Relative effectiveness refers to comparing the effectiveness of two or more interventions or treatments in achieving a desired outcome within a specific context. It involves assessing the benefits, risks, and costs of each intervention to determine which one is most suitable for a particular situation or population. Relative effectiveness studies help inform decision-making in healthcare and other fields by providing evidence on what works best in real-world settings.
Ann Kirton has written: 'The relative effectiveness of attributional descriptions and physical feature descriptions in the recognition of faces'
As posed, your question has no obvious meaning, particularly "biological effectiveness". Benefit is also a relative term, you have to compare to something else. What? Also, precisely what use had you in mind? Caustic soda has very many uses.
Yes, but only relative to other antibiotics used on the same species. The zone of inhabition will very between different bacterial species.
Robert Brendan O'Meara has written: 'A study of the relative effectiveness of substituting specimen photographs for laboratory drawings in the teaching of college freshman biology courses'
effectiveness
Effectiveness is a noun.
effectiveness
Harriet Lynn Johnson has written: 'The relative effectiveness and efficiency of hands-on, demonstration and videotape laboratories for non-science major students' -- subject(s): Achievement tests
Ralph R Peters has written: 'Assessment of the relative benefits of solar energy systems for application to a mixed-load community' -- subject(s): Solar energy, Cost effectiveness
No, using two methods of birth control increases effectiveness or leaves effectiveness unchanged.
Determining the effectiveness of sugar as preservatives
Leadership effectiveness is best assessed