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- Dictionaryconfound/kənˈfaʊnd/
verb
- 1. cause surprise or confusion in (someone), especially by not according with their expectations: "the inflation figure confounded economic analysts" Similar
- 2. mix up (something) with something else: "he was forever confounding managerialism with idealism"
exclamation
- 1. used to express anger or annoyance: dated "oh confound it, where is the thing?"
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4 days ago · confounding. Other forms: confoundingly. Definitions of confounding. adjective. that confounds or contradicts or confuses. synonyms: contradictory. unsupportive. not furnishing support or assistance.
2 days ago · A confounding variable is an extraneous variable in a statistical model that correlates with both the dependent variable and the independent variable.
16 hours ago · For this reason, we follow the widely used strategy to define post-COVID by symptoms and conditions associated with it. Based on published literature, previous work developing a core outcome set [ 15 ], and the clinical expertise of the author team, we selected a large set of 96 outcomes covering multiple organ systems and diagnosis/symptom complexes (Supplemental Table 1).
2 days ago · To confound matters, Oxford’s English Dictionary says something different: “rode, n.1 North American regional (chiefly New England and Newfoundland). Nautical. A rope, esp. one attached to the anchor of a boat.” There is a conflict, leaving the matter open to interpretation.
1 day ago · The confound time series derived from head motion estimates and global signals were expanded with the inclusion of temporal derivatives and quadratic terms for each . Frames that exceeded a threshold of 0.5 mm FD or 1.5 standardized DVARS were annotated as motion outliers.
16 hours ago · Specific elements mentioned in the descriptions (e.g., a dog, a drum, an ice skater) were used to define AOIs. These allowed us to examine whether eye movements were influenced by the information ...
1 day ago · Everyday experiences often overlap, challenging our ability to maintain distinct episodic memories. One way to resolve such interference is by exaggerating subtle differences between remembered events, a phenomenon known as memory repulsion. Here, we tested whether repulsion is influenced by emotional arousal, when resolving memory interference is perhaps most needed. We adapted an existing ...