scholarly journals Nuclear medicine and imaging research (instrumentation and quantitative methods of evaluation)

1992 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.N. Beck ◽  
M. Cooper ◽  
C.T. Chen
1979 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-32
Author(s):  
A. S. Houston ◽  
N. R. Thorpe

AbstractTwo quantitative methods of analysing thyroid dynamic studies using 99mTc O-4 are compared for 33 patients (22 euthyroid, 8 hyperthyroid and 3 hypothyroid). A physiological model based on pertechnetate uptake by the thyroid is compared with principal components analysis. Both methods gave good separation between euthyroid and hvperthyroid in all but one case, while the separation between euthyroid and hypothyroid, although based on a small sample, appeared to be better for principal components analysis.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 593-593
Author(s):  
Alex Bishop ◽  
Rosemary Blieszner

Abstract Despite the fact that religiosity and spirituality are commonly cited as essential elements of physical and mental health functioning in old and very old age, the conceptualization of religiosity and spirituality continues to present a quandary in contemporary gerontological inquiry and assessment. Identification of variables that best capture and truly define religious and spiritual constructs has remained relatively inconclusive over the past few decades. Recently, there has been a renewed interest among gerontologists to identify underlying religious and spiritual variables using alternative qualitative and quantitative methods of evaluation. Such methods have been used to further disentangle and understand the uniqueness of religion and spirituality as variables for studying human aging. This symposium will be used to communicate empirical results, methodological procedures, and conceptual insights concerning the identification of understudied and under-represented variables often absent within modern gerontological inquiry of religion and spirituality. Four presentations representing qualitative and quantitative studies will be used to report key religious and spiritual variables stemming from the context of personal narrative, oral storytelling, self-improvement behavior, and the disposition to seek forgiveness. Recommendations pertaining to future gerontological inquiry in the science of religion and spirituality, as well as applications within geriatric and gerontological practice will be highlighted and discussed.


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