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  2. Cohort (educational group) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohort_(educational_group)

    A cohort is a group of students who work through a curriculum together to achieve the same academic degree together. Cohortians are the individual members of such a group. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In a cohort, there is an expectation of richness to the learning process due to the multiple perspectives offered by the students.

  3. Cohort (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohort_(statistics)

    Case–control study versus cohort on a timeline. "OR" stands for "odds ratio" and "RR" stands for "relative risk".In statistics, epidemiology, marketing and demography, a cohort is a group of subjects who share a defining characteristic (typically subjects who experienced a common event in a selected time period, such as birth or graduation).

  4. Cohort study - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohort_study

    Cohort studies differ from clinical trials in that no intervention, treatment, or exposure is administered to participants in a cohort design; and no control group is defined. Rather, cohort studies are largely about the life histories of segments of populations and the individual people who constitute these segments.

  5. Cohort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohort

    Cohort (statistics), a group of subjects with a common defining characteristic, for example age group; Cohort (floating point), a set of different encodings of the same numerical value; Cohort (taxonomy), in biology, one of the taxonomic ranks; Cohort study, a form of longitudinal study used in medicine and social science

  6. Cohort analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohort_analysis

    Cohort analysis is a kind of behavioral analytics that breaks the data in a data set into related groups before analysis. These groups, or cohorts, usually share common characteristics or experiences within a defined time-span.

  7. Longitudinal study - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longitudinal_study

    Cohort studies are one type of longitudinal study which sample a cohort (a group of people who share a defining characteristic, typically who experienced a common event in a selected period, such as birth or graduation) and perform cross-section observations at intervals through time. Not all longitudinal studies are cohort studies; some ...

  8. Cohort effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohort_effect

    Cohort effects are important to resource dependency, and economics theorists when these groups affect structures of influence within their larger organizations. Cohorts in organizations are often defined by entry or birth date, and they retain some common characteristic (size, cohesiveness, competition) that can affect the organization.

  9. Prospective cohort study - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prospective_cohort_study

    A prospective cohort study is a longitudinal cohort study that follows over time a group of similar individuals who differ with respect to certain factors under study to determine how these factors affect rates of a certain outcome. [1]