Stereology: Difference between revisions

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An important question might be, "How much copper can be retrieved by mining a given deposit?" Another important question might be, "If a drug is given to a patient, do any cells die?" Another interesting question to answer might be, "Even though these two ancient pots look alike, were they made from the same raw materials?"
An important question might be, "How much copper can be retrieved by mining a given deposit?" Another important question might be, "If a drug is given to a patient, do any cells die?" Another interesting question to answer might be, "Even though these two ancient pots look alike, were they made from the same raw materials?"


Stereology is used in many diverse fields including [[paleontology]], [[forest science]], [[medicine]], [[pathology]], [[archeology]], [[petrology]], [[dentistry]], [[anatomy]], [[aquaculture]], etc.
Each of these questions is fairly difficult to directly measure. Can the entire deposit be evaluated without mining it in the first place? Is it possible to count the millions or billions of cells found in many tissues in an organism? Is it possible to determine the materials thatmake up a pot without destroying it?
 
The work to complete tasks may be too arduous, too dangerous, too expensive, or destructive of the objects being studied. For that reason sampling is performed. A sample is a piece taken from the original object or group of objects and used to represent the bigger group. For example, one or more rocks may be chosen as sampled of the rocks found in an ore deposit. A piece of tissue may be chosen or removed from a large organ to  determine what is inside of the organ. A small piece of a pot may be removed and used to study the pot.
 
As you might expect the manner in which the sample is chosen is important. Getting the sampling correct is the second big step in this process. The first step was deciding what is to be studied.
 
Stereology is used in many diverse fields including [[paleontology]], [[forest science]], [[medicine]], [[pathology]], [[archaeology]], [[petrology]], [[dentistry]], [[anatomy]], [[aquaculture]], etc.


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 14:45, 9 May 2007

Stereology is the science of estimating or measuring geometric quantities. A geometric quantity is something like length or surface area. Other common geometric quantities are volume and the number of objects. Estimation is a way to get an idea of how much there is without actually having to measure the value.

A few examples should make this easier to understand. Suppose that the question is, "How many trees are in a forest?" Ther might very well be millions of trees in any given forest. It does not make sense to count every tree. What does it matter if the answer is 23 million trees or 23 million and 5 trees? Besides, who is going to be able to count every single tree. It is too much work. The solution is estimate the number of trees and get a good idea of how many trees there are.

An important question might be, "How much copper can be retrieved by mining a given deposit?" Another important question might be, "If a drug is given to a patient, do any cells die?" Another interesting question to answer might be, "Even though these two ancient pots look alike, were they made from the same raw materials?"

Each of these questions is fairly difficult to directly measure. Can the entire deposit be evaluated without mining it in the first place? Is it possible to count the millions or billions of cells found in many tissues in an organism? Is it possible to determine the materials thatmake up a pot without destroying it?

The work to complete tasks may be too arduous, too dangerous, too expensive, or destructive of the objects being studied. For that reason sampling is performed. A sample is a piece taken from the original object or group of objects and used to represent the bigger group. For example, one or more rocks may be chosen as sampled of the rocks found in an ore deposit. A piece of tissue may be chosen or removed from a large organ to determine what is inside of the organ. A small piece of a pot may be removed and used to study the pot.

As you might expect the manner in which the sample is chosen is important. Getting the sampling correct is the second big step in this process. The first step was deciding what is to be studied.

Stereology is used in many diverse fields including paleontology, forest science, medicine, pathology, archaeology, petrology, dentistry, anatomy, aquaculture, etc.

External links