Meaning population
What does population mean? Here you find 158 meanings of the word population. You can also add a definition of population yourself

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population


See: Study population.
Source: medicinenet.com (offline)

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population


(1) Refers to all the individuals of a given species in a specific area or region at a certain time. Its significance is more than that of a number of individuals because not all individuals are ident [..]
Source: physicalgeography.net

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population


A group of individuals of one species that live in a particular geographic area.
Source: phschool.com

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population


Totality of related items under consideration. Note 1: A clearly defined part of a population is called a subpopulation. The term ‘population segment’ is sometimes used as a synonym for subpopulation. [..]
Source: sis.nlm.nih.gov

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population


Assemblage of individuals with defined characteristics.
Source: sis.nlm.nih.gov

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population


 The entire set of individuals to which generalizations will be made based on an experimental sample.
Source: apa.org (offline)

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population


The entire set of data from which a sample is selected and about which an IS auditor wishes to draw conclusions.
Source: isaca.org

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population


A population is the entire group of objects or individuals considered for a survey.
Source: mathgoodies.com

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population


A group of objects or organisms of the same kind.
Source: prb.org (offline)

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population


All members of a specified group.
Source: cfainstitute.org (offline)

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population


The target group under investigation, as in all students enrolled in first-year composition courses taught in traditional classrooms. The population is the entire set under consideration. Samples are [..]
Source: writing.colostate.edu

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population


The number of individuals residing in a geographic area. The population figure is based on the most recent official census and only includes those individuals who permanently reside within the jurisdiction served. Population figures do not include daily or seasonal population surges.
Source: fema.gov (offline)

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population


1610s, from Late Latin populationem (nominative populatio) "a people; a multitude," as if from Latin populus "a people" (see people (n.)). Population explosion is first attested 19 [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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population


whole set of individuals, items or data from which a statistical sample is drawn. • a census is an example of collecting data from the whole population. • sample - selected section, population - whole [..]
Source: amathsdictionaryforkids.com

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population


The totality of cases that conforms to some designated specifications.
Source: ama.org (offline)

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population


total number of people or organisms in a particular area.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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population


There are approximately 13-14 million Jews in the world. For details and links to population resources, see Jewish Population.
Source: jewfaq.org

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population


Either The set of all possible observations of a phenomenon under analysis, or A group of individual persons, objects, or item from which samples are taken for statistical analysis. [D03543]
Source: maxwideman.com

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population


A group of people with a common link, such as the same medical condition or living in the same area or sharing the same characteristics. The population for a clinical trial is all the people the test [..]
Source: nice.org.uk

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population


A group of organisms of the same species relatively isolated from other groups of the same species. A locally interbreeding population.
Source: nativeseednetwork.org (offline)

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population


the people who inhabit a territory or state; "the population seemed to be well fed and clothed" a group of organisms of the same species inhabiting a given area; &quo [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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population


A collection of units being studied. Units can be people, places, objects, epochs, drugs, procedures, or many other things. Much of statistics is concerned with estimating numerical properties (parame [..]
Source: stat.berkeley.edu

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population


the people, or the number of the people living in any country, city, town or village
Source: eenglish.in

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population


A population is a group of people who inhabit a geographic region or share a common origin.
Source: familytreedna.com

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population


The entire group to which research is hoping to generalize (e.g., males, adults, U.S. citizens).
Source: allpsych.com

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population


A group of the same species in the same area that have the potential to interbreed with one another. © 2014 Nature Education
Source: nature.com

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population


A group of individuals of the same species, occupying a defined area, and usually isolated to some degree from other similar groups. Populations can be relatively reproductively isolated and adapted t [..]
Source: biodiversitya-z.org

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population


In statistics, population refers to the entire group about which data are being collected.
Source: mathway.com

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population


In social research this term refers to the total group of people that the researcher is studying. For very large groups, sampling is usually undertaken.
Source: faculty.rsu.edu (offline)

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population


Definition A group of individuals or items that share one or more characteristics from which data can be gathered and analyzed.
Source: investorwords.com

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population


A statistical term that takes into account all of the units that are of interest for a certain situation.
Source: erieri.com

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population


noun. 1. the entire amount of people in a rendered geographical location. 2. with regard to statistics, a theoretically defined, total group of items from which a sampling is taken in effort to attain [..]
Source: psychologydictionary.org

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population


A term referring to the people living in a particular area.
Source: familysearch.org

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population


A subject heading used in the FamilySearch Catalog to categorize information that describes the people who live in an area.
Source: familysearch.org

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population


bafelkerung
Source: yiddishdictionaryonline.com (offline)

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population


population (pop)
Source: users.ugent.be

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population


All of the people who live in a place and the total number of these people.
Source: canadiangeographic.com

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population


When conducting research there are lots of factors to consider. Psychologists may want to study, for example, the effect of some new test on all college students, but this is obviously not possible. I [..]
Source: alleydog.com

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population


All individuals of a species found in a specific area
Source: myfwc.com

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population


(L: populus=people; populare=to inhabit) the inhabitants of a place, usually meaning the number of specimens of one species. It is often very difficult to estimate the population of a species: obscuri [..]
Source: seafriends.org.nz

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population


A group of organisms, usually a group of sexual organisms that interbreed and share a gene pool, and are normally relatively isolated from other groups of the same species
Source: fossilmall.com

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population


The totality of a closely related number of individual organisms that belong to the same species and live in the same geographical area and interact with each other through sexual (or asexual for bacteria) reproduction.
Source: whatislife.com (offline)

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population


Community of humans, animals or plants from the same species.
Source: efsa.europa.eu

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population


All the individuals of a species in a given area.
Source: nrcs.usda.gov (offline)

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population


A group of organisms, usually a group of sexual organisms that interbreed and share a gene pool, and are normally relatively isolated from other groups of the same species.
Source: fossilmuseum.net

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population


group of individuals of the same species that live in the same area
Source: ontrack-media.net

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population


All the members of a single species living together in the same location or habitat.
Source: bigpictureeducation.com

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population


A group of organisms of the same species that live in the same area at the same time.
Source: mdk12.msde.maryland.gov

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population


A statistical population, or universe, is the entire collection of measurements of the variable being studied.
Source: brendan.com (offline)

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population


The number of people in a given area.
Source: feedyourbrains.com

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population


The number of people living in a place.
Source: year7geo.com

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population

Source: texasaquaticscience.org

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population


A clearly defined group of people or objects. Samples are drawn from the population and statistical results that are derived from random samples can be generalized to the whole population.
Source: researchconnections.org

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population


group of organisms of the same species living in a specific geographical area. 
Source: alanpedia.com

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population


A group of individuals of the same species occupying a given area.
Source: enviroliteracy.org (offline)

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population


In the case of NAEP, the population of interest is the entire collection of American students in public or private schools at grades 4, 8, or 12 (or in the case of the long-term trend assessments, at [..]
Source: nationsreportcard.gov

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population


In the case of NAEP, the population of interest is the entire collection of American students in public or private schools at grades 4, 8, or 12 (or in the case of the long-term trend assessments, at [..]
Source: nces.ed.gov

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population


The entire collection of people or objects you are studying.
Source: connectedmath.msu.edu

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population


For the purposes of appendices in the Public Service Commission (PSC) Annual Report, the number of active employees in organizations under the exclusive appointment authority of the PSC (employees of organizations named in Schedule I, most of Schedule IV and some agencies in Schedule V to the Financial Administration Act). The Population count repr [..]
Source: psc-cfp.gc.ca (offline)

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population


In demography, all the people living in a given geographic area. In research, the total number of cases with a particular characteristic.
Source: asanet.org

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population


A population is the complete set of items that belong to a specified grouping.
Source: qualityresearchinternational.com

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population


In scientific language the whole group being studied. Depending on the study the population may be, for example, voters in St. Louis, physicians in California or all residents of the United States.
Source: slowburn.com (offline)

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population


In the legal sense, "Population" is sometimes defined as the population according to the most recent United States decennial census.
Source: definitions.uslegal.com

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population


Countries by Population Countries by Population FlagCountry CodeCountryPopulation 2015 CN China (Mainland) 1,378,760,000 IN India 1,331,030,000 US United States 324,484,000 ID Indonesia 260,581,000 BR [..]
Source: mindprod.com

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population


(n) the people who inhabit a territory or state(n) a group of organisms of the same species inhabiting a given area(n) (statistics) the entire aggregation of items from which samples can be drawn(n) t [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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population


the entire collection of individuals or items from which samples are drawn.
Source: dosits.org (offline)

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population


a group of individuals of one species, found within a particular area.
Source: coml.org

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population


A group of animals of the same species that occupies a particular area; usually refers to a group that is somewhat separate from other groups of the same species.
Source: animaldiversity.org

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population


A group of interbreeding organisms that is relatively isolated (i.e. demographically uncoupled) from other such groups and is likely adapted to the local habitat.
Source: pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca (offline)

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population


The number of people living in a certain area.
Source: mcwdn.org (offline)

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population


frequentia
Source: latin-dictionary.org (offline)

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population


A group of interbreeding organisms that represents the level of organization at which speciation begins. In other words, a population is a group within a species that shares common ecological and genetic features compared to other individuals of that species. (FAO Fisheries Department)
Source: seafoodchoices.com (offline)

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population


all the individuals of a particular species that live in a specific geographic area; a species may be made up of one or more populations
Source: khanacademy.org

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population


[1] The number of persons living in a zone, region, or other defined spatial unit, often categorized by socio-economic characteristics or housing type. An endogenous, variable in land use models and a [..]
Source: its.uci.edu

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population


The complete group of units to which survey results are to apply. (These units may be persons, animals, objects, businesses, trips, etc.)
Source: statcan.gc.ca

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population


The total number of all possible subjects or elements which could be included in a study. If the data are valid, the results of research on a sample of subjects drawn from a much larger population can [..]
Source: st-andrews.ac.uk

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population


A group of organisms of one species, occupying a defined area and usually isolated to some degree from other similar groups.
Source: natureconservancy.ca

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population


The total number of people who live within a market. The population can be segmented by key demographic groups. Populations (also referred to as universe estimates) of defined geographic areas are the [..]
Source: saundersoutdoor.com

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population


The total number of people or a target group who live within a market. Population of adults 18+ or other target groups within a defined market serves as the base universe from which rating points are [..]
Source: outfrontmedia.com

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population


The total number of persons inhabiting a country, town, or other area. A population may also be defined by some other characteristic (such as biological, legal, social, or economic) than living in a p [..]
Source: ilo.org

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population


The totality of items under consideration. Every clearly defined part of a population is called a ``subpopulation''. In the case of a random variable, the probability distribution is conside [..]
Source: ilo.org

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population


A collection of individuals (plants or animals), all of the same species and in a defined geographical area.
Source: cieem.net (offline)

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population


A group or number of people living within a specified area or sharing similar characteristics (such as occupation or age).
Source: atsdr.cdc.gov

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population


A group of interbreeding organisms occupying a particular space; the number of humans or other living creatures in a designated area.
Source: infohouse.p2ric.org

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population


A group of interbreeding organisms occupying a particular space; the number of humans or other living creatures in a designated area.
Source: ehso.com

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population


The number of humans or other living creatures in a designated area.
Source: deq.idaho.gov

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population


is a group of closely related and interbreeding organisms.
Source: edugreen.teri.res.in

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population


a group of actually or potentially breeding organisms coexisting spatially and temporally.
Source: cpp.edu (offline)

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population


The total number of individuals inhabiting a particular region or area.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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population


The inhabitants of rural areas or of small towns classified as rural.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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population


The inhabitants of peripheral or adjacent areas of a city or town.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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population


Patient groups that may include those with special needs, homeless people, those with low Income, or in remote communities and Minority Groups
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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population


The inhabitants of a city or town, including metropolitan areas and suburban areas.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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population


Groups of Persons whose range of options is severely limited, who are frequently subjected to Coercion in their Decision Making, or who may be compromised in their ability to give Informed Consent.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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population


The total number of individuals inhabiting a particular region or area.
Source: medicaldictionaryweb.com

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population


A community of potentially breeding individuals, usually at a given locality or within a limited geographic region.
Source: archaeologyinfo.com

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population


a group of units sharing a common defined characteristic
Source: carodog.eu (offline)

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population


All of the individuals from the same species (or closely-related species) that are closely associated and that occupy a certain area.
Source: wolf.org

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population


all the organisms that constitute a specific group or occur in a specified habitat
Source: kerbtier.de

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population


All people, male and female, child and adult, living in a given geographic area.
Source: hoosierdata.in.gov

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population


A group of individuals with common ancestry that is much more likely to mate with one another than with individuals from another such group.
Source: aboutbioscience.org (offline)

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population


Members of a species that live together in the same area, and whose subsequent generations maintain uniform genetic character.
Source: learnaboutbutterflies.com

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population


The total number of people who inhabit an area, which could b a country, town or area.
Source: dlsweb.rmit.edu.au (offline)

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population


A group of individuals of one species that inhabit the same area at the same time. A population forms a reproductive community. One species can develop multiple populations at different locations.
Source: worldoceanreview.com

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population


All the plants, animals or microorganisms of the same species in a particular ecosystem.
Source: gerrymarten.com

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population


A group of coexisting individuals that interbreed if they are sexually reproductive.
Source: chesapeakebay.net

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population


Organisms of the same species that occupy the same area.
Source: dddmag.com (offline)

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population


A discrete portion of a species that interbreeds. If isolated from other populations of the species for long periods of time, it may evolve into a separate race or species.
Source: bcn.boulder.co.us

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population


A group of individuals of the same species occupying a given area.
Source: amyhremleyfoundation.org (offline)

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population


Iran, Iraq, Lebanon Iran, world India, Pakistan, East Africa Yemen Saudi Arabia, Indonesia. Many others Islam The religion started in Saudi Arabia by the prophet Muhammad about 622 AD. There are t [..]
Source: teachinghearts.org

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population


A group of organisms of the same species relatively isolated from other groups of the same species. See deme.
Source: groups.molbiosci.northwestern.edu

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population


In the Sphere Handbook, depending on context, this term refers to individuals and groups such as families and communities. It is often expressed as the "disaster-affected population".
Source: sphereproject.org (offline)

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population


A group of individuals of the same species that occupy a particular geographic area or region. In general, individuals within a population interbreed and exchange genes with each other.
Source: abtreegene.com

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population


A group of individual trees having some characteristics in common, either location, family ancestry, or intended use.
Source: esf.edu (offline)

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population


A group of individuals of the same species occupying a certain area and sharing a common gene pool.
Source: nzlizards.landcareresearch.co.nz (offline)

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population


A population is all the organisms that both belong to the same group or species and live in the same geographical area.
Source: tracytuten.com (offline)

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population


De facto population in a country, area or region as of 1 July of the year indicated. Figures are presented in thousands.
Source: esa.un.org

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population


Estimated Resident Population
Source: delwp.vic.gov.au (offline)

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population


Estimated Resident Population (ERP)
Source: delwp.vic.gov.au (offline)

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population


The entity (some common examples are groups of people, organizations or places) your initiative seeks to have an impact on, e.g. students in a certain school, parents, residents of a certain neighborh [..]
Source: theoryofchange.org

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population


The total number of inhabitants of a given area or country. In sampling, the population may refer to the units from which the sample is drawn, not necessarily the total population of people.
Source: cs.columbia.edu

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population


A group of persons identified by geographic location, organizational affiliation, or non-clinical characteristics.
Source: qualitymeasures.ahrq.gov

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population


This is usually a subjective assessment of abundance; population numbers are given where available.
Source: iucnredlist.org (offline)

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population


A well-defined group (of people, firms, cities, and so on) that is the focus of a statistical or econometric analysis.
Source: et.bs.ehu.es (offline)

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population


The number of people aged 15+ who live within the TSA of a given station.
Source: rajar.co.uk (offline)

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population


A group of conspecific organisms that occupy a more or less well defined geographic region and exhibit reproductive continuity from generation to generation; ecological and reproductive interactions are more frequent among these individuals than with members of other populations of the same species.
Source: sites.sinauer.com (offline)

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population


A subgroup of a species coexisting in the same time and area. Population may also be used in a different sense to refer to the number of individuals in a defined group.
Source: bagheera.com

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population


A population is every person in a category of interest. (Source: Glossary of Statistical Terms, http://www.stat.berkeley.edu/~stark/SticiGui/Text/gloss.htm)
Source: childhealthdata.org

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population


A group of people who are cared for by a particular provider, live in a particular community, or share a similar characteristic (e.g., condition, age, gender, race, or ethnicity).
Source: hcp-lan.org

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population


Group of interbreeding individuals and their offspring. In asexual species, this definition cannot be applied; in this case, a population is a group of phenotypically matching individuals living in th [..]
Source: evolution.unibas.ch

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population


Population, as used in the Census includes citizens of Canada and landed immigrants resident in Canada and abroad if living on a military base or attached to a diplomatic mission or aboard a merchant vessel of Canadian registry. Included also are refugees and their families living with them and persons holding student or employment authorizations o [..]
Source: bcstats.gov.bc.ca (offline)

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population


  A group of people living in a certain area; or the number of people in a certain area.
Source: adph.org

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population


The number of people in the universe or target group.
Source: barb.co.uk (offline)

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population


In a research context, population refers to that group, set, universe, or macrocosm of study participants that is the focus of an investigation. When such a set of study participants is accessible to the extent that each member can potentially be selected for inclusion in the study, it is then known as an accessible population.
Source: amtamassage.org (offline)

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population


a group of organisms of one species that interbreed and live in the same place at the same time (e.g. deer population).
Source: fauna-flora.org

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population


  The entire set of elements for which statistical information is desired, defines a population.  Examples are the group of tourists that visited Malta in 2009, the totality of babies born in France in January 2010 or the set of beer bottles produced by a German brewery on a specific day.  Hence, it needs to be clearly defined [..]
Source: fernuni-hagen.de (offline)

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population


Same as STOCK.
Source: nechakowhitesturgeon.org

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population


Data on populations in the United States are often collected and published according to several different definitions. Various statistical systems then use the appropriate population for calculating rates.
Source: agingstats.gov (offline)

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population


A group of organisms of one species that interbreed and live in the same place at the same time. Both research and management in Galapagos tend to focus on populations rather than species. This allows [..]
Source: galapagos.org

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population


All persons in a particular group.
Source: nsc.edu

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population


The number of people living in a specific geographic area at a set time. Population usually refers to the usual residents of that area.
Source: finance.alberta.ca (offline)

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population


All people living in a geographic area.
Source: ucsd.libguides.com

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population


A. For the purposes of natural-resource planning, the set of individuals of the same species that occurs within the natural resource of interest (USFS, modified).
Source: acwi.gov (offline)

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population


the organisms inhabiting a particular area or biotope.
Source: wef.org (offline)

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population


a group of one type of living things in a particular area. pore:
Source: audubonadventures.org

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population


The total number of people in a certain geographic area or in a specific group. 
Source: dhs.wisconsin.gov

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population


A group of individuals, sharing some featurein common and living in a particular defined area, that is considered without regard to interrelationship among them.
Source: web.deu.edu.tr

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population


Population figures are from the year 2000 U.S. Census.
Source: maps.massgis.state.ma.us

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population


The domain of interest of a sampling study. The population in the sense of sampling is the set of all “elements” for which estimates shall be produced. In forest monitoring, the population is usually [..]
Source: wiki.awf.forst.uni-goettingen.de

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population


In ecology
Source: worldlandtrust.org

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population


All observations of the phenomena being studied, e.g. all software modules, all code reviews, all programmers [ISERN]
Source: informatique.umons.ac.be

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population


(biology) population collection of organisms
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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population


In ecology, this refers to individuals of the same species that occur together in time and space.
Source: celp.ca (offline)

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Population typically refers the number of people in a single area whether it be a city or town, region, country, or the world. Governments typically quantify the size of the resident population within [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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population


Population typically refers the number of people in a single area whether it be a city or town, region, country, or the world. Governments typically quantify the size of the resident population within [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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population


Population typically refers the number of people in a single area whether it be a city or town, region, country, or the world. Governments typically quantify the size of the resident population within [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Population is the second studio album by Canadian indie rock band The Most Serene Republic. It was recorded and mixed by Ryan Mills, Mike Kuehn and Ryan Lenssen at Sleepytown Sound in Toronto. The alb [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Population may refer to: Population, a summation of all the organisms of the same group or species, who live in the same geographical area. Statistical population, which is a set of similar items or [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org





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