[PDF] Top 20 Estructuras y mecanismos en la fisiología
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Volume 10 - Article 3 | Pages 61–82
... Estimated years of life expected for individuals alive at selected ages are presented for LDS and non-LDS males and females in Table 3. The additional number of years of life experienced by LDS compared with ... See full document
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Volume 21 - Article 10 | Pages 255–288
... Table 3 summarizes the coverage by religious tradition, of the leaders represented in the MRP at both the national denominational and local congregational levels, along with the corresponding number of MDICP ... See full document
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Volume 30 - Article 61 | Pages 1653–1680
... hypotheses 3 and 4, the next specification (Model 4 in Table 4) adds a set of cross-level interaction effects between parental divorce and the two contextual ...hypothesis 3, and suggests that the negative ... See full document
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Volume 39 - Article 3 | Pages 61–94
... Nevertheless, we are most interested in two specific biases, rWpU and rUpW. The former response pair, rWpU, is much more common than the latter, rUpW (see Table 3). The more common bias, rWpU, occurs when a woman ... See full document
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Volume 34 - Article 10 | Pages 285–320
... Sex differences are not always statistically significant yet appeared quite clear in the predicted probabilities shown in Figure 3, with stronger slopes for females. Past findings on earlier-life SES across sexes ... See full document
6
Volume 36 - Article 10 | Pages 307–338
... In Germany and Sweden the dominant gender ideology has played a pivotal role in the implementation of family policies. Gender ideology is highly egalitarian in Sweden, where the welfare system combines policies promoting ... See full document
132
Volume 37 - Article 10 | Pages 251–294
... Figure 3, here we use the continuous measure of attractiveness in order to better demonstrate these bivariate ...Panel 3, never-married women tend to have higher attractiveness scores than married women, ... See full document
133
Volume 39 - Article 10 | Pages 315–336
... We first present some descriptive results on the relationship between full siblings and expected family size. Afterward, we estimate multinomial logistic regression models with expected family size as the dependent ... See full document
5
Volume 22 - Article 10 | Pages 211–236
... 2, 3, and 4 all reveal that the Hadwiger function overestimated the curves at the peak and towards the end; a problem which has long been noticed with the function by Hoem et ... See full document
168
Volume 14 - Article 10 | Pages 179–216
... Table 3 shows that being smaller or heavier than the gestational age-specific optimum has the largest effect on infant mortality for all three race/ethnic ... See full document
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Volume 12 - Article 10 | Pages 237–272
... Concerning the contribution of cancers of several sites into the decline of the overall cancer incidence rate, there is a common opinion that the shape of the incidence rate pattern is an invariant characteristic of a ... See full document
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Volume 19 - Article 10 | Pages 249–260
... (3) A third difficulty inherent in any kind of demographic study is that the analyst rarely has any counterfactuals at hand to demonstrate effects. If a counterfactual is not available, it is impossible to know ... See full document
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Volume 15 - Article 4 | Pages 61–104
... Table 2 C illustrates the effects of parental relationship on a child’s propensity to dis- play behavioral problems at age one. Ordinary least squares regressions are estimated for the continuous behavioral problems ... See full document
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Volume 13 - Article 3 | Pages 63–82
... In the model we begin with fairly high infant mortality (203 per thousand), resulting from the values of A 1 = 0 . 2 , A 2 = 0 . 0002 and A 3 = 0 . 003 . The early decline over age proceeds at a pace of B 1 = 1 ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 4 | Pages 61–94
... The above studies share three limitations. First, their focus is largely restricted to the United States and Hispanics. Second, they use varying definitions of ‘recent’ migrants (10 years or less since arrival in ... See full document
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Volume 38 - Article 61 | Pages 1885–1932
... Spain, interregional movements are driven by economic determinants, while intraregional migration is more associated with residential preferences typically associated with swings in the housing market (Recaño and Roig ... See full document
119
Volume 17 - Article 3 | Pages 59–82
... Applying the benchmark setting for the parameters and postulating that the acceptable range for potential partners is only determined by the social pressure and independent of the age of the agent, we obtain the hazard ... See full document
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Volume 8 - Article 3 | Pages 61–92
... The results of the analyses regarding fixed effects are given in Table 2. Age at first sexual intercourse does not have a significant effect, meaning that the credibility interval, given[r] ... See full document
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Volume 19 - Article 61 | Pages 2043–2056
... Another possible reason for the strength of the association between home ownership and the SDT score could be reverse causality: regions with many cohabiters and divorced people could produce a high demand for rental ... See full document
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Volume 36 - Article 61 | Pages 1859–1888
... (Sobotka and Toulemon 2008). Spain is clearly a late-comer to this transformation process, partially due to the only very recent legal changes: the first Divorce Law was approved in 1981 and reformed in a very liberal ... See full document
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