infinite-source model - определение. Что такое infinite-source model
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Что (кто) такое infinite-source model - определение

MATHEMATICAL MODEL FOR CALCULATING GENETIC MUTATIONS
Infinite-alleles model; Infinate-alleles model
Найдено результатов: 4428
infinite         
2017 STUDIO ALBUM BY DEEP PURPLE
InFinite
1.
If you describe something as infinite, you are emphasizing that it is extremely great in amount or degree.
...an infinite variety of landscapes...
The choice is infinite.
ADJ [emphasis]
infinitely
His design was infinitely better than anything I could have done.
ADV: ADV adj/adv
2.
Something that is infinite has no limit, end, or edge.
Obviously, no company has infinite resources.
ADJ
infinitely
A centimeter can be infinitely divided into smaller units.
ADV: ADV with v
infinite         
2017 STUDIO ALBUM BY DEEP PURPLE
InFinite
<mathematics> 1. Bigger than any natural number. There are various formal set definitions in set theory: a set X is infinite if (i) There is a bijection between X and a proper subset of X. (ii) There is an injection from the set N of natural numbers to X. (iii) There is an injection from each natural number n to X. These definitions are not necessarily equivalent unless we accept the Axiom of Choice. 2. The length of a line extended indefinitely. See also infinite loop, infinite set. [Jargon File] (1995-03-29)
infinite         
2017 STUDIO ALBUM BY DEEP PURPLE
InFinite
I. a.
1.
Unbounded, boundless, unlimited, illimitable, limitless, immeasurable, interminable.
2.
Immense, enormous, vast, stupendous, very great, very large.
3.
Unconditioned, absolute, self-determined, self-existent, eternal.
II. n.
[With The prefixed.] The Absolute, the Eternal. See god.
Infinite         
2017 STUDIO ALBUM BY DEEP PURPLE
InFinite
·noun An infinite quantity or magnitude.
II. Infinite ·noun The Infinite Being; God; the Almighty.
III. Infinite ·noun An infinity; an incalculable or very great number.
IV. Infinite ·adj Indefinitely large or extensive; great; vast; immense; gigantic; prodigious.
V. Infinite ·adj Unlimited or boundless, in time or space; as, infinite duration or distance.
VI. Infinite ·noun That which is infinite; boundless space or duration; infinity; boundlessness.
VII. Infinite ·adj Greater than any assignable quantity of the same kind;
- said of certain quantities.
VIII. Infinite ·adj Without limit in power, capacity, knowledge, or excellence; boundless; immeasurably or inconceivably great; perfect; as, the infinite wisdom and goodness of God;
- opposed to finite.
IX. Infinite ·adj Capable of endless repetition;
- said of certain forms of the canon, called also perpetual fugues, so constructed that their ends lead to their beginnings, and the performance may be incessantly repeated.
infinite         
2017 STUDIO ALBUM BY DEEP PURPLE
InFinite
['?nf?n?t]
¦ adjective
1. limitless in space, extent, or size.
very great in amount or degree.
2. Mathematics greater than any assignable quantity or countable number.
Derivatives
infinitely adverb
infiniteness noun
infinitude ?n'f?n?tju:d noun
Origin
ME: from L. infinitus, from in- 'not' + finitus 'finished, finite'.
Infinite discography         
WIKIMEDIA BAND DISCOGRAPHY
Infinite (south korean band) discography
South Korean boy group Infinite has released six studio albums, two compilation albums, two live albums, two reissues, six extended plays, two single albums, and twenty-nine singles. The group debuted in South Korea in June 2010 with the mini album First Invasion and in Japan in November 2011 with a Japanese version of the song "BTD (Before the Dawn)" released as single.
Infinite alleles model         
The infinite alleles model is a mathematical model for calculating genetic mutations. The Japanese geneticist Motoo Kimura and American geneticist James F.
Source Vagabond Systems         
TRAVEL EQUIPMENT STORE
SOURCE (Outdoor & Tactical Gear)
Source Vagabond Systems Ltd. (brand: SOURCE) is known in the outdoor, trekking and sports market for sandals, hydration systems, packs and accessories and in the tactical market for hydration systems, packs, and its SOURCE Virtus Soldier System.
Source–filter model         
  • One possible combination of source and filter in the human vocal tract.
Source Filter Model of Speech Production; Source-filter model of speech production; Source–filter model of speech production; Source-filter model; Source/filter model; Source/filter theory; Source–filter theory; Source-filter theory
The source–filter model represents speech as a combination of a sound source, such as the vocal cords, and a linear acoustic filter, the vocal tract. While only an approximation, the model is widely used in a number of applications such as speech synthesis and speech analysis because of its relative simplicity.
Open-source software development         
FREELY ACCESSIBLE CREATION AND REFINEMENT OF COMPUTER PROGRAMS
Open source software development method; Open-source software development model; Principle of open source software; Open source software development; Open-source software project; Open-source-software development
Open-source software development (OSSD) is the process by which open-source software, or similar software whose source code is publicly available, is developed by an open-source software project. These are software products available with its source code under an open-source license to study, change, and improve its design.

Википедия

Infinite alleles model

The infinite alleles model is a mathematical model for calculating genetic mutations. The Japanese geneticist Motoo Kimura and American geneticist James F. Crow (1964) introduced the infinite alleles model, an attempt to determine for a finite diploid population what proportion of loci would be homozygous. This was, in part, motivated by assertions by other geneticists that more than 50 percent of Drosophila loci were heterozygous, a claim they initially doubted. In order to answer this question they assumed first, that there were a large enough number of alleles so that any mutation would lead to a different allele (that is the probability of back mutation to the original allele would be low enough to be negligible); and second, that the mutations would result in a number of different outcomes from neutral to deleterious.

They determined that in the neutral case, the probability that an individual would be homozygous, F, was:

F = 1 4 N e u + 1 {\displaystyle F={1 \over 4N_{e}u+1}}

where u is the mutation rate, and Ne is the effective population size. The effective number of alleles n maintained in a population is defined as the inverse of the homozygosity, that is

n = 1 F = 4 N e u + 1 {\displaystyle n={1 \over F}=4N_{e}u+1}

which is a lower bound for the actual number of alleles in the population.

If the effective population is large, then a large number of alleles can be maintained. However, this result only holds for the neutral case, and is not necessarily true for the case when some alleles are subject to selection, i.e. more or less fit than others, for example when the fittest genotype is a heterozygote (a situation often referred to as overdominance or heterosis).

In the case of overdominance, because Mendel's second law (the law of segregation) necessarily results in the production of homozygotes (which are by definition in this case, less fit), this means that population will always harbor a number of less fit individuals, which leads to a decrease in the average fitness of the population. This is sometimes referred to as genetic load, in this case it is a special kind of load known as segregational load. Crow and Kimura showed that at equilibrium conditions, for a given strength of selection (s), that there would be an upper limit to the number of fitter alleles (polymorphisms) that a population could harbor for a particular locus. Beyond this number of alleles, the selective advantage of presence of those alleles in heterozygous genotypes would be cancelled out by continual generation of less fit homozygous genotypes.

These results became important in the formation of the neutral theory, because neutral (or nearly neutral) alleles create no such segregational load, and allow for the accumulation of a great deal of polymorphism. When Richard Lewontin and J. Hubby published their groundbreaking results in 1966 which showed high levels of genetic variation in Drosophila via protein electrophoresis, the theoretical results from the infinite alleles model were used by Kimura and others to support the idea that this variation would have to be neutral (or result in excess segregational load).