availability curve - significado y definición. Qué es availability curve
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Qué (quién) es availability curve - definición

THE TENDENCY AND MENTAL SHORTCUT OF PREFERRING AN ITEM WITH MORE AVAILABLE INFORMATION
Availability error; Availability bias; Availability Heuristic; User:JudithBrizuela/sandbox
  • heuristics and biases]]

Epidemic curve         
  • Common source outbreak of Hepatitis A in Nov-Dec 1978
A STATISTICAL CHART USED IN EPIDEMIOLOGY TO VISUALISE THE ONSET OF A DISEASE OUTBREAK.
Epi curve; Epidemiological curve
An epidemic curve, also known as an epi curve or epidemiological curve, is a statistical chart used in epidemiology to visualise the onset of a disease outbreak. It can help with the identification of the mode of transmission of the disease.
Reliability, availability and serviceability         
QUALITY OF ROBUSTNESS OF COMPUTER HARDWARE
Reliability, Availability and Serviceability; Reliability, availability and serviceability (computer hardware); Reliability, availability and serviceability (computing); Reliability, availability, and maintainability
Reliability, availability and serviceability (RAS), also known as reliability, availability, and maintainability (RAM), is a computer hardware engineering term involving reliability engineering, high availability, and serviceability design. The phrase was originally used by International Business Machines (IBM) as a term to describe the robustness of their mainframe computers..
Bezier curve         
  • Animation of the construction of a fifth-order Bézier curve
  • cyan: ''y'' {{=}} ''t''<sup>3</sup>}}.
  • Abstract composition of cubic Bézier curves ray-traced in 3D. Ray intersection with swept volumes along curves is calculated with Phantom Ray-Hair Intersector algorithm.<ref>Alexander Reshetov and David Luebke, Phantom Ray-Hair Intersector. In Proceedings of the ACM on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques (August 1, 2018). [https://research.nvidia.com/publication/2018-08_Phantom-Ray-Hair-Intersector]</ref>
  • Animation of a linear Bézier curve, ''t'' in [0,1
  • Animation of a quadratic Bézier curve, ''t'' in [0,1
  • Construction of a quadratic Bézier curve
  • Animation of a cubic Bézier curve, ''t'' in [0,1
  • Construction of a cubic Bézier curve
  • Animation of a quartic Bézier curve, ''t'' in [0,1
  • Construction of a quartic Bézier curve
  • Quadratic Béziers in [[string art]]: The end points ('''&bull;''') and control point ('''&times;''') define the quadratic Bézier curve ('''⋯''').
CURVE USED IN COMPUTER GRAPHICS AND RELATED FIELDS
Bezier curve; Bezier curves; Bézier Curve; Bernstein-Bézier curve; Bernstein-Bezier curve; Besier curve; Bezier cubic; Bézier cubic; Bezier splines; Bezier Curve; Cubic bezier; Conic Bezier curve; Conic Bézier curve; Bezier path; Cubic bézier curve; Cubic Bézier curve
<graphics> A type of curve defined by mathematical formulae, used in computer graphics. A curve with coordinates P(u), where u varies from 0 at one end of the curve to 1 at the other, is defined by a set of n+1 "control points" (X(i), Y(i), Z(i)) for i = 0 to n. P(u) = Sum i=0..n [(X(i), Y(i), Z(i)) * B(i, n, u)] B(i, n, u) = C(n, i) * u^i * (1-u)^(n-i) C(n, i) = n!/i!/(n-i)! A Bezier curve (or surface) is defined by its control points, which makes it invariant under any affine mapping (translation, rotation, parallel projection), and thus even under a change in the axis system. You need only to transform the control points and then compute the new curve. The control polygon defined by the points is itself affine invariant. Bezier curves also have the variation-diminishing property. This makes them easier to split compared to other types of curve such as Hermite or B-spline. Other important properties are multiple values, global and local control, versatility, and order of continuity. [What do these properties mean?] (1996-06-12)

Wikipedia

Availability heuristic

The availability heuristic, also known as availability bias, is a mental shortcut that relies on immediate examples that come to a given person's mind when evaluating a specific topic, concept, method, or decision. This heuristic, operating on the notion that, if something can be recalled, it must be important, or at least more important than alternative solutions not as readily recalled, is inherently biased toward recently acquired information.

The mental availability of an action's consequences is positively related to those consequences' perceived magnitude. In other words, the easier it is to recall the consequences of something, the greater those consequences are often perceived to be. Most notably, people often rely on the content of their recall if its implications are not called into question by the difficulty they have in recalling it.