As everyone will soon tell you, everyone is different so no specific age can be determined but there wrong.
It is at the conclusion of puberty that males stop growing. Unlike females, males finish 'maturing' at the age of 18!
This is a specific guideline and it should be noted that males usually stop growing before they are fully mature, but as a term, males stop growing at 18 years of age.
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Whereas age-standardization adjusts for underlying differences in the age distribution of the combined male-female population, age/sex-standardized rates adjust for differences in the population distribution by both age and sex simultaneously.Age/sex-standardized rates are NOT the same as sex-specific age-adjusted rates.Like age, sex has a powerful influence on disease rates. Males and females have markedly different incidence, prevalence, and mortality rates for certain diseases and males have a shorter life expectancy than females.Therefore, in order to fully account for these differences, researchers may want to adjust for both age and sex when making comparisons for some conditions.The calculation for age/sex adjustment differs from age-standardization in that the individual age-specific rates are stratified by sex and are applied to the standard population stratified by sex.The requirements for the calculation of age/sex standardized rates are:Study population by age and sexStandard population by age and sexNumber of events for males and females in the study populationFormulaei(f) is the number of events for females in age group iei(m) is the number of events for males in age group ipi(f) is the number of females in age group i the study populationpi(m) is the number of males in age group i the study populationPi(f) is the number of females in age group i in the Standard populationPi(m) is the number of males in age group i in the Standard populationFor each age stratum the expected number of events is the sum of the expected number of events for males plus the expected number of events for females in that stratumAge-specific expected events= Ei=[(ei(m) /pi(m) ) *Pi(m) ] + [ (ei(f) /pi(f) ) *Pi(f) ]The age/sex Standardized Rate (per 100 000) is the sum of all expected events divided by the total standard population= [ Sum(Ei)/Sum(Pi)] * 1000
Age is none of the items listed. Age is ratio data.
Employee age is a ratio level of measurement. Requirements of ratio level of measurement are: A) has a natural zero (in case of age is birth) and B) differences and ratio's are meaningful (for age 4 is twice as old as 2).
It is just a factor or categorical variable. On the other hand for instance, If your age is continuous (rather than age brackets) then it would be a covariate. If your age is given as age-brackets, then it wont be covariate.
There is no way to stop growing taller. You will stop growing usually around the age of 18.
it depends on the person but it can sometimes be from 15 - 18
Dude that's so totally awsome!
Most males reach their maximum height by the age of 18-21, although some may continue to grow until their mid-20s. After this point, growth plates in the bones fuse and the individual stops growing taller.
because their body chromosones require their body mass to stop at this age. males are taller because of their xy chromosones and therefore are taller but body mass still blocks at 18.
Most people do not stop growing at age 13, so it's extremely probable that you will become taller.
This varies according to individual differences, but generally people do not grow any taller after the age of 20. However, some bones such as the pelvis and the skull never stop growing, according to researchers.
Most people stop growing at 12-17 years old. (Your ears keep growing until you die!)
I am 15 female I am 5ft5 I have not grown in 9 months so I probly have finished growing now I dont know about males
Most people stop growing after age 17, and nearly all have stopped growing after age 18-19. Anyone who is still growing at age 22 probably has some kind of growth disorder, such as acromegaly.
It depends if you are a female or a male. Females usually stop growing at 17 years but males keep growing until they reach their early 20s.
Males who are only 16 of age can still experience growing pains because they're still growing.