vector payoff - significado y definición. Qué es vector payoff
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Qué (quién) es vector payoff - definición

US TELEVISION PROGRAM
Big Payoff

free vector         
GEOMETRIC OBJECT THAT HAS MAGNITUDE (OR LENGTH) AND DIRECTION
Vector (classical mechanics); Three-vector; Vector sum; Vector addition; Spatial vector; Vector (physics); Vector subtraction; Relative vector; Spacial vector; Physical vector; Vector methods (physics); Vector component; Component (vector); Bound vector; Vector (spatial); Vector (geometry); Free vector; Vector (geometric); Triangle law; Euclidean vectors; Vector direction; Vector components; 3d vector; Euclid vector; 3D vector; Geometric vector; Magnitude of resultant vector; Euclidian vector; Vector quantity; Resultant vector; Antiparallel vectors
¦ noun Mathematics a vector of which only the magnitude and direction are specified, not the position or line of action.
Disease vector         
  • deer tick]], a vector for [[Lyme disease]] pathogens
  • Figure 1. This figure shows how the [[Flavivirus]] is carried by [[mosquito]]s in the [[West Nile virus]] and [[Dengue fever]]. The mosquito would be considered a disease vector.
AGENT THAT CARRIES AND TRANSMITS AN INFECTIOUS PATHOGEN INTO ANOTHER LIVING ORGANISM
Vector species; Insect-borne disease; Vector (epidemiology); Vector borne transmission; Vector (disease); Vector (parasitology); Insect vectors; Disease vectors; Insect vector; Contagion vector; Vector-borne disease; Disease-vector; Draft:Vector-Borne Disease; Vector competence; Vector-borne
In epidemiology, a disease vector is any living agent that carries and transmits an infectious pathogen to another living organism; agents regarded as vectors are organisms, such as parasites or microbes. The first major discovery of a disease vector came from Ronald Ross in 1897, who discovered the malaria pathogen when he dissected a mosquito.
payoff         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Expected payoff; Pay-off; Payoff (disambiguation)
also pay-off (payoffs)
1.
The payoff from an action is the advantage or benefit that you get from it.
If such materials became generally available to the optics industry the payoffs from such a breakthrough would be enormous...
N-COUNT: oft N from n
2.
A payoff is a payment which is made to someone, often secretly or illegally, so that they will not cause trouble.
Soldiers in both countries supplement their incomes with payoffs from drugs exporters.
N-COUNT: oft N from n
3.
A payoff is a large payment made to someone by their employer when the person has been forced to leave their job.
The ousted chairman received a ?1.5 million payoff from the loss-making oil company.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

The Big Payoff

The Big Payoff is a daytime and primetime game show that premiered on NBC in 1951, and ended its network run on CBS in 1959. It had a brief syndication revival in 1962. NBC used The Big Payoff to replace the 15-minute show Miss Susan starring Susan Peters, which had gone off the air in December 1951.

Over its eight-year run plus syndication, the show had three hosts. The first was Randy Merriman (from 1951-1957), who left after claiming that CBS was in breach of his contract. Bob Paige took his place from 1957-1959. He was followed by a short stint by Bert Parks (1959), after which CBS removed the show along with all of its other quiz shows out of abundance of caution; it stated it could not ensure the shows were produced honestly in the wake of the quiz show scandals of the late 1950s.

Contestants were selected from men who mailed in letters explaining why the women in their lives deserved prizes. The men were asked four questions (delivered on a silver tray by "Question Girl" Susan Sayers) in order to win prizes like a mink coat or a vacation. Late in the network run, the format changed to three competing couples playing a guessing game. The couple with the highest score answered the Big Payoff question. For the 1962 revival, there were only two couples.

On Tuesdays, the format changed to the "Little Big Payoff" in which children sent in a letter in which they voiced the reason that they should appear. Four questions were asked, and prizes awarded for each correct answer.

Winning contestants (other than the children) had the opportunity to answer one final question. Getting this question correct, the individual was awarded the "big payoff" of a mink coat or a trip to Europe, or both. Bess Myerson modeled the mink coat and escorted the contestants on stage.

The theme song was "A Pretty Girl Is Like a Melody" by Irving Berlin, and the sponsor was Revlon.