戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 f injunctive norms and the relation to moral conviction.
2 included only if the final legal outcome was conviction.
3 mother estimated relative risk of adolescent conviction.
4 tcome was first violent offence leading to a conviction.
5 l-treated self-harm episode or violent crime conviction.
6 rders, and first violence offence leading to conviction.
7 rs to be falsified in some cases of personal conviction.
8 f PMNL in SIMP-treated corneas supports this conviction.
9 mitted at least one violent crime leading to conviction.
10 ation accounts for 70% of verified erroneous convictions.
11 ffecting deportations of people with violent convictions.
12 cial welfare, early retirement, and criminal convictions.
13 hiatric diagnoses and violent criminal court convictions.
14 ductions in MVC traumas and impaired driving convictions.
15 duce nearly a quarter of subsequent criminal convictions.
16 cation is one of the leading causes of false convictions.
17 on later risk of self-harm and violent crime convictions.
18 tion, and disenfranchisement due to criminal convictions.
19 ourly MVC traumas and daily impaired driving convictions.
20 vidence that mTBI caused criminal charges or convictions.
21 ter contacts, psychiatric disorders, and new convictions.
22 community supervision rather than new felony convictions.
23  regulation predicted more frequent criminal convictions.
24 ers for all hospital admissions and criminal convictions.
25 ty among psychiatric conditions and criminal convictions.
26 Gini coefficients equalled 0.96 for criminal convictions, 0.91 for public-hospital nights, 0.86 for w
27 n living in poverty did not present criminal conviction (89%), poverty at baseline was the only modif
28                               Stronger moral conviction about a given attitude object, for example, i
29 prove and yet we can feel a strong intuitive conviction about them, as exemplified by insights that i
30 st was strongly related to age and number of convictions accrued prior to actual or attempted handgun
31 efined as the first police-recorded criminal conviction after prison release.
32        Cumulative incidence of violent crime convictions after 5 years was 5.0% (95% CI 4.6-5.5) in i
33  1.6-fold increased risk of nonviolent crime convictions (aHR, 1.62; 95% CI, 1.54-1.71).
34 % CI, 6.32-7.40), substance-related criminal convictions (aHR, 2.56; 95% CI, 2.36-2.77), and substanc
35 00-2.43), a 3-fold increased risk of violent convictions (aHR, 3.13; 95% CI, 2.92-3.36), and a 1.6-fo
36                            Variance in moral conviction also predicts important social and political
37 ervative estimate of the proportion of false conviction among death sentences in the United States.
38 ations to estimate the overall rate of false conviction among death sentences.
39 ard violence in both samples and for violent convictions among our black sample.
40 ate the risk of violent assault and criminal convictions among people with TS or CTD, compared with t
41               However, there is a widespread conviction amongst biologists that the description of ge
42 ow that personal spiritual formidability-the conviction and immaterial resources (values, strengths o
43 gun purchasers with only 1 prior misdemeanor conviction and no convictions for offenses involving fir
44 etween 10 psychiatric conditions or criminal convictions and five cardiometabolic complications in in
45 h substance (sample 1) and substance-related convictions and hospitalizations for an alcohol- or othe
46              Violent and nonviolent criminal convictions and medical treatments or deaths owing to as
47 er to urban markets show higher densities of convictions and more individual animals taken.
48 ta on terrorism offending, arrests, charges, convictions and sentencing over 16 years in 28 European
49 offenders varied in their number of previous convictions and the nature of their individual crimes, w
50  disorder, suicide, HIV infections, criminal convictions and unemployment.
51 fewer arrests (0.20 vs 0.45; P = .03), fewer convictions and violations of probation (0.09 vs 0.47; P
52  association between SSRIs and violent crime convictions and violent crime arrests varied by age grou
53 egal system (eg, prior 9-1-1 calls, criminal convictions), and 225 (23.7%) described engagement with
54 e indicating severe preoccupation, distress, conviction, and functioning impact); and brain activatio
55  of the oldest and most widespread spiritual convictions, and it has been shown to offer various psyc
56 ndividuals [62.1%]), 93 742 impaired driving convictions, and more than 24 million Uber rides were an
57 bstance overdoses, and criminal suspicion or convictions, and prescription of antidepressants, antial
58    Handgun purchasers with prior misdemeanor convictions are at increased risk for future criminal ac
59                  As a result, very few false convictions are ever discovered, and those that are disc
60 " at arrest and substituting misdemeanors or convictions as measures of crime.
61 hlight the importance of poverty in criminal conviction, as it includes several deprivations and sugg
62 te the hazard ratio of time to violent crime conviction ascertained from national registers in indivi
63 hildhood (5-14 years, n = 2511) and criminal conviction at a 7-year follow-up in a cohort of young pe
64  (95% CI, 1.62-6.40) higher adjusted odds of conviction before age 26 years, compared with children o
65 hically linked reduction in impaired driving convictions between January 2014 to December 2019 (incid
66 tive-compatible donation decisions and moral convictions beyond the experiment.
67            Non-paranoid delusion-like belief conviction (but not paranoia) was associated with aberra
68 ldren are prone to set aside their own prior convictions, but they may sometimes defer to informants
69 cing deportations of people with no criminal convictions by half-without affecting deportations of pe
70 pathways by which experience can shape these convictions: by filtering which beliefs feel perceptuall
71                            ADHD and criminal convictions co-aggregate within families, consistent wit
72 ced violent assault also had a violent crime conviction, compared with 17.9% (16 067 of 89 920; 95% C
73 he probability of a species appearing in the convictions database.
74 se beliefs that are rigidly held with strong conviction despite contradictory evidence.
75                           Number of previous convictions did not correlate significantly with the 2Dr
76  an 11% lower risk of self-reported criminal conviction during adolescence (adjusted odds ratio, 0.89
77 s had their first violent offence leading to conviction during follow-up.
78 emic performance in adolescence and criminal convictions, employment, and years of education in early
79 ociated with increased risk of violent crime conviction, even after controlling for familial effects
80 with an increased risk for offspring violent convictions, even when controlling for maternal and pate
81  main outcome was dichotomous, self-reported conviction for a crime during adolescence (age 14-18 yea
82 3 authorized purchasers, 3128 had at least 1 conviction for a misdemeanor offense prior to handgun pu
83 harm is associated with an increased risk of conviction for a violent offense in both sexes.
84 isorders in offenders 15 years after a first conviction for driving while impaired with a general pop
85 evious license suspension (17.1% vs 7.1%) or conviction for driving while intoxicated (7.9% vs 1.2%).
86                  Violent crime (any criminal conviction for homicide, assault, robbery, arson, any se
87 s of violent offending within 12 months were conviction for previous violent crime (adjusted odds rat
88          Violent crime (actions resulting in convictions for homicide, assault, robbery, arson, any s
89                      Here we extracted 9,256 convictions for illegal hunting from a nationwide databa
90  detailed analyses linking rideshare volume, convictions for impaired driving, and nonfatal MVC traum
91  association between SSRIs and violent crime convictions for individuals aged 15 to 24 y (HR = 1.43,
92  association between SSRIs and violent crime convictions for males aged 15 to 24 y (HR = 1.40, 95% CI
93 current federal law, many persons with prior convictions for misdemeanor offenses pass criminal recor
94        Among men, those with 2 or more prior convictions for misdemeanor violence were at greatest ri
95 h only 1 prior misdemeanor conviction and no convictions for offenses involving firearms or violence
96                                              Convictions for violent and nonviolent criminal offenses
97 scribed these drugs, of whom 604 (1.4 %) had convictions for violent crime.
98 son had no significant effects on arrests or convictions for violent crimes after release from prison
99 hizophrenia, and substance use disorders and convictions for violent crimes, between 1973 and 2013, w
100 before age 10 years and criminal charges and convictions from ages 15 to 20 for the entire study popu
101 re age 10 years and all criminal charges and convictions from ages 15 to 20 years.
102 >=3 months) persecutory delusion with strong conviction (>50%).
103 ity and temporary assistance for drug felony conviction had 1.37 times the odds of high depressive sy
104  association between SSRIs and violent crime convictions (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.19, 95% CI 1.08-1.32,
105 tal friendliness, and action driven by inner conviction; hierarchy privileges conformity, order, and
106 e was no association between SDP and violent convictions, however, when comparing differentially expo
107 h), 1.33 [1.17-1.53]) to a narcotics-related conviction (HR(moderate), 2.23 [2.14-2.31]; HR(high), 2.
108  CI 1.16-1.41, p < 0.001), non-violent crime convictions (HR = 1.22, 95% CI 1.10-1.34, p < 0.001), no
109 thod to determine the accuracy of a criminal conviction; if there were, these errors would not occur
110 ren and families influence juvenile criminal conviction in an LMIC remains unexplored; however, it is
111  was 4.9 (95% CI, 4.8-5.0) for violent crime conviction in exposed individuals compared with the unex
112 eliance on priors may also lead to increased conviction in the beliefs generated by bottom-up noise a
113 eath, or as a substance use-related criminal conviction in the nationwide registers.
114                                There were no convictions in 13 incomplete cases.
115 egisters of hospital admissions and criminal convictions in 1973-2006.
116 ychiatric diagnoses, and subsequent criminal convictions in 2006-09.
117 ay affect rates and ratios of true and false convictions in a hypothetical legal system.
118 macologic treatment, and subsequent criminal convictions in Sweden from 2006 through 2009.
119 regnancy also was associated with nonviolent convictions in the entire population (HR(moderate), 1.62
120 major contributor to the problem of wrongful convictions in the United States.
121                             Impaired driving convictions included all indictments made by the Harris
122                                        These convictions involved illegal hunting of 21% (n = 673) of
123            Non-paranoid delusion-like belief conviction is instead related to parameters controlling
124 ification were having a parent with criminal convictions, male sex, having a relative with ADHD, numb
125                                              Conviction Narrative Theory (CNT) is a theory of choice
126 ssociation between maternal SDP and criminal convictions, not the specific exposure to SDP.
127 outcomes after arrest for domestic violence: conviction of a new violent crime (including domestic vi
128                                              Conviction of a violent crime according to the Swedish p
129 sson regression analysis, and probability of conviction of a violent offence using an Aalen-Johansen
130 nd premature mortality, with follow-up until conviction of a violent offence, emigration, death, or e
131              First, we investigated rates of conviction of a violent offence, suicide, and premature
132 ncreased risk of adverse outcomes, including conviction of a violent offence, suicide, and premature
133 violent crime (including domestic violence), conviction of any new crime, and rearrest for domestic v
134 s those leading to the Enron scandal and the conviction of Bernard Madoff, evoke a strong sense of pu
135  nurture them with purpose, passion, and the conviction of doing meaningful science.
136                        The rate of erroneous conviction of innocent criminal defendants is often desc
137 h personal and societal costs of failure-the conviction of innocent people-has elicited calls for cau
138  testing of the validity of this test in the conviction of intoxicated drivers.
139 take this opportunity to make the case for a conviction of mine that I think many will consider outda
140 he largest single factor contributing to the conviction of these innocent people.
141 searchers insist on the traditional textbook conviction of what is part of the community of life.
142                Under what conditions are the convictions of a minority going to dominate the future d
143 initial motion correlated with the degree of conviction on the Peters Delusions Inventory (original s
144 's first PTSD diagnosis) until violent crime conviction or until being censored at emigration, death,
145 dds ratio [OR], 1.26; 95% CI, 1.19-1.34) and convictions (OR, 1.24; 95% CI, 1.16-1.33).
146 red substance use-related disorder, criminal conviction, or death (population cohort), and self-repor
147 d, the latter had significantly less disease conviction (P<.05) and somatization (P<.01) at inception
148  episodes and 25 (15-41) fewer violent crime convictions per 10 000 person-years compared with women
149 episodes and 88 (56-191) fewer violent crime convictions per 10 000 person-years than men of a low in
150                                              Convictions pertained overwhelmingly to illegal hunting
151 ormation, speech/action, and mistaken belief/conviction provides an opportunity to expand research an
152 nt ivory out of Africa, yet prosecutions and convictions remain few.
153                            A small number of convictions represented most of the animals taken, indic
154                                     Criminal convictions require proof that a prohibited act was perf
155 and drug (standardized estimate=-0.43) crime conviction scores, lower risky sexual behavior scores (s
156 t, targeted policing and increasing rates of conviction should be integrated into strategies for inju
157    Risk assessment is needed for China's new conviction standards based on monetary value.
158 ions at the threshold between indecision and conviction (Study 1).
159 chances outcome (a composite of any criminal conviction, substance misuse, or school dropout).
160 higher risks of a violent offence leading to conviction than those who had not experienced homelessne
161                                          The conviction that biosignature gases will actually be dete
162 d human interleukin 1 receptors has sown the conviction that both molecules trigger related signaling
163 onals have sustained an almost single-minded conviction that disparities in access to health care acr
164 supersede other values is a broadly accepted conviction that guides practice and policies in the real
165 linical remission, giving credibility to the conviction that histologic remission should be a treatme
166 question-driven research with the intangible conviction that long-term data will yield valuable findi
167 creased their social trust and increased the conviction that other risks were neglected.
168     The aims of the study were to verify the conviction that outer silicone lead insulation is biosta
169 and nutrition organizations motivated by the conviction that public trust remains key to the realizat
170 ust, a low level of perceived risks, and the conviction that risks other than health risks were negle
171                            IDSA stresses our conviction that the antibiotic pipeline problem can be s
172                                    It is our conviction that this Review will be useful to a wide ran
173  my trainees and colleagues and to convey my conviction that we have the best job on earth.
174  States, however, a high proportion of false convictions that do come to light and produce exoneratio
175 s of attitudes that are experienced as moral convictions, that is, attitudes that people perceive as
176 ed States, an ambitious young man holds to a conviction: that he will, one day, get a PhD.
177     The IRR for a violent offence leading to conviction was highest in individuals experiencing homel
178                 Information on violent crime convictions was extracted from the Swedish national crim
179 djusted IRRs of a violent offence leading to conviction were 4.8 (4.5-5.1) in men and 6.3 (5.6-7.2) i
180 purchasers with at least 1 prior misdemeanor conviction were more than 7 times as likely as those wit
181 were based on self-report; their arrests and convictions were based on self-report and archived data
182                                     Criminal convictions were reported for 81 (4.3%) youths.
183 igious delusions were held with the greatest conviction, whereas persecutory delusions were marked by
184  separation; bullying; and parental criminal conviction, with data collected on multiple occasions be
185 with ADHD were at increased risk of criminal convictions, with some sex-based variations.

 
Page Top