Examples of life table in the following topics:
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- Some early mathematicians developed primitive forms of life tables, which are tables of life expectancies, for life insurance and actuarial purposes.
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- Men and women may have different life expectancies, so mortality rates can vary with the gender distribution of a population.
- These rates are compiled in a life table, which shows the mortality rate separate for each age group and gender.
- A life table is necessary to give a good estimate of life expectancy.
- Overall, developing countries tend to have higher mortality rates, higher infant mortality rates, and lower life expectancies.
- Explain the various ways mortality is calculated, such as the crude death rate, infant mortality rate and life expectancy
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- Sub-replacement fertility is below approximately 2.1 children in a woman's life time.
- life expectancy: the number of years which an individual at a given age can expect to live at present mortality rates
- A more complete picture of mortality is given by a life table which summarizes mortality separately at each age.
- This chart depicts life expectancy by region of the world.
- Similar to infant mortality, life expectancies are higher in more developed regions of the world.
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- The table below illustrates both how early definitions included essentialist and taxonomic elements and how definitions have changed over time.
- Because racial differences continue to be important issues in social and political life, racial classifications continue.
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- To Table One, she assigned those she considered "fast learners."
- "Average" students were placed at Table Two, and the "slow learners" were placed at Table Three in the back of the classroom.
- Middle class students were placed at Table One, while children from poorer homes were placed at the other two tables.
- During class, the teacher paid the most attention to the children closest to her, less to Table Two, and least to Table Three.
- Eventually, the children at Table Three stopped participating in classroom activities.
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- Rather than focusing on putting enough food on the table, people became concerned with how that food was produced, packaged, and transported.
- Over the years, the World Values Survey has demonstrated that people's beliefs play a key role in defining life in different countries—defining anything from a nation's economic development to the emergence of democratic institutions to the rise of gender equality .
- Self-expression values give high priority to environmental protection; tolerance of foreigners, gays, and lesbians; gender equality; and participation in decision-making as it relates to economic and political life.
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- See this link for a sortable table of famous sociologists: http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Introduction_to_Sociology/Famous_Sociologists
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- A technique employed to avoid bias is the "round table," an adversarial format in which representatives from opposing views comment on an issue.
- Many people believe that violent video games, when played regularly, lead to real-life violence.
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- See this link for a sortable table of sociological videos: http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Introduction_to_Sociology/Sociological_Videos
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- The life course approach analyzes people's lives within structural, social, and cultural contexts.
- The life course approach, also known as the life course perspective, or life course theory, refers to an approach developed in the 1960s for analyzing people's lives within structural, social, and cultural contexts.
- This is an example that demonstrates the influence of developmental stages on legal determinations of life stages, and thus, attitudes towards people at different stages of the human life course.
- This man is well into his later years and depicts life in its final stages.
- This picture depicts an individual at the earliest of life stages.