extended valuation - meaning and definition. What is extended valuation
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What (who) is extended valuation - definition

Valuation domain; Center (valuation ring)

Business valuation         
PROCESS OF DETERMINING ECONOMIC VALUE OF AN OWNER'S INTEREST
Corporate valuation; Enterprise valuation; Marketability; Discount for lack of marketability; Total Beta
Business valuation is a process and a set of procedures used to estimate the economic value of an owner's interest in a business. Here various valuation techniques are used by financial market participants to determine the price they are willing to pay or receive to effect a sale of the business.
The Extended Phenotype         
  • A [[beaver dam]], an example of an organism altering the environment in which it evolves — the first form of extended phenotype
  • reed warbler]] raising the young of a common cuckoo
BOOK WRITTEN BY RICHARD DAWKINS, ABOUT THE EXTENSION OF THE PHENOTYPE TO ETHOLOGY
Extended phenotype; Extended Phenotype; The extended phenotype
The Extended Phenotype is a 1982 book by the evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, in which the author introduced a biological concept of the same name. The main idea is that phenotype should not be limited to biological processes such as protein biosynthesis or tissue growth, but extended to include all effects that a gene has on its environment, inside or outside the body of the individual organism.
extended memory         
  • Extended memory is located above 1 MB.
<storage> Memory above the first megabyte of address space in an IBM PC with an 80286 or later processor. Extended memory is not directly available in real mode, only through EMS, UMB, XMS, or HMA; only applications executing in protected mode can use extended memory directly. In this case, the extended memory is provided by a supervising protected-mode operating system such as Microsoft Windows. The processor makes this memory available through a system of global descriptor tables and local descriptor tables. The memory is "protected" in the sense that memory assigned a local descriptor cannot be accessed by another program without causing a hardware trap. This prevents programs running in protected mode from interfering with each other's memory. A protected-mode operating system such as Windows can also run real-mode programs and provide expanded memory to them. DOS Protected Mode Interface is Microsoft's prescribed method for an MS-DOS program to access extended memory under a multitasking environment. Having extended memory does not necessarily mean that you have more than one megabyte of memory since the reserved memory area may be partially empty. In fact, if your 386 or higher uses extended memory as expanded memory then that part is not in excess of 1Mb. See also conventional memory. (1996-01-10)

Wikipedia

Valuation ring

In abstract algebra, a valuation ring is an integral domain D such that for every element x of its field of fractions F, at least one of x or x−1 belongs to D.

Given a field F, if D is a subring of F such that either x or x−1 belongs to D for every nonzero x in F, then D is said to be a valuation ring for the field F or a place of F. Since F in this case is indeed the field of fractions of D, a valuation ring for a field is a valuation ring. Another way to characterize the valuation rings of a field F is that valuation rings D of F have F as their field of fractions, and their ideals are totally ordered by inclusion; or equivalently their principal ideals are totally ordered by inclusion. In particular, every valuation ring is a local ring.

The valuation rings of a field are the maximal elements of the set of the local subrings in the field partially ordered by dominance or refinement, where

( A , m A ) {\displaystyle (A,{\mathfrak {m}}_{A})} dominates ( B , m B ) {\displaystyle (B,{\mathfrak {m}}_{B})} if A B {\displaystyle A\supseteq B} and m A B = m B {\displaystyle {\mathfrak {m}}_{A}\cap B={\mathfrak {m}}_{B}} .

Every local ring in a field K is dominated by some valuation ring of K.

An integral domain whose localization at any prime ideal is a valuation ring is called a Prüfer domain.