Significance of Significant change
Synonyms: Major change, Substantial change, Profound change, Drastic change, Substantial transformation
In Dutch: Belangrijke verandering; In Finnish: Merkittävä muutos; In Spanish: Cambio significativo
The below excerpts are indicatory and do represent direct quotations or translations. It is your responsibility to fact check each reference.
The concept of Significant change in local and regional sources
Significant change encompasses transformative shifts in the Indian National Congress’s strategies, societal or religious practices, the Sindhi community's fortunes, and twentieth-century literary values, reflecting impactful adaptations to evolving circumstances and challenges.
From: Triveni Journal
(1) A noticeable and impactful transformation in societal or religious practices.[1] (2) Refers to the important transformations in the strategy and goals of the Indian National Congress over time.[2] (3) Transformations in literary values and styles that occurred in the twentieth century as a response to post-war disillusionment.[3]
The concept of Significant change in scientific sources
The keyphrase "Significant change" pertains to measurable and statistically meaningful improvements in study outcomes, behavioral alterations, and patient health following treatment, highlighting the treatment's effectiveness through careful statistical analysis.
From: The Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences
(1) This refers to a statistically meaningful alteration in a measurement, indicating a real effect, which is observed in blood pressure readings.[4] (2) This indicates a notable difference in the measured parameters, indicating a statistically relevant alteration in the patient's health status.[5] (3) This is a symptom required for a diagnosis of MDD, in addition to persistent depressed mood or loss of the ability to experience pleasure, and is an important criterion.[6] (4) This refers to a real and meaningful difference in the levels of a biomarker, and it is important to estimate this given the variation in results.[7] (5) The study measured the differences in the stress and well-being of the participants before and after the intervention, but there were no large differences.[8]