'And Jacob was left alone; and there wrestlted a man with him until the breaking of the day. And when he saw that he prevailed not against him he touched the hollow of his thigh; and the hollow of Jacob's thigh was out of joint, as he wrestled with him. And he said, let me go, for the day breaketh, And he said, I will not let thee go, except thou bless me.'
Gen. 32: 24 - 26
'And Jacob was left alone; and there wrestlted a man with him until the breaking of the day. And when he saw that he prevailed not against him he touched the hollow of his thigh; and the hollow of Jacob's thigh was out of joint, as he wrestled with him. And he said, let me go, for the day breaketh, And he said, I will not let thee go, except thou bless me.'
Gen. 32: 24 - 26
This week we will look at GEFC's second core value, a commitment to prayer. Jesus provides us with a "Master Class" on prayer. He prayed in a wide variety of settings and circumstances. By observing and learning from His prayer life we can be schooled in prayer - the conduit of divine power in the life of the believer.
Reproducibility and predictivity in the genetics of predispositions ppt 2013Nikita Khromov-Borisov
Poor reproducibility and low predictive values of the results in the genetics of predispositions become a systemic problem. Results of the
statistical quality control of genetic tests in the study should be supported with not only integral indices such as odds ratios (OR), but with the
post-test (posterior) predictive probabilities (PPV and NPV) and likelihood ratios (LR[+] and LR[-]). Usefulness of predictiveness graphs
for visualization of the relationships between the prevalence as a pretest (prior) probability of disease and predictive values PPV and NPV as
posttest (posterior) probabilities is demonstrated. Predictive capabilities of widely used genetic, observational, instrumental and immunological
diagnostic tests are discussed. Several examples of such tests are presented and it is shown that despite of their high statistical significance they
are not able to provide clinically important association between the disease and biomarker. The predictive power of the vast majority of genetic
markers (given very wide confidence intervals due to small sample sizes) differs little from the population prevalence of the disease. Extremely
rare the odds ratios in the studies on the genetics of dispositions exceed practically critical OR = 5. As a result, in most cases, recommendations
of medical geneticists are based on clinically negligible (though statistically significant) recognizablity and predictability of genetic markers.
This week we will look at GEFC's second core value, a commitment to prayer. Jesus provides us with a "Master Class" on prayer. He prayed in a wide variety of settings and circumstances. By observing and learning from His prayer life we can be schooled in prayer - the conduit of divine power in the life of the believer.
Reproducibility and predictivity in the genetics of predispositions ppt 2013Nikita Khromov-Borisov
Poor reproducibility and low predictive values of the results in the genetics of predispositions become a systemic problem. Results of the
statistical quality control of genetic tests in the study should be supported with not only integral indices such as odds ratios (OR), but with the
post-test (posterior) predictive probabilities (PPV and NPV) and likelihood ratios (LR[+] and LR[-]). Usefulness of predictiveness graphs
for visualization of the relationships between the prevalence as a pretest (prior) probability of disease and predictive values PPV and NPV as
posttest (posterior) probabilities is demonstrated. Predictive capabilities of widely used genetic, observational, instrumental and immunological
diagnostic tests are discussed. Several examples of such tests are presented and it is shown that despite of their high statistical significance they
are not able to provide clinically important association between the disease and biomarker. The predictive power of the vast majority of genetic
markers (given very wide confidence intervals due to small sample sizes) differs little from the population prevalence of the disease. Extremely
rare the odds ratios in the studies on the genetics of dispositions exceed practically critical OR = 5. As a result, in most cases, recommendations
of medical geneticists are based on clinically negligible (though statistically significant) recognizablity and predictability of genetic markers.
3. And said: "Naked I came
from my mother's womb,
and naked I will depart. The
LORD gave and the LORD has
taken away; may the name
of the LORD be praised."
Job 1:21
4. Job 1:21
And said, Naked (without possessions)
came I [into this world] from my
mother's womb, and naked (without
possessions) shall I depart. The Lord
gave and the Lord has taken
away; blessed (praised and magnified in
worship) be the name of the Lord!
5. And said, Naked came I out
of my mother's womb, and
naked shall I return thither:
the LORD gave, and the
LORD hath taken
away; blessed be the name
of the LORD.
Job 1:21
8. Add your title here
• Add as many slides as you want
• Add text/videos/images as required
• Add edit/delete existing slides as
required
• Just download type and present!