Generic Acomplia (Rimonabant, Acomplia® equivalent)
Rimonabant is an anorectic anti-obesity medication. It is a CB1 cannabinoid receptor antagonist. Rimonabant has been found effective in stopping food craving, and is used to assist in losing weight. It is indicated for use in conjunction with diet and exercise for patients with a body mass index greater than 30 kg/m2, and recently was also proven effective in smoking cessation. This is a non-controlled weight loss solution with proven results.
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20mg
| Quantity | Price | Price per pill | Returning customer price | Bonus | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30 | $ 89.00 | $ 2.97 | $ 80.00 | ---- | Add to cart |
| 60 | $ 155.00 | $ 2.58 | $ 139.00 | ---- | Add to cart |
| 90 | $ 189.00 | $ 2.10 | $ 170.00 | ---- | Add to cart |
Drug Medical Information
AGE AND BEHAVIOR: INTELLIGENCE – ORGANIZATION OF ABILITIES - EDUCATION
One of the studies on the organization of intelligence in relation to age was particularly important because it focused upon the role of education in intelligence, and it turned up a result related to the "classic aging pattern." Birren and Morrison (1961) were able to re-analyze the WAIS standardization data, based upon the scores of people in the age range 25-64. Rather than compare factor groupings of several age groups, they analyzed the 11 WAIS subtests along with both age and education in the same matrix of correlations. That is, the age and education of each person were intercorrelated with the WAIS subtest scores just as if age and education were scores themselves. Birren and Morrison extracted a large component of general intelligence which accounted for approximately half of the variance; but of greater interest to the study of aging, the age of the person was not at all important to this component. The education level was very important to this component, and it contributed as much to it as did any one of the 11 subtests. Age was very important in their second component which accounted for approximately 11 percent of the total variance. Birren and Morrison referred to the second component as an Aging component which contained subtests "positively related to age, e.g., vocabulary, and a group negatively related to age, e.g., digit symbol." They wrote that, "This aging component may have within it at least two concurrent, independent processes operating in opposite directions" (Birren and Morrison, 1961). This is another aspect of the "classic aging pattern," i.e., the age-sensitive and age-insensitive test groupings. These results suggest that the educational level of a person is more important than his age in regard to his mental ability. It is very clear, then, that in studying the effects of age, it is important to evaulate the effects of education. Birren and Morrison (1961) emphasized that the failure to control or remove the effects of education by statistical or experimental means exaggerates the decremental effects of aging since older people tend to have fewer years of schooling. *258\220\8*
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