inter-block gaps - определение. Что такое inter-block gaps
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Что (кто) такое inter-block gaps - определение

Parasitic gaps
Найдено результатов: 2171
Gaps         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
GAPS
Gaps is a member of the Montana group of Patience games, where the goal is to arrange all the cards in suit from Deuce (a Two card) to King.
Block (permutation group theory)         
TERM IN MATHEMATICS AND GROUP THEORY
Block system
In mathematics and group theory, a block system for the action of a group G on a set X is a partition of X that is G-invariant. In terms of the associated equivalence relation on X, G-invariance means that
block system         
TERM IN MATHEMATICS AND GROUP THEORY
Block system
¦ noun a system of railway signalling which divides the track into sections and allows no train to enter a section that is not completely clear.
Block system         
TERM IN MATHEMATICS AND GROUP THEORY
Block system
·add. ·- A system by which the track is divided into short sections, as of three or four miles, and trains are so run by the guidance of electric, or combined electric and pneumatic, signals that no train enters a section or block until the preceding train has left it, as in absolute blocking, or that a train may be allowed to follow another into a block as long as it proceeds with excessive caution, as in permissive blocking.
Block System         
TERM IN MATHEMATICS AND GROUP THEORY
Block system
A system of signalling on railroads. The essence of the system consists in having signal posts or stations all along the road at distances depending on the traffic. The space between each two signal posts is termed a block. From the signal posts the trains in day time are signalled by wooden arms termed semaphores, and at night by lanterns. The arms may be moved by hand or by automatic mechanism depending in part on electricity for carrying out its functions. Thus in the Westinghouse system the semaphores are moved by pneumatic cylinders and pistons, whose air valves are opened and shut by the action of solenoid magnets, q. v. The current of these magnets is short circuited by passing trains, so as to let the valves close as the train passes the signal post. The block system causes the semaphore to be set at "danger" or "caution," as the train enters the next block. Then the following train is not allowed to enter the block until the safety signal is shown. The Westinghouse system provides for two semaphores on a post, one indicating "danger" as long as the train is on the next block; the other indicating "caution" as long as the train is on the next two blocks. The rails form part of the circuit, their joints being bridged by copper wire throughout the block, and being insulated where the blocks meet.
Atrioventricular block         
  • ECG tracing in relation to normal depolarization and contraction of the heart. Red tracing indicates pathway of electrical depolarization. Blue tracing indicates resulting ECG tracing.
  • Electrical conduction pathway of the heart.
  • Normal ECG tracing for a single contraction of the heart.
HEART CONDUCTION DISEASE THAT IS CHARACTERIZED BY THE IMPAIRMENT OF THE CONDUCTION BETWEEN THE ATRIA AND VENTRICLES OF THE HEART
AV nodal block; AV block; Av block; Mobitz 1
Atrioventricular block (AV block) is a type of heart block that occurs when the electrical signal traveling from the atria, or the upper chambers of the heart, to ventricles, or the lower chambers of the heart, is impaired. Normally, the sinoatrial node (SA node) produces an electrical signal to control the heart rate.
Block cipher         
  • The development of the [[boomerang attack]] enabled [[differential cryptanalysis]] techniques to be applied to many ciphers that had previously been deemed secure against differential attacks
  • Many block ciphers, such as DES and Blowfish utilize structures known as ''[[Feistel cipher]]s''
  • IDEA]].
  • One round (two half-rounds) of the RC5 block cipher
  • Insecure encryption of an image as a result of [[electronic codebook]] (ECB) mode encoding.
CIPHER THAT WORKS ON FIXED-SIZE BLOCKS OF BITS
Codebook algorithm; Block ciphers; Block cyphers; Block crypto; Block cypher; Symmetric block cipher; Block Cipher; Tweakable block cipher; ARX cipher
In cryptography, a block cipher is a deterministic algorithm operating on fixed-length groups of bits, called blocks. They are specified elementary components in the design of many cryptographic protocols and are widely used to encrypt large amounts of data, including in data exchange protocols. It uses blocks as an unvarying transformation.
City block         
  • Chicago in 1857. Blocks of 80, 40, and 10 acres establish a street grid at the outskirts which continues into the more finely divided downtown area.
  • Same diagram of first illustration (see introduction), enhancing the "blocks without sidewalks", enfolded by the tiny green line. They are, with the inner alley and the sidewalks, sub-structures of the ''city block''.
  • Aerial views of superilles in [[Eixample]], Barcelona
  • Interior of the Kone & Silta perimeter block, [[Helsinki]], 1920s
  • dead-end]] streets complemented by bike and foot paths which connect the entire sector and beyond.
  • A diagramatic illustration of the streets (blue), paths (green) and open spaces (yellow) in a "[[Pedestrian Pocket]]" superblock (after P. Calthorpe and D. Kelbaugh)
  • Stuyvesant Town road and path network plan showing the looped streets and the connecting paths through the open space. It is an example of the superblock concept and of the idea of "filtered permeability."
  • Complicated superblock designs implemented in [[Troieschyna]] neighborhood ([[Kyiv]], Ukraine)
  • A newly developed community in suburb Madrid featuring superblocks
CENTRAL ELEMENT OF URBAN PLANNING AND URBAN DESIGN; SMALLEST AREA THAT IS SURROUNDED BY STREETS
Block (street); Cityblock; Urban block; City Block; City blocks; Superblock (urban planning); Superilla; City bloc
A city block, residential bloc urban block, or simply block is a central element of urban planning and urban design.
Aschbacher block         
FINITE GROUP IN MATHEMATICS
Standard block
In mathematical finite group theory, a block, sometimes called Aschbacher block, is a subgroup giving an obstruction to Thompson factorization and pushing up. Blocks were introduced by Michael Aschbacher.
Inter-rater reliability         
  • Bland–Altman plot
  • Four sets of recommendations for interpreting level of inter-rater agreement
MEASURE OF CONSENSUS IN RATINGS GIVEN BY MULTIPLE OBSERVERS
Inter-rater agreement; Inter-observer reliability; Inter-judge reliability; Interrater reliability; Interrater agreement; Limit of agreement; Agreement limit; Limits of agreement; Inter-rater variability; Inter-observer variability; Observer variability; Intra-observer variability; Inter-annotator agreement; Inter‐rater
In statistics, inter-rater reliability (also called by various similar names, such as inter-rater agreement, inter-rater concordance, inter-observer reliability, inter-coder reliability, and so on) is the degree of agreement among independent observers who rate, code, or assess the same phenomenon.

Википедия

Parasitic gap

In generative grammar, a parasitic gap is a construction in which one gap appears to be dependent on another gap. Thus, the one gap can appear only by virtue of the appearance of the other gap, hence the former is said to be "parasitic" on the latter. For example, in the example sentence in (1) the first gap is represented by an underscore ( __ ), and appears as a result of movement of the constituent which explanation to the beginning of the sentence. The second gap is represented by an underscore with a subscript p ( __p); this is the "parasitic gap".

While parasitic gaps are present in English and some related Germanic languages, e.g. Swedish (see Engdahl 1983), their appearance is much more restricted in other, closely related languages, e.g. German and the Romance languages. Japanese linguistic scholar Fumikazu Niinuma has attempted to differentiate between parasitic gaps and coordination in his research, as he believes the two are often confused.

An aspect of parasitic gaps that makes them particularly mysterious is the fact they usually appear inside islands to extraction. Although the study of parasitic gaps began in the late 1970s, no consensus has yet been reached about the best analysis.