Asymptotic Pitman efficiencies of multivariate spatial sign and rank methods are considered in the one-sample location case. Limiting distributions of the spatial sign and signed-rank tests under the null hypothesis as well as under contiguous sequences of alternatives are given. Formulae for asymptotic relative efficiencies are found and, under multivariate t distributions, relative efficiencies with respect to Hotelling's T 2 test are calculated.
In this paper the asymptotic Pitman efficiencies of the affine invariant multivariate analogues of the rank tests based on the generalized median of Oja are considered. Formulae for asymptotic relative efficiencies are found and, under multivariate normal and multivariate t distributions, relative efficiencies with respect to Hotelling's T 2 test are calculated.
Academic Press
Altogether 2159 pregnancies among black and white Americans in the Collaborative Perinatal Study and dental casts from their children at the age of 6-12 years were studied to determine the effect of maternal smoking on permanent tooth crown dimensions. A trend of reduction, similar to that observed in the deciduous second molars, was found in the permanent first molars and also in the mesio-distal dimension of permanent incisors in relation to sex and race of the children and smoking habits of the mother. In terms of peak in their mitotic growth, the results can be interpreted to indicate a sensitive period of intra uterine development from the 24th to 28th gestational weeks. Comparisons of postnatal body size and differential correlation patterns in affected tooth dimensions with early postnatal body and head size between smokers and non-smokers, suggests that maternal smoking during pregnancy may have an effect on basic growth of the head and body and/or the developmental process that impacts tooth development at some specific sensitive period also during the postnatal formation of these tooth crowns.
We analysed statistically the association of emphysema, determined on inflation fixed specimens, with the weights of the body and heart, and of the cardiac ventricles, weighed separately, in 170 male and 86 female adult autopsies. The cases were grouped according to the cause of death into cardiovascular, cancer and other deaths. In men the body weight was inversely proportional to the severity of emphysema, but no association existed between the body weight and the cause of death. In male cardiovascular deaths the total heart weight, total ventricular weight and the weight of the left ventricle with the septum were also inversely proportional to the severity of emphysema while this was not true in the other deaths. In male cardiovascular deaths a decrease, and in the other deaths an increase, of the weight of the free wall of the right ventricle was associated with an increasing severity of emphysema. In all male deaths, however, the left to right ratio decreased with an increasing severity of emphysema. Thus, pulmonary emphysema is associated both with a general atrophy, including the myocardium, and a mainly relative right ventricular hypertrophy. An absolute right ventricular hypertrophy, however, seems to accompany emphysema only in the absence of other major cardiovascular diseases.
Asymmetries in the head area, such as promoted here in strabismic children, may have associations with asymmetries in the dentition, focusing the embryonal origins and timing of developmental processes.
To evaluate how well pulmonary emphysema could be diagnosed on routine chest radiographs by using generally known criteria, a radio-pathologic correlative study was performed in 88 unselected patients with post-mortem verification of emphysema. The signs used were: I. Signs of overinflation as (a) blunting of the costophrenic sinuses and/or depression of the dome of the right diaphragm, (b) widening of the retrosternal airspace and (c) a right or obtuse sternodiaphragmatic angle, II. Irregular radiolucencies. III. Arterial deficiency. If two or more of the above signs were present, a total accuracy of 77% in detecting emphysema was achieved. The irregular radiolucency and arterial deficiency signs were sensitive but less accurate than those of overinflation.
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