cohort

listen to the pronunciation of cohort
İngilizce - Türkçe
{i} topluluk
(Askeri) Askeri müfreze
destekçi
arkadaş
takım
türküm
aynı yaşlı takson veya bireylerin oluşturduğu grup
bir lejyonun onda biri
yandaş
{i} kohort

Sürpriz, sürpriz: Tom ve onun kohortu. - Surprise, surprise: it's Tom and his cohort.

{i} lejyonun onda biri
{i} (insanlardan oluşan) grup
{i} kalabalık
taraftar
(Çevre) grup
(Denizbilim) tertip
suç ortağı
hempa
cohort study
(Tıp) kohort çalışması
cohort analysis
(Denizbilim) tertip çözümlemesi
cohort analysis
(Denizbilim) tertip analizi
cohort studies
grup çalışmaları
cohort survival method
(Coğrafya) grup yaşamlılık yöntemi
İngilizce - İngilizce
A demographic grouping of people, especially those in a defined age group

The 18-24 cohort shows a sharp increase in automobile fatalities over the proximate age groupings.

An accomplice; an associate in crime

He was able to plea down his sentence by revealing the names of three of his cohorts, as well as the source of the information.

A colleague
Any division of a Roman legion; normally of about 500 men

Three cohorts of men were assigned to the region.

A group of people supporting the same thing or person
A cohort is generally defined as a group of people within a population who are assumed to have identical exposures during a specified exposure period The use of cohorts is a necessary simplifying assumption for modeling exposures of a large population For the exposure assessment, the population was divided into a set of cohorts such that (1) each person is assigned to one and only one cohort, and (2) all the cohorts combined encompass the entire population
groups of individuals who share one or more characteristics in a research study and who are followed over time For example, a vaccine trial might include two cohorts, a group at low risk for HIV and a group at higher risk for HIV
{n} a troop of Roman soldiers about 5
a group people having approximately the same age
disapproval A person's cohorts are their friends, supporters, or associates. Drake and his cohorts were not pleased with my appointment
a group of individuals in a study who share a demographic, clinical, or other statistical characteristic (e g , age, study site)
A group of individuals having a statistical factor (age, race etc ) in common in a demographic study
A group of fish spawned during a given period, usually within a year
A group of trees (or other entities) of similar origin, and hence of the same age
A term used to designate one group among many in a study For example, "the first cohort" may be the first group to have participated in a training program
A group of people
That section of a population born during a particular period and identified by period of birth, e g born between 1985 and 1990
A group
a band of warriors (originally a unit of a Roman Legion) a company of companions or supporters
A group of people who begin and end an activity at the same time In education, some programs admit a group of learners as a cohort-they enter the program together, complete all classes together, and finish all course requirements simultaneously
A group of individuals born in the same calendar year or group of years
A group of students who began their degree-seeking college experience at the same time
A group of individuals who enter the life cycle at the same time Specifically, it refers to the individual age levels of a population pyramid
A group of individuals (subjects) who share a common experience or condition
The combined group of faculty and students working together in a learning community
a band of warriors (originally a unit of a Roman Legion)
A group of individuals (in this case, students) who went through the same experience or event at the same time A cohort does not necessarily progress at the same rate Thus, students who entered the university in Fall 1998 for the first time form a cohort Generation X could also be described as a cohort
Any band or body of warriors
A well-defined group of people who have had a common experience or exposure, who are then followed up for the incidence of new diseases or events, as in a cohort or prospective study A group of people born during a particular period or year is called a birth cohort
A cohort is a group of individuals, identified by a common characteristic, who are studied over a period of time as part of an epidemiological investigation
A cohort in the Bureau of Labor Statistics' National Longitudinal Surveys (NLS) program is a group of people, defined by age, that make up a particular study For example, the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 (NLSY79) cohort is made up of people born between January 1, 1957, and December 31, 1964
A body of about five or six hundred soldiers; the tenth part of a legion
a company of companions or supporters
Group of students registering at the same stage of a programme at the same time
A group of people who begin and end an activity at the same time In education, some programs admit a group of learners as a cohortthey enter the program together, complete all classes together, and finish all course requirements simultaneously
A group of individuals having a statistical factor (such as age) in common in a demographic or epidmiological study
A natural group of orders of plants, less comprehensive than a class
A group of individuals that have a statistical factor in common, for example, year of birth
A group of subjects initially identified as having one or more characteristics in common who are followed over time In social science research, this term may refer to any group of persons who are born at about the same time and share common historical or cultural experiences
{i} group, gang; one tenth of a legion; one of ten divisions of an ancient Roman legion; companion, friend; people with shared characteristics who experience the same happening concurrently; group of people who are approximately of the same age
cohort study
(Tıp, İlaç) A research study that compares a particular outcome (such as lung cancer) in groups of individuals who are alike in many ways but differ by a certain characteristic (for example, female nurses who smoke compared with those who do not smoke)
generational cohort
A generational cohort has been defined as "the group of individuals (within some population definition) who experience the same event within the same time interval". The notion of a group of people bound together by the sharing of the experience of common historical events developed in the early 1920s. Today the concept has found its way into popular culture through well known phrases like "baby boomer" and "Generation X"
cohorts
plural of cohort
cohort