(a.) Having faith or trust; confident; undoubting; firm.
(a.) Having the nature of a trust; fiduciary; as, fiducial power.
Example Sentences:
(1) The effect of exclusion versus inclusion of the fiducial timing point optimizing routine in the signal averaging program was examined in 21 patients.
(2) This includes the analysis of the transfer characteristics of the image detection system, the use of laser-induced fiducials for deformation correction and alignment, the control of section thickness by EELS and the use of ESI to image thick sections.
(3) By using a slope-ratio bioassay model, the relative biological availability of endogenous and added zinc in milk-based formula was estimated to be 0.86 and that of soy-based formula 0.67 (zinc sulphate = 1.00) with corresponding 95% fiducial limits being 0.82 to 0.91 and 0.62 to 0.71.
(4) This template is subsequently superimposed on the radiographs in a longitudinal series by the structural method, which permits the transference of two fiducial points.
(5) This article describes a new body stereotaxic system that defines a fiducial point by means of a skin localization device placed directly on the patient.
(6) These rDNA signals are used as fiducial markers when aligning the two fluorescent images.
(7) A method is described for calculating fiducial intervals for the serological potency estimates, and it is shown that these intervals are no larger than, and are in fact probably smaller than, those obtained from quantal challenge tests.
(8) We present here a solution to the problem of alignment for single-axis tomography using fiducial markers.
(9) Verification of the accuracy of the stereotactic positioning is obtained with computer-generated overlays of the vascular malformation, stereotactic fiducial markers, and bony landmarks on orthogonal radiographs immediately prior to treatment.
(10) For each cardiac and average cycle the amplitude at 6 physiologic fiducial markers are measured and derived calculations are made.
(11) Developed procedures for use on a microscope equipped with a precision scanning stage allow registration of the image coordinates (X-Y) for any original or composite field and the alignment of one of these fields along the depth (Z) axis by means of external, machined fiducial marks in serial sections.
(12) A dynamic multi-image environment allows for simultaneous display of magnetic resonance, computed tomography, digital subtraction angiography, and positron emission tomography images in multiple windows, adjusted for common coordinates with reference to stereotactic frame fiducial markers.
(13) This system for signal averaging of the Frank vectorcardiogram incorporates several important features: 1, simultaneous analogue to digital conversion of three orthogonal leads; 2, interactive editing of the data; 3, optimization of the fiducial timing point using a template derived from the calculated QRS vector magnitude; and 4, simultaneous display of both the averaged recording and the noise level at high amplification, which facilitates the assessment of low amplitude signals in the ST segment.
(14) LD50 data with 95% fiducial limits are reported for each mixture and tests for additive joint toxicity were made.
(15) The average fiducial limits rates were less than 20%.
(16) Since the method relies on anatomic information in the images rather than on external fiducial markers, it can be applied retrospectively.
(17) Determination of the position in space of the plate with control points in relation to the plate with fiducial marks requires more consideration.
(18) A major benefit is the inclusion of a routine to optimize the QRS fiducial timing point.
(19) The results indicate that heading perception is robust against degradation of the flow-field by the presence of noise or by the reduction of the lifetime of the fiducial points.
(20) The localisation of the aberration requires induction of the arrhythmia, simultaneous measurement of activity from many (100-200) sites over the surface of the heart, attachment of fiducial markers to this data, and display of the activation sequence in the form of an isochronous map.
Fiduciary
Definition:
(n.) One who holds a thing in trust for another; a trustee.
(n.) One who depends for salvation on faith, without works; an Antinomian.
Example Sentences:
(1) As the authors rightly point out, much of the blame for the failure of directors to act is their mistaken view that maximising shareholder value is a company’s legal obligation or director’s fiduciary responsibility.
(2) Pension funds, which have a fiduciary duty to make money, have no business owning any of these companies.
(3) At the same time, around half of total institutional assets ($45trn) under management now subscribe to responsible investing principles, and climate risk management now needs to become part of investors’ fiduciary duty.
(4) "Our political leaders seem alarmingly content to lurch from one near-crisis to the next, and it is our hope that this new framework helps encourage policymakers to meet their fiduciary responsibilities and come up with a bipartisan plan to fix the debt," she said.
(5) The Fifa spokesperson Delia Fischer told the Mail & Guardian: “As our statement already says, Safa instructed Fifa that the diaspora legacy programme should be administered and implemented directly by the president of Concacaf who at that time was deputy chairman of the finance committee and who should act as the fiduciary of the diaspora legacy programme fund of $10m.
(6) The authors propose a rebuttable presumption that sexual contact between an attorney and client was obtained through the attorney's exercise of undue influence and was therefore a breach of the attorney's fiduciary duties to the client.
(7) Given this, the question then becomes under what circumstances and conditions a simple internal conflict may escalate into the problem of divided loyalties or fiduciary ambiguities.
(8) He says the FCA and the Bank of England should include these aspects in fiduciary responsibility.
(9) The sole share in the new company was issued to Stephen Jones's company, Jirehouse Fiduciaries Nominees.
(10) The board of directors never questioned this purchase, which Hampton termed a failure of their fiduciary responsibilities," the cable said.
(11) In this way, the care of the cancer patient can become a truly fiduciary responsibility.
(12) To suggest that there is any reason to settle prior to the adjudication of the pending criminal cases is obscene and without regard to the fiduciary responsibility owed to the taxpaying citizens of the city,” Lt Gene Ryan said in a statement.
(13) In January 2009 the family's lawyer, Bashir Ghazialam, filed court papers alleging "breach of trust, breach of fiduciary duty and fraud".
(14) Though insisting that interaction between them is two-way, not one-way, the author insisted that the relation is basically asymmetrical because of the physician's expertise in health matters, gained through training and experience, and his special fiduciary responsibility for the care of the sick.
(15) Shareholders give directors the power to run a company and a breach of that fiduciary duty is a reflection of a lapse in that honesty.
(16) Rethink what fiduciary responsibility means in this changing world.
(17) I have said before and I will say it again, if corporations continue to invest in new fossil fuel exploration, new fossil fuel exploitation they are really in breach of their fiduciary duty because the science is abundantly clear.
(18) The Article suggests that the supremacy of self-medication is consistent with competition policy, the medical profession's fiduciary duty to clients, reduced medical costs and improved health.
(19) Asked about the importance of a fiduciary responsibility, Simon Morris of law firm CMS Cameron McKenna said: "A fiduciary duty is about honesty.
(20) After discussing how physicians express this ideal in practice, Moline suggests that it is possible in almost any occupation to express the spirit of the paradigm professional by putting the good of the weaker party over one's own interest, maintaining standards of strict confidentiality regarding personal information, and treating one's working relationships with others as fiduciary.