Longitudinal in a sentence as an adjective

You can find it if you google for "Design of portable maps enabling longitudinal access" Miura, 2006

"And the graph's acceleration is noted as longitudinal and lateral.

Having lived in China and know a lot about its history for the past 60 years, I can't help but shudder at anyone trying to compare health between Chinese and Americans on a longitudinal basis.

This was a longitudinal study that took considerable resources to conduct and involved a seemingly well-designed experimental test.

It's well worth reading in full on eur-lex for riveting prose like "the measurement, in millimetres, of the thickness of a transverse section of the fruit between the lateral faces and the middle, perpendicularly to the longitudinal axis".

> "the measurement, in millimetres, of the thickness of a transverse section of the fruit between the lateral faces and the middle, perpendicularly to the longitudinal axis"Oh, look, a good definition in a legal document.

Fourth, the quality in SF has been declining for those of us with a longitudinal view over time, and even if the top-line metric of overall reviews inflates the NPS score, the fact that this is striking a chord with "power users" should be alarming.

But as Terman gained more experience, especially with the subjects in his own longitudinal study of Americans identified in childhood by high IQ scores, he didn't equate high IQ to genius, and he became more aware of the shortcomings of IQ tests.

The study design of the study reported in the submitted article is basically the best kind of study design for a longitudinal study that will pass institutional review for study of human subjects and not bankrupt the researchers with its expense.

[1] A longitudinal study of graduates of the UVA Law School class of 1990 found that while women and men went into private practice and to large law firms in similar proportions, after 20 years almost all the men were still working while half the women had either dropped out of practice entirely or were part-time.

IQ may in fact be similar in heritability to the physical trait of heightWhat the article is saying is that intelligence cannot be tied to particular genes:> We sought [and failed] to replicate published associations between 12 specific genetic variants and g using three independent, longitudinal datasetsIt just goes to show that there isn't necessarily one particular factor you can pick out to predict intelligence; it is a combination of many things.

Longitudinal definitions

adjective

of or relating to lines of longitude; "longitudinal reckoning by the navigator"

adjective

running lengthwise; "a thin longitudinal strip"; "longitudinal measurements of the hull"

adjective

over an extended time; "a longitudinal study of twins"