If there are any diagnostic doubts, patients should be referred for evaluation by magnetic resonance imaging or arthroscopy. |
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Metabolic and toxic screens, as well as computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging, were used to exclude other causes of dementia. |
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Confirmation of a stress fracture is best made using triple phase nuclear medicine bone scan or magnetic resonance imaging. |
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For the new study, Kwangwook Cho's team at the university medical school, used magnetic resonance imaging to measure brain volumes. |
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More recent and dramatic evidence has come largely through functional magnetic resonance imaging and positron emission tomography. |
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Dimples should never be probed and should be evaluated with magnetic resonance imaging before neurosurgical intervention. |
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Ultrasound uses high frequency sound waves and magnetic resonance imaging uses radio waves. |
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If surgery is contemplated, injected dye, or magnetic resonance imaging can outline the blockages of the vessels in detail. |
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The spinal canal should be examined by magnetic resonance imaging or computed tomography, and surgery is indicated for severe symptoms. |
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A nuclear bone scan and magnetic resonance imaging of the spine confirmed compression fractures of those two vertebrae. |
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She had magnetic resonance imaging of the heart to rule out right ventricular dysplasia, and this showed no abnormality. |
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Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging of the head gave normal results as did computed tomography of the cervical spine. |
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The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging to measure blood flow throughout the brains of 16 adults. |
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The downfield resonance is attributed to molecules on the highly curved region of the bicelle torus. |
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Repeat films are usually required, and a bone scan or magnetic resonance imaging if there is doubt. |
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Occasionally, a blood test, bone scan or magnetic resonance imaging exam also may be necessary. |
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The change in resonance frequency of the etalon measures the change in optical-path length. |
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It was a particularly bellicose speech, and living in occupied West Berlin, within a mile of the Wall, it had a particularly scary resonance. |
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The animals were imaged in a magnetic resonance scanner during the infusion and 1, 2, 4, and 7 days after infusion. |
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It is superseding most diagnostic endoscopic cholangiopancreatography as faster magnetic resonance imaging scanners become more widely available. |
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The quote might be seen to have a resonance for his own situation as leader in waiting, too. |
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Nowadays we see it as a piece of pleasing folklore, full of Tennysonian resonance. |
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They include plain radiographs, magnetic resonance imaging, ultrasonography, and bone scintigraphy. |
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The novel's weight and mythical resonance depend on creatures that stretch the imagination and go beyond it. |
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Even the rhythmic resonance of the waves beating against the hull of a ship produces music of a different kind. |
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A precautionary magnetic resonance scan showed a meningocele, Arnold-Chiari malformation, gross hydrocephalus, and a normal fourth ventricle. |
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Although the hair cell's electrical resonance and frequency selectivity are well understood, a problem remains. |
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This resistance to chemical oxidation is likewise due to the resonance stability of the benzene. |
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Caine's mother was a charlady, so the scenes in the rural pile in the movie had a far deeper resonance for him than mere film-set nostalgia. |
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Magnetic resonance has been widely used in the investigation of nanomagnetic particles immersed in nonmagnetic matrices. |
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In general, magnetic resonance is excellent for imaging soft tissue and bone marrow. |
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Initially, what I found to be striking as I walked through the exhibition was its banality and quiet resonance. |
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I could forgive the fetishizing of martyrdom if the film displayed a hint of subtlety or emotional resonance. |
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A magnetic resonance scan of his thigh showed a lesion within the sciatic nerve. |
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The structures of these derivatives were characterized with proton nuclear magnetic resonance, infrared and mass spectra. |
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The octagon, suggests Perrin, was chosen for its resonance with the baptistries of the ancient and gothic worlds. |
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Time and again she finds a resonance between her own experiences and Annie's, who, dismissed without a character, is forced into prostitution. |
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The spatial proximities between labels are determined by heteronuclear dipolar couplings, which are measured by rotational-echo double resonance. |
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What makes this record are the spoken intros, outros and in-betweens, in which he adds political resonance. |
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Here is music that is fiercely modern yet filled with strong emotional resonance. |
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Cranial CT and magnetic resonance imaging revealed a small metastasis in the right caudate nucleus. |
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Standard angiography and magnetic resonance angiography can provide anatomic definition of the occlusive disease. |
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Into this meditation obtrudes another vision, with an entirely distinct vocabulary and resonance. |
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This resonance was due to a delicate balance between the strong nuclear force and the repulsive electromagnetic force in samarium. |
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Computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging are undertaken to stage the disease accurately. |
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Only the last haunting and elegiac shot of the steam train bearing the wounded Ned back to Melbourne and his hanging carry a real resonance. |
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Patients requiring preoperative magnetic resonance imaging must remove body jewelry. |
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More recently radiologists have become involved also in ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging. |
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From radiocarbon to luminescence, uranium-series and electron spin resonance, the results were the same. |
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In our times, this message has far more resonance than a straightforward official admonition to shape up. |
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The themes live through a language buzzing with resonance and cadence, a hallucinatory, burlesque fusion that demands to be read aloud. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging is especially useful in determining if there is spread of tumor into the spinal canal. |
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This creates a homogenous quality to the pieces, as does the particular resonance of the instrument. |
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The effects on lipid dynamics have been investigated by spin-label electron spin resonance spectroscopy. |
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It is a also an ethic of participation rather than withdrawal from the world and of resonance between man and nature. |
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Exposure to electromagnetic fields, such as magnetic resonance imaging, are contraindicated. |
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He had no spinal injury, and the results from magnetic resonance imaging were normal. |
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But Far from Heaven is a film of great emotional resonance precisely because it hasn't a trace of irony or knowingness. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging showed a mass bilaterally in the nasopharynx and the sphenoid sinuses. |
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Biochemical investigations and magnetic resonance spectroscopy are particularly useful in metabolic and mitochondrial disorders. |
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However, there are regimes in which a process similar to stochastic resonance operates and amplifies pattern selectivity. |
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Useful clinical investigations for the diagnosis of RS are electroencephalography monitoring and brain magnetic resonance imaging studies. |
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The text is introduced with a brief explanation of the structure determination methods of X-ray crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance. |
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The energies are just right inside stars, thanks to an unusual quantum effect known as a resonance. |
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If necessary, intravenous pyelography, computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging can add more information. |
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I loved the ambiguousness and the honesty, the emotional resonance of being completely forthright and yet respectful of the subject matter. |
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Magnetic resonance spectroscopy measures the amount of certain metabolites in the body. |
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Moffatt exploits the cultural resonance of photographic style by working in a variety of vernacular traditions. |
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Known as a Feshbach resonance, this pairing phenomenon can be externally controlled by the Zeeman effect using an applied magnetic field. |
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He won the Nobel Prize in 1968 for the development of the hydrogen bubble chamber and the discovery of new resonance states. |
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The best diagnostic test available for DVT is venography, although magnetic resonance imaging may rival venography for accuracy. |
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And they have earned for him a reputation as an artist whose work displays rich religious resonance. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging is an imaging technique that provides superior tissue visualization of human anatomy. |
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This is pure classic fairy-tale material, and what it may lack in gritty complexity it makes up in primal symbolic resonance. |
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Now that is a voice. A truly great voice, with resonance, musicality and beauty. |
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She said that each theatre person can find their own truth in spoken language and they can work on their voices to improve their resonance. |
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I envy guys who are comfortable in their own voices and who speak with deep resonance. |
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The deep resonance of his voice brings out both the wisdom and intimacy of his poems. |
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Yet, such is the resonance and clarity of her voice that it lingers in the mind long after the woman herself has departed for pastures new. |
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It's a virtuoso performance full of muted notes, plucked resonance, bristling clusters, elliptical melodies, rolled chords and tremolos. |
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The deep resonance of the opening logo in each episode always brings a smile! |
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The organic purity of the organoarsenic species was determined by protonic nuclear magnetic resonance. |
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Fifty-five-gallon oil drums are cut to various depths that determine pitch and resonance of high tenors to deep bass. |
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Both ultrasound and resonance measurements in crystals are very demanding in terms of sample size and preparation requirements. |
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Of course, his films were also movies with complicated characters, a distinctive milieu, and emotional resonance. |
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Baseball may not quite be America's favorite sport anymore, but it still has plenty of emotional resonance. |
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As always, theatre acquires an extra resonance when it deals with the real world. |
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Certainly, any play critiquing class structure gains resonance during the Depression. |
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Amelie is the sort of film that will have the same resonance for audiences across the world. |
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Not to be outdone, the nurses looked for a banner carrier whose image would evoke even greater resonance. |
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The story of Lucille is vapid and uninteresting in comparison, for it lacks any emotional or societal resonance. |
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The carboxylate ion has a negative charge, which is delocalized over both oxygen atoms to form a stable resonance hybrid. |
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Instead of the usual light-hearted romp, this performance found power and emotional resonance in the music. |
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Her version takes on added resonance and power when you remember that Tori is herself a victim of male violence. |
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Beyond the coolness, however, each action scene has a purpose and emotional resonance to it. |
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Harry's personal conflicts become the central focus, and the emotional resonance is sufficient to power the film. |
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The fourth crucial technique of his allegory is the use of myth to orient events, to give resonance to images, places, persons. |
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The timbre and quality of its resonance had a lingering delicate quality, which communicated nuances of infinite variety. |
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Audio is very clear, and music comes through with fullness and resonance, although it is not a major feature of the film. |
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Though blood frothed on his lip Mathias' voice had lost none of that boom and resonance. |
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Cranial magnetic resonance imaging showed a giant intracranial parasagittal frontal tumour eroding through the top of the skull. |
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The researcher believes giraffes may use Helmholtz resonance, causing the air in their long windpipes to vibrate at a low pitch. |
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A magnetic resonance image demonstrated sinusitis involving mainly the right maxillary, ethmoid, and frontal sinuses. |
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According to principles of Pythagoras, the river water in the down pipe changed the pitch of the sonic resonance. |
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In addition, the signal overlap for each resonance line can be examined in the spatially resolved spectra. |
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The piezo transformer is operated as close to resonance as possible, contributing to greater circuit efficiency. |
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The present invention relates to a method of measuring motion of an object such as a heart by magnetic resonance imaging. |
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Generating and detecting x rays in the strong fields used for magnetic resonance is difficult, but it can be done. |
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It doesn't take an exceptional amount of in-depth psychology to guess why I found a resonance in those four lines. |
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And he imparts some wisdom that seems to have resonance beyond the craps table. |
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After reading it I put it aside, deeply troubled as I was by the haunting resonance of its peroration, which so moved the audience. |
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This creates a line of p orbitals down the length of the molecule, allowing resonance stabilization of the pi bonds. |
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This resonance strongly stabilizes benzene and profoundly influences its chemical properties. |
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Magnetic resonance venography should be considered instead for intrapelvic and proximal thrombi if clinically indicated. |
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The photochemistry of ninhydrin in benzene and water was studied by laser flash photolysis and electron paramagnetic resonance. |
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It is shown that Mie's solution to Maxwell's equations no longer holds for the analysis of resonance of a plasmonic metal nanosphere. |
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The use of ultrasound and magnetic resonance since 1945 has also made it easier to diagnose disease. |
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Considering the artful subtlety found elsewhere, this is a let-down, stripping the film of any resonance with the issues at hand. |
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Testing these ideas is hard, because anything that is precisely predictable is excluded from morphic resonance. |
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Subsequent nuclear magnetic resonance studies established that the helices are right-handed. |
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On examination the only abnormality was a little bilateral basal dullness to percussion accompanied by a decrease in vocal resonance. |
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All had cerebral atrophy, but none had intracranial vascular pathology on magnetic resonance imaging examination. |
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In a time when we have never been more oppressed by the system, doesn't she still have some resonance? |
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To use words with great resonance in the field, disability history seems destined to remain a side show. |
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Intraoperative magnetic resonance images are displayed on monitors within the gap. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging confirmed recurrent hemorrhage of the arteriovenous malformation into the cervical spinal cord. |
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I predict that your life will have synchronistic resonance with several historical events. |
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Her paintings project a fragility and an overall resonance that I can only compare to a perfectly hit note on a tuning fork. |
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Second, I am delighted that the name has a wider resonance in the showbiz and literary world. |
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Feeling that resonance was an extraordinary experience that was both like listening to a lullaby and an awakening song. |
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I'm entirely on the side of graffiti artists who tag places that have a political resonance. |
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That last term, with all its Ciceronian resonance, is perhaps the most revealing. |
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Perhaps that is why his testimony is full of language which has an almost biblical resonance. |
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This is the homepage of computer program for visualization of the resonance graphs of benzenoid graphs. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging uses the body's natural magnetic properties to produce detailed images from any part of the body. |
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The increasing availability of magnetic resonance imaging and ultrasonography should improve diagnostic reliability. |
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Computed tomography scans and magnetic resonance imaging also are adapted from space technology. |
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The researchers investigated the dilatation changes in the brachial artery using high resolution magnetic resonance imaging. |
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Thus, detection of this resonance will provide an important new constraint on chromospheric models. |
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Strokes can be diagnosed by computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging. |
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It's not like superheroes, where an essentially silly subject has a huge cultural resonance allowing an audience to suspend disbelief. |
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To measure the efficacy of sunscreens, researchers used electron spin resonance spectroscopy to measure free radical production induced by UVA in the skin of white people. |
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An addict could be prescribed Dilaudid with out the stigma and resonance that a drug like heroin carries with it. |
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The pumpkin seeds, trapped in the heat of the caramel, are imbued with an autumnal, resiny resonance. |
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It would be difficult to find an issue with less resonance with the vast majority of voters than climate change. |
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Rooting around for unique observations that have universal resonance offers emotional release to you, and comic relief to others. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging off the brain showed scattered foci of abnormal white matter signal in both cerebral hemispheres, which were considered entirely nonspecific. |
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And like many of the best songs, their resonance has only deepened with time. |
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At a news conference, Lucas acknowledged the political allegories of the saga, which could have contemporary resonance although he wrote it at the time of the Nixon era. |
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In many cases small sample quantities limit the utility of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and X-ray crystallography in obtaining structural information. |
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The sequence in the alternate dimension had a profound resonance with me, like I'd experienced similar places in dreams but couldn't quite remember the specifics. |
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His own voice has matured well, developing resonance and combining the power of his younger years with the savvy he displayed in his white-soul days. |
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He'd much rather surround the listener with sound than attack with it, and with Levitate he's created another song cycle of unmatched beauty and resonance. |
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How can you get resonance in voices trained solely for the mike? |
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In business presentations, voice, particularly its pitch and resonance, can have a small but important impact on the way information given by a speaker is received. |
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Love must have the power to haunt to provide emotional resonance. |
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It's visual inventiveness and emotional resonance are second to none. |
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The books did not find any resonance, and not one review appeared. |
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A story, unlike a theory, invites embroidery and variation, and indeed stories gain their communicative power by resonance with more primal stories. |
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None of the other works in the gallery achieved such resonance. |
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A special kind of sound reinforcement, called assisted resonance, is used in some halls to increase the reverberation time within certain frequency bands. |
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The conditions under which resonance can be observed are quite specific. |
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On the other hand, if the electrical resonance is involved in the generation of oscillations, disabling it should eliminate the spontaneous bundle activity. |
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Leaving aside the microtonal differences resulting from natural resonance I have constructed 11 modes based on the interaction of 2 harmonic series. |
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In this resonance, Venus would make, on average, four axial rotations as seen by an Earth observer between successive close approaches of the two planets. |
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Because a carboxylate ion has low energy due to resonance stabilization, its formation via dissociation in aqueous solution is somewhat favorable. |
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Furthermore, any resonance with the Earth is illusory in that Mercury is not well placed for observations except during its brief greatest elongations near its aphelion. |
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Conventional methods for cancer diagnosis use roentgenography, scintigraphy, ultrasound, and magnetic resonance imaging techniques for tissue imaging. |
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When calibrated to be in tune with the planet's resonance, it created what is still the largest man-made electrical surge ever, an arc over 130 feet long. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging or examination under anesthesia and arthroscopy are options when adequate examination is not possible because of pain or spasm. |
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These patronage disputes had both local salience and national resonance. |
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The past decade has seen an increasing ability to perform preliminary examination of the effect of new treatments by using magnetic resonance imaging as an outcome measure. |
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Doctors can check the implant, after it has been inserted, simply by feeling it, or by ultrasonography, magnetic resonance imaging, or a blood test. |
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Ultrasound scans of the brains of all of our patients were normal, and so was cranial computed tomography in two and magnetic resonance imaging in one. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging showed a 2.5-cm, smoothly marginated, ovoid mass that did not have the signal characteristics typical for benign adenoma or myelolipoma. |
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The timing of the violence against the students has particular resonance and has stirred public sentiment. |
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You can also change volume and reverb levels on each track, adjust resonance and center frequency of a simple bandpass filter, and change pitch and tempo globally. |
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Other blood flow assessment tools, including thermography, infrared measurement, angiography, and magnetic resonance angiography, are beyond the scope of this report. |
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As a jazz lover, I want people to embrace the music for its intrinsic qualities, not its symbolic resonance. |
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Flashbulbs pop with resonance, the ship's engine throbbed with power. |
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A developmental psychologist would likely say that the resonance of a particular meter or beat or note-combination sends the baby into fits of laughter. |
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The film holds a special resonance for Jones, since terry also served as his mentor. |
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What is especially interesting is the resonance with today, especially the comparison between the permanence of the civil service and the transience of almost anything else. |
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The discovery of a way to mass-produce penicillin has personal resonance for Belfer. |
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Characters with a bit part in one film become central characters in another and peripheral scenes in one film take on a whole new resonance in the next. |
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But once the chemical has crystallized, subsequent attempts to crystallize it in other places will be influenced by morphic resonance from the first crystals. |
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In 2003 the last five of these groups produced ultracold molecules by causing pairs of fermionic atoms to associate with one another at a Feshbach resonance. |
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From inside it sounds like a Spitfire with the whine of the gearbox, a resonance through the uncarpeted cockpit and stones rattling like bullets off the underside. |
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To know that kind of music, which is uncompromising, was up there and to know that folk have found a resonance from his music shows how it has worked and lasted. |
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The frequency of the microwaves is adjusted until the output current of the electron multiplier is maximized, constituting the measurement of the atoms' resonance frequency. |
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It was amusing, it was in my vernacular, and the atmosphere held great emotional resonance for me. |
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Uranus, which was discovered 11 years after his birth, is prominent in his nativity and there is a powerful resonance between his own chart and that set for the discovery. |
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The color of a dye is due to its ability to absorb light in the visible region of the spectrum, an ability enhanced by unsaturation and resonance. |
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Unostentatious and unshowy, their simplicity belies their deep resonance. |
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Your body needs these micromoments of positivity resonance just like it needs good food and physical activity. |
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The demonstrated differences can be attributed to the fact that the girls with CF did less total work than control subjects in the magnetic resonance spectroscope. |
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The antioxidant capacity of plasma was measured with electron spin resonance spectroscopy while homocysteine and fasting plasma lipids were also determined. |
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The diagnosis is confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging that shows narrowing of the spinal canal caused by osteophytes, herniated discs and ligamentum flavum hypertrophy. |
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Also, if you're interested in learning more about her dance style, Yoshioka is giving a body resonance workshop based on butoh and organic movement. |
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Pottruck's yearlong journey through the stages of corporate grief has relevance and resonance for every person, no matter what his or her station. |
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Electron paramagnetic resonance is a spectroscopic technique similar to nuclear magnetic resonance except that microwave radiation is employed instead of radio frequencies. |
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The crucifixions may be disturbing to Western eyes because of their Biblical resonance. |
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It was only after they were completed that he realized the true scope of their resonance. |
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Meanwhile, strong octave Bs in the bass, along with the lengthy pedals necessary to sustain them, create the tremendous resonance this passage requires. |
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With only one heteroatom participating in resonance stabilization, the effect of the photolysis of the triarylmethanol on the binding constant will be maximal. |
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The play takes on a particular resonance when it is acted out of doors. |
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These perturbations also transform the spectral profile, inducing subharmonic frequencies, transitions to period doubling and tripling, superharmonic resonance, and chaos. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging or computerized axial tomography scans are not sensitive enough to distinguish between hyaline cartilage and fibrocartilage. |
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The sound, from a radio or a mobile phone, is then carried through the jaw bone to the inner ear by bone resonance which converts the digital signals to audio. |
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The audio track is without obvious flaw, and we hear every dying scream, sizzle of hot pokers, and swoosh of descending swords with great clarity and resonance. |
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This paper proposes an algorithm which maps the position of a catheter tip on a fluorograph to the 3D position in magnetic resonance angiography data. |
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If we detune laser A from resonance the symmetry is destroyed. |
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A magnetic resonance imaging scan, myelogram, or computed axial tomography scan, and sometimes, an electromyograph are performed to diagnose the specific problem. |
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Models for the helical structure have been developed based on NMR, electron spin resonance, infrared, and circular dichroism data, as well as computer simulations. |
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Functional magnetic resonance imaging visualizes the blood oxygen level-dependent signal in the brain, which indexes neural activity. |
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Washingtonians used to explain their continued allegiance to Barry by talking of his symbolic resonance for the nation. |
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Clocks keep time by mechanical resonance in a balance wheel, pendulum, or quartz crystal. |
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Cutting wedges of grinding wheel are positioned in resonance ultrasound wave systems antinodes of longitudinal stagnancy oscillation. |
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Primary endpoints will include aortic distensibility, as measured by state-of-the-art magnetic resonance imaging, and exercise tolerance. |
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In addition, for the first time both the upbend and the well known scissors resonance have been observed simultaneously for the same nucleus. |
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Inside the phonon band DB are not possible since any resonance of the DB or harmonics with the extended phonons will radiate the DB away. |
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But the film is largely redeemed by an unexpected emotional resonance befitting a Steven Spielberg production. |
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In some of the resonance structures the carbon-oxygen bond is a single bond, and in others it is a double bond. |
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The mirror has good imaging performance, operating to 20 scan lines per second below resonance and above resonance at 200 scan lines per second. |
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Some investigators have attributed the onset of puberty to a resonance of oscillators in the brain. |
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Birch has a natural resonance that peaks in the high and low frequencies, which are also the hardest for speakers to reproduce. |
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To cause resonance, the phase of a sinusoidal wave after a roundtrip must be equal to the initial phase, so the waves reinforce the oscillation. |
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The linewidth is inversely proportional to the Q factor, which is a measure of the sharpness of the resonance. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a multicystic mass with little perifocal edema. |
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These complexes were detected by mass spectrography, infrared, ultraviolet, and nucleus magnetic resonance. |
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Cranial magnetic resonance imaging revealed subependimal hamartomas and cortical tubers. |
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Not every escapist action flick has such moments of political resonance. |
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These include intravenous pyelography, ultrasound, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and angiography. |
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Subsequent magnetic resonance imaging of the brain, with and without contrast, performed with attention directed toward the chiasm was normal. |
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I intoned into a Belisha beacon or the top of a traffic cone to get the resonance. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging of the placenta in rhesus monkeys, Macaca mulatta. |
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Like mechanical resonance, acoustic resonance can result in catastrophic failure of the object at resonance. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging confirmed the presence of soft tissue extension involving the tibiofibular syndesmosis and peroneal tendons. |
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The following day, magnetic resonance imaging revealed acute ischemic change within the rostral pons and midbrain. |
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Avoiding resonance disasters is a major concern in every building, tower, and bridge construction project. |
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Technologies at validation and demonstration phases include ultrasound imagers, SQUID and quadruple resonance analyzers, T-ray imagers. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging showed multiple hypointense necrotic lesions of varying sizes on T2-weighted imaging. |
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In normal speakers, English vowels and oral sonorants are produced primarily with oral resonance and little if any nasal resonance. |
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Follow-up magnetic resonance imaging scans of the patient's head and neck showed lingual tonsil hypertrophy in the vallecula. |
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However, sonography or magnetic resonance imaging is also usually needed as an additional method for confirmation. |
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Commissioned by the arts group Jump Ship Rat and funded by Daiwa and EU Japan, the work now has a special resonance for Mr Kaihatsu. |
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There were no pathologic signs in the evaluation of cerebral, cervical, and thoracolumbar magnetic resonance imaging. |
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It is a piece of surpassing minimalism that has profound resonance. |
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Light and other short wavelength electromagnetic radiation is produced by resonance on an atomic scale, such as electrons in atoms. |
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Multiple subependymal tubers were identified on brain magnetic resonance imaging. |
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Bruney had a magnetic resonance imaging exam on Thursday and an arthrogram on Friday, seeking answers. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging of the right hand showed numerous sclerotic lesions in the distal radius, ulna, carpal bones and metacarpal head. |
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Frequencies at which the response amplitude is a relative maximum are known as the system's resonant frequencies or resonance frequencies. |
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These methods have included fluoroscopy, videoendoscopy, nasopharyngoscopy, cephalometry, magnetic resonance imaging, and computed tomography. |
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Electron paramagnetic resonance spectra were recorded on a Varian E-3 X-band spectrometer at 77 K and at room temperature. |
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It is the last of these three elements, which is undergirded by a tragicomic hope, that West swings with delightful fervor and resonance. |
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We examined the anatomical height and shape of the conus medullaris in 602 cases using magnetic resonance imaging. |
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Chronic back pain affects different parts of the brain than acute back pain does, magnetic resonance images reveal. |
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The localized surface plasmon resonance of gold nanoparticles is an important property for fluorescence enhancement. |
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Gold and silver nanoparticles have high adsorption coefficient, which is caused by the surface plasmon resonance in their electrons. |
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Researchers in physical and biomedical sciences here set out procedures for using surface plasmon resonance for a number of tasks. |
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In any case, the narrative resonance of all this is impossible to deny. |
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Functional magnetic resonance imaging of a child with Alice in Wonderland syndrome during an episode of micropsia. |
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A follow-up magnetic resonance imaging showed improvement but persistence of pelvic phlegmon. |
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The problem took on a particular resonance at that time because St John's College, Cambridge had chosen it as the topic for the 1857 Adams Prize. |
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Magnetic resonance arthrogram revealed a small, undisplaced, anterior labral tear. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging was not obtained, nor was electronystagmography performed. |
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On magnetic resonance imaging, the lesions appeared as high T2 signal areas that enhanced heterogeneously or in a ringlike manner. |
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Then, with the help of magnetic resonance imaging, they conducted a volumetric analysis of the subjects' left and right hippocampi. |
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Land's End has a particular resonance because it is often used to suggest distance. |
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Often computer tomography or magnetic resonance imaging are unable to detect low-grade gliomas or distinguish glioma from other diseases. |
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They lost eight seats in Belfast and County Antrim, where the issue of the border had far less resonance. |
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Brain magnetic resonance imaging and dermatoglyphic measurements were performed for structural features. |
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A statistical reanalysis of four sets of functional magnetic resonance imaging data supports this theory, Lloyd reports in the Aug. |
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Although moral arguments did play a secondary role, they usually had major resonance when used as a strategy to undercut competitors' profits. |
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The Zwitterion is stabilized via resonance through both the MA component and the ITX component. |
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Intramuscular hemangioma of the posterior belly of the digastrics muscle failing to highlight on magnetic resonance imaging. |
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Such a migration of ideas is generally successful only when there is a resonance between both traditions. |
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Impact of magnetic resonance imaging on the surgical management of cystic hygromas. |
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This virtually eliminates hysteresis and resonance problems, making minute movements possible with very little coil current. |
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Using 1 H magnetic resonance imaging and complementary analytical techniques to characterize developmental changes in the Zantedeschia Spreng. |
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As a form that turns scarcity into resonance, the lipogram does special work here. |
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Multipilicities of proton resonance were designated as singlet, doublet, and multiplet. |
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During the war he invented the cavity resonance wavemeter to find the first accurate value of the speed of light. |
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Cromwell's suppression of the Royalists in Ireland during 1649 still has a strong resonance for many Irish people. |
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Also, measuring the output force via the motion of an inertial mass avoids resonance problems which plague rigid fixture tests. |
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One such result is the absorption of microwave power by the ferromagnet when the microwave frequency matches the resonance frequency. |
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Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging has emerged as a powerful tool in the evaluation of pericardial disease. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a left orbital apex meningioma with proptosis. |
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Competing techniques with QCM include dual polarization interferometry and surface plasmon resonance. |
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As a movement with national and international resonance, the BPP was short-lived. |
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Magnetic resonance imaging in the diagnosis of acute injured distal tibiofibular syndesmosis. |
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Several media sources have commented that Boyle's success seemed to have particular resonance in the United States. |
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New York City itself comes alive in both novels, which pulse with a synergetic resonance that reflects the author's personal life experience. |
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The results of this work may one day help enhance the analytical and diagnostic power of nuclear magnetic resonance and magnetic resonance imaging. |
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Septimus is a name with great resonance for number theorists. |
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The point is to work oneself up into a frenzy of painterliness, each gesture synergistically interacting with every other, to create a kind of orgasmic resonance. |
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Food and Drug Administration has granted orphan drug designation to its synthetic human secretin, RG1068, for use with magnetic resonance imaging of the pancreas. |
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They underwent a specialized magnetic resonance spectroscopy brain scan, an imaging technique that allows measurement of the amount of GABA in small regions of the brain. |
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Wilson has looked specifically at structures into which gadolinium has been inserted as potential contrast agents for high resolution magnetic resonance imaging. |
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