This paper presents a method for calculating stage line diagrams, a novel type of reference diagram useful for tracking developmental processes over time. Potential fields of applications include: dentistry (tooth eruption), oncology (tumor grading, cancer staging), virology (HIV infection and disease staging), psychology (stages of cognitive development), human development (pubertal stages) and chronic diseases (stages of dementia). Transition probabilities between successive stages are modeled as smoothly varying functions of age. Age-conditional references are calculated from the modeled probabilities by the mid-P value. It is possible to eliminate the influence of age by calculating standard deviation scores (SDS). The method is applied...
<p>Monthly abbreviations are positively scaled to mean relative wave energy (RWE; J/m) and color gra...
<p>Summary of mapping statistics obtained from five different developmental stages.</p
The analog methods used in the clinical assessment of the patient’s chronological age are subjective...
This paper presents a method for calculating stage line diagrams, a novel type of reference diagram ...
This paper presents a method for calculating stage line diagrams, a novel type of reference diagram ...
This article reviews and compares two types of growth charts for tracking human development over age...
Measurement of development is often less precise than that of height and weight. Developmental score...
Using a multistate model such as MicMac1 for making scenarios requires that assumptions need to be s...
In recent decades, interest in stages of human development sufficiently decreased. The existing stag...
Age-specific fertility rates can be smoothed using parametric models or splines. Alternatively a rel...
Reference charts have long been used in the medical field for quantitative clinical assessment of ju...
<p>Flow diagram of MCS participants with available PA and gestational age data at age 7.</p
The data represents the base line values of all the participants in study group and control group. T...
Open circles represent the mean total length at every counted age class, and the solid circles repre...
<p>The lines indicate the theoretical distributions. The observed (arrow) and theoretical (black squ...
<p>Monthly abbreviations are positively scaled to mean relative wave energy (RWE; J/m) and color gra...
<p>Summary of mapping statistics obtained from five different developmental stages.</p
The analog methods used in the clinical assessment of the patient’s chronological age are subjective...
This paper presents a method for calculating stage line diagrams, a novel type of reference diagram ...
This paper presents a method for calculating stage line diagrams, a novel type of reference diagram ...
This article reviews and compares two types of growth charts for tracking human development over age...
Measurement of development is often less precise than that of height and weight. Developmental score...
Using a multistate model such as MicMac1 for making scenarios requires that assumptions need to be s...
In recent decades, interest in stages of human development sufficiently decreased. The existing stag...
Age-specific fertility rates can be smoothed using parametric models or splines. Alternatively a rel...
Reference charts have long been used in the medical field for quantitative clinical assessment of ju...
<p>Flow diagram of MCS participants with available PA and gestational age data at age 7.</p
The data represents the base line values of all the participants in study group and control group. T...
Open circles represent the mean total length at every counted age class, and the solid circles repre...
<p>The lines indicate the theoretical distributions. The observed (arrow) and theoretical (black squ...
<p>Monthly abbreviations are positively scaled to mean relative wave energy (RWE; J/m) and color gra...
<p>Summary of mapping statistics obtained from five different developmental stages.</p
The analog methods used in the clinical assessment of the patient’s chronological age are subjective...