprising 4,906 subjects. Table2 gives the prevalence figures concerned. The prevalence of left-handedness among transsexuals was significantly higher than that in the age-matched general population, ^(1, AT = 137,4769) = 7.... ..."

Table 2b Twin Correlation Coefficients in the Middle-aged Dutch Twin Sample

in Heritabilities of apolipoprotein and lipid levels in three countries
by Marian Beekman, Bastiaan T. Heijmans, Nicholas G. Martin, Nancy L. Pedersen, John B. Whitfield, Ulf Defaire, G. Caroline, M. Baal, Harold Snieder, George P. Vogler, P. Eline Slagboom, Dorret I. Boomsma 2002
"... In PAGE 4: ... This was also the case for the other apolipoprotein and lipid levels. In the young Dutch twin pairs ( Table2 a), the correla- tion coefficients for total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol in DZ men, but not in women, are relatively low. However, it is unlikely that this low correlation reflects an error in the LDL cholesterol measurements of the young Dutch DZ men, since the phenotypic measurements were performed randomly over the young Dutch sample.... In PAGE 5: ...( Table2 b) are higher than the DZ correlations for all pheno- types, indicating that genetic factors influence these traits. In the Australian sample (Table 2c), the correlation coef- ficients in DZ twins of opposite sex for apolipoprotein B, total cholesterol, LDL, HDL and triglyceride level seem to be lower than the correlation coefficients of DZ twins of the same sex.... In PAGE 5: ...(Table 2b) are higher than the DZ correlations for all pheno- types, indicating that genetic factors influence these traits. In the Australian sample ( Table2 c), the correlation coef- ficients in DZ twins of opposite sex for apolipoprotein B, total cholesterol, LDL, HDL and triglyceride level seem to be lower than the correlation coefficients of DZ twins of the same sex. This may indicate that different genes affect these traits in men and women.... In PAGE 5: ... This may indicate that different genes affect these traits in men and women. In the Swedish men ( Table2 d), the DZ corelations are more than twice as low as the MZ corelations, which could indicate that dominant genetic factors might influence these traits. Structural Modelling Figure 1 shows the proportion of the variances estimated under the conditions of the most extensive model, includ- ing a separate aditive genetic, comon and unique 91 Twin ResearchApril 2002 Heritabilities of Apolipoprotein and Lipid Levels in Three Countries Table 2a Twin Correlation Coefficients in the Young Dutch Twin Sample Young Dutch twins Sex Men Women DOS Zygosity (number of pairs) MZ (35) DZ (31) MZ (35) DZ (30) DOS (29) ApoE 0.... ..."
Cited by 2

Table 7: Sample of Dutch VC forms that appear to attract final stress in bisyllabic VC-VC words. word ending initial final

in Dutch Stress Acquisition: OT and Connectionist Approaches
by Marc Joanisse, Suzanne Curtin 2000
"... In PAGE 14: ... For example, two-syllable words in Dutch of the form (VC)s (VC)s tend to have initial stress, since Dutch is a trochaic language. However, van der Hulst (1984) has observed that certain non- morphological word endings tend to correlate with final stress placement in such words, for example the French word endings illustrated in Table7 . Thus, it would appear that factors other than syllabic weight seem to influence the... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 1: Sample words with their phonetic transcription (including stress markers). Samples are from Dutch, British English, French, and Scottish Gaelic, respectively.

in TreeTalk: Memory-based word phonemisation
by Walter Daelemans, Antal van den Bosch 2001
"... In PAGE 1: ...denoting, e.g., syllable boundaries and word stress). We call this mapping phonemisation. Table1 provides examples in a few languages of input and output of a phonemisation module. In a traditional knowledge engineering approach, several linguistic processes and knowledge sources are presupposed to be essential in achieving this task.... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 1: Sample words with their phonetic transcription (including stress markers). Samples are from Dutch, British English, French, and Scottish Gaelic, respectively.

in TreeTalk: Memory-based word phonemisation
by Walter Daelemans, Antal van den Bosch 2001
"... In PAGE 1: ...denoting, e.g., syllable boundaries and word stress). We call this mapping phonemisation. Table1 provides examples in a few languages of input and output of a phonemisation module. In a traditional knowledge engineering approach, several linguistic processes and knowledge sources are presupposed to be essential in achieving this task.... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 2 Chromosomal regions yielding a LOD score 41.5 in the simultaneous analysis of Australian, adolescent Dutch, adult Dutch and Swedish twins

in in
by Bastiaan T Heijmans, Marian Beekman, Hein Putter, Nico Lakenberg, Henk Jan Van Der Wijk, John B Whitfield, Daniƫlle Posthuma, Nancy L Pedersen, Nicholas G Martin, Dorret I Boomsma, P Eline Slagboom
"... In PAGE 6: ...chromosomes 1, 3, 8 and 12 for HDL-C and on 1 and 2 for ApoAI ( Table2 ). There was no overlap in regions yielding a LOD score greater than 1.... In PAGE 6: ...4 in the adult Dutch sample. Linkage signals observed for LDL-C and ApoB levels generally coincided (Figure 3 and Table2 ). LOD scores greater than 2 were observed for both LDL-C and ApoB on 2p and 2q.... ..."

Table 5: The difference between Dutch and first-price revenues Experiment

in Using Field Experiments to Test Equivalence between Auction Formats: Magic on the Internet
by David Lucking-Reiley, Ann Bell, Jim Cox, Rachel Croson, Ron Harstad, Elton Hinshaw, John List, Preston Mcafee 1999
"... In PAGE 13: ... This is a surprising result, conflicting with results from laboratory experiments, where Dutch auctions systematically raise less revenue than first-price auctions. The top section of Table5 displays statistical results for all matched pairs of cards. The revenue was higher in the Dutch auction for 63 of 87 matched pairs in experiment FD, and 59 of 86 pairs in experiment DF.... In PAGE 14: ...enue-equivalence hypothesis in each sample, as does a nonparametric Wilcoxon signed-rank test of revenue equivalence.23 The bottom section of Table5 contains results for a restricted sample of observations, in an at- tempt to correct for the advertising effects discussed in Section 2.B.... ..."
Cited by 44
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