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For example, gentamicin is an antibiotic that can be nephrotoxic (kidney damaging) and ototoxic (hearing damaging); measurement of gentamicin through concentrations in a patient's plasma and calculation of the AUC is used to guide the dosage of this drug. [3] AUC becomes useful for knowing the average concentration over a time interval, AUC/t.
Whereas TOC AUC varies between 0 and 1 — with an uninformative classifier yielding 0.5 — the alternative measures known as informedness, [citation needed] Certainty [12] and Gini coefficient (in the single parameterization or single system case) [citation needed] all have the advantage that 0 represents chance performance whilst 1 ...
Ab urbe condita (Latin: [ab ˈʊrbɛ ˈkɔndɪtaː]; 'from the founding of the City'), or anno urbis conditae (Latin: [ˈannoː ˈʊrbɪs ˈkɔndɪtae̯]; 'in the year since the city's founding'), abbreviated as AUC or AVC, expresses a date in years since 753 BC, the traditional founding of Rome.
Phi measures how better (or worse) is a classification, with respect to the random classification, which is characterized by Phi = 0. According to the reference values suggested by Cohen, [8] one can take Phi = 0.35 as a minimum acceptable level of Phi for a classification. In the ROC space, Phi equal to a non null constant corresponds to the ...
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump laid out his economic vision for the country on Thursday during a speech at the New York Economic Club. Trump said if he is elected he would create a ...
The measurement of economic worth over time is the problem of relating past prices, costs, values and proportions of social production to current ones. For a number of reasons, relating any past indicator to a current indicator of worth is theoretically and practically difficult for economists , historians , and political economists .
AUC may refer to: Ab urbe condita or Anno urbis conditae , Latin for "from the founding of the city" (of Rome), used for dates African Union Commission , the executive/administrative branch or secretariat of the supranational organisation
These measures differ from one another by the variables they measure and by the variables excluded from measurements. The measurable variables in economics are quantity, quality and distribution. Excluding variables from measurement makes it possible to better focus the measurement on a given variable, yet, this means a more narrow approach.