testing regulation - significado y definición. Qué es testing regulation
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Qué (quién) es testing regulation - definición

GROUP OF WRITERS IN POLITICAL ECONOMY
Regulation theory; Regulation approach; French regulation school

Usability testing         
TECHNIQUE USED IN USER-CENTERED INTERACTION DESIGN TO EVALUATE A PRODUCT BY TESTING IT ON USERS
Usability study; UI Testing; Usability test; Hallway testing; Hallway usability testing; Usability Testing; User testing; UX testing; User study; User test; Guerrilla usability
Usability testing is a technique used in user-centered interaction design to evaluate a product by testing it on users. This can be seen as an irreplaceable usability practice, since it gives direct input on how real users use the system.
Trade regulation         
REGULATION OF TRADE PRACTICES
Trade regulation law; Trade Regulation
Trade regulation is a field of law, often bracketed with antitrust (as in the phrase “antitrust and trade regulation law”),The Florida State Bar , for example, classifies “antitrust and trade regulation law” as one of the areas of legal practice in which board certification is available, which permits certified attorneys to advertise themselves as specialists or experts. See Florida Bar.
All-pairs testing         
ALSO KNOWN AS PAIRWISE TESTING, A SOFTWARE TESTING METHOD
Combinatorial Interaction Testing; All-pair testing
In computer science, all-pairs testing or pairwise testing is a combinatorial method of software testing that, for each pair of input parameters to a system (typically, a software algorithm), tests all possible discrete combinations of those parameters. Using carefully chosen test vectors, this can be done much faster than an exhaustive search of all combinations of all parameters, by "parallelizing" the tests of parameter pairs.

Wikipedia

Regulation school

The regulation school (French: l'école de la régulation) is a group of writers in political economy and economics whose origins can be traced to France in the early 1970s, where economic instability and stagflation were rampant in the French economy. The term régulation was coined by Frenchman Destanne de Bernis, who aimed to use the approach as a systems theory to bring Marxian economic analysis up to date. These writers are influenced by structural Marxism, the Annales School, institutionalism, Karl Polanyi's substantivist approach, and theory of Charles Bettelheim, among others, and sought to present the emergence of new economic (and hence social) forms in terms of tensions within existing arrangements. Since they are interested in how historically specific systems of capital accumulation are "regularized" or stabilized, their approach is called the "regulation approach" or "regulation theory". Although this approach originated in Michel Aglietta's monograph A Theory of Capitalist Regulation: The US Experience (Verso, 1976) and was popularized by other Parisians such as Robert Boyer, its membership goes well beyond the so-called Parisian School, extending to the Grenoble School, the German School, the Amsterdam School, British radical geographers, the US Social Structure of Accumulation School, and the neo-Gramscian school, among others.