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Related Concept Videos

Null and Alternative Hypotheses01:16

Null and Alternative Hypotheses

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The actual hypothesis testing begins by considering two hypotheses. They are termed  the null hypothesis and the alternative hypothesis. These hypotheses contain opposing viewpoints.
The null hypothesis, denoted by H0 is a statement of no difference between the variables—they are not related. This can often be considered the status quo. As  a result if you cannot accept the null, it requires some action.
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Kirchoff's Rules: Application01:22

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Kirchhoff's rules quantify the current flowing through a circuit and the voltage variations around the loop in a circuit. Applying Kirchhoff's rules generates a set of linear equations that allow us to find the unknown values in circuits. These may be currents, voltages, or resistances.
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Electrocyclic reactions, cycloadditions, and sigmatropic rearrangements are concerted pericyclic reactions that proceed via a cyclic transition state. These reactions are stereospecific and regioselective. The stereochemistry of the products depends on the symmetry characteristics of the interacting orbitals and the reaction conditions. Accordingly, pericyclic reactions are classified as either symmetry-allowed or symmetry-forbidden. Woodward and Hoffmann presented the selection criteria for...
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The Frost circle or the inscribed polygon method is a graphical method for determining the relative energies of π molecular orbitals (MOs) for planar, fully conjugated, and monocyclic compounds. This method was first described by A. A. Frost and Boris Musulin in 1953.
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Drugs administered through various routes can lead to nonlinear elimination, resulting in complex pharmacokinetic behaviors crucial to understanding efficacious drug dosing.
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Predicting the Effectiveness of Population Replacement Strategy Using Mathematical Modeling
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A simple null model predicts the island rule.

Matt Biddick1, Kevin C Burns2

  • 1Terestrial Ecology Research Group, Technical University of Munich, Freising, Germany.

Ecology Letters
|May 19, 2021
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Evolutionary drift may explain the island rule, where species change size on islands. This simulation model shows drift can cause small species to grow larger and large species to shrink, but natural selection may also play a role.

Area of Science:

  • Evolutionary biology
  • Island biogeography
  • Ecology

Background:

  • The island rule proposes that small species increase in size and large species decrease on islands.
Keywords:
body sizeconvergent evolutiondwarfismevolutionary driftgigantismsize diversitytrait evolution

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  • A clear mechanistic explanation for the island rule's variable occurrence across taxa remains elusive.
  • Understanding these evolutionary patterns is crucial for island biodiversity research.