serological surveillance - определение. Что такое serological surveillance
Diclib.com
Словарь ChatGPT
Введите слово или словосочетание на любом языке 👆
Язык:

Перевод и анализ слов искусственным интеллектом ChatGPT

На этой странице Вы можете получить подробный анализ слова или словосочетания, произведенный с помощью лучшей на сегодняшний день технологии искусственного интеллекта:

  • как употребляется слово
  • частота употребления
  • используется оно чаще в устной или письменной речи
  • варианты перевода слова
  • примеры употребления (несколько фраз с переводом)
  • этимология

Что (кто) такое serological surveillance - определение

SCIENTIFIC STUDY OF SERUM AND OTHER BODILY FLUIDS
Serological; Serological testing; Serological Test; Serologic test; Serologic tests; Serologic; Immunologic techniques; Serological survey; Serosurvey; Sero survey; Serology test; Serology testing; Serologist; Serodiagnosis; Serological surveys; Serological test; Serological assay; Seroassay
  • O positive blood type: the patient's red cells are agglutinated by Anti-D (anti-Rh factor) antisera, but not by anti-A and anti-B antisera. The patient's plasma agglutinates type A and B red cells.
  • IgG and IgM [[rapid diagnostic test]] for [[COVID-19]]
  • Blood compatibility testing}}
Найдено результатов: 258
Public health surveillance         
THE CONTINUOUS, SYSTEMATIC COLLECTION, ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF HEALTH-RELATED DATA NEEDED FOR THE PLANNING, IMPLEMENTATION, AND EVALUATION OF PUBLIC HEALTH PRACTICE
Clinical Surveillance; Syndromic survelliance; Syndromic surveillance; Syndromic Surveillance; Public Health Surveillance; Product surveillance, postmarketing; Epidemiological surveillance; Epidemiologic surveillance; Clinical surveillance; Active surveillance study
Public health surveillance (also epidemiological surveillance, clinical surveillance or syndromic surveillance) is, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), "the continuous, systematic collection, analysis and interpretation of health-related data needed for the planning, implementation, and evaluation of public health practice."Public health surveillance, World Health Organization (accessed January 14, 2016).
Postmarketing surveillance         
PRACTICE OF MONITORING THE SAFETY OF A PHARMACEUTICAL DRUG OR MEDICAL DEVICE AFTER IT HAS BEEN RELEASED ON THE MARKET
Post-marketing surveillance; Post market safety surveillance; Post marketing surveillance; Post-market surveillance; Post market surveillance; Post-marketing experience; Postmarketing experience
Postmarketing surveillance (PMS), also known as post market surveillance, is the practice of monitoring the safety of a pharmaceutical drug or medical device after it has been released on the market and is an important part of the science of pharmacovigilance. Since drugs and medical devices are approved on the basis of clinical trials, which involve relatively small numbers of people who have been selected for this purpose – meaning that they normally do not have other medical conditions which may exist in the general population – postmarketing surveillance can further refine, or confirm or deny, the safety of a drug or device after it is used in the general population by large numbers of people who have a wide variety of medical conditions.
Disease surveillance         
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL PRACTICE BY WHICH THE SPREAD OF DISEASE IS MONITORED IN ORDER TO ESTABLISH PATTERNS OF PROGRESSION
Infectious disease reporting; Disease reporting; Communicable disease reporting; Modern international human infectious disease surveillance; Reporting disease; International human infectious disease surveillance; Human infectious disease surveillance; Infectious disease surveillance; Reporting disease cases; Disease surveillence; Disease case reporting; Surveillance of infectious diseases; Disease tracking; Surveillance system (medicine)
Disease surveillance is an epidemiological practice by which the spread of disease is monitored in order to establish patterns of progression. The main role of disease surveillance is to predict, observe, and minimize the harm caused by outbreak, epidemic, and pandemic situations, as well as increase knowledge about which factors contribute to such circumstances.
Surveillance issues in smart cities         
  • A data-driven stop and frisk program in New York was found to constitute racial profiling.
  • Barcelona is a city that has embraced smart city technology while maintaining public access.
  • Santa Cruz has been the site of a number of predictive policing experiments.<ref name=SantaCruz />
  • [[Kista]] has implemented smart city technology using the Triple Helix Model with positive outcomes.
  • plan]] of Jeremy Bentham's Panopticon penitentiary, drawn by [[Willey Reveley]], 1791
  • Traffic Management is a major focus of proactive policing technologies.
  • In some situations, privacy may be lessened by surveillance.
OVERVIEW ABOUT SURVEILLANCE ISSUES IN SMART CITIES
Mass surveillance in smart cities; Citywide surveillance; City-wide surveillance
Smart cities seek to implement information and communication technologies (ICT) to improve the efficiency and sustainability of urban spaces while reducing costs and resource consumption. In the context of surveillance, smart cities monitor citizens through strategically placed sensors around the urban landscape, which collect data regarding many different factors of urban living.
Surveillance court         
DISTINCT BRANCH OF THE ITALIAN JUDICIARY, WITH A SPECIALIZED COMPETENCE OVER THE SUPERVISION OF DETAINEES AND PRISONS
Magistratura di Sorveglianza; Magistratura di sorveglianza; Surveillance judge
In Italy, the Surveillance Magistracy (Magistratura di Sorveglianza) is a distinct branch of the Italian judiciary, with a specialized competence over the supervision of detainees and prisons.
SOSUS         
  • First SOSUS stations
  • The [[GIUK gap]]
  • LOFARgram
  • NAVFAC Nantucket showing Terminal building as internal security area.
  • NAVFAC Cape May (1955-1962) Terminal Building on WW II Coast Artillery bunker before storm damage forced move to Fort Miles in Delaware where it became NAVFAC Lewes.
  • Officer and enlisted IUSS insignia.
  • ''Neptune'' (ARC-2), first cable repair ship formally assigned to Project Caesar.
  • P-3B of Patrol Squadron 6 (VP-6).
  • Point Sur Lightstation and in background NAVFAC Point Sur (1969)
  • Naval Facility Brawdy, Wales, the first "super NAVFAC" to be established.
  • SWATH]] design, for SURTASS/LFA operations.
  • USNS ''Zeus''
  • LOFARgram writers on NAVFAC watch floor.
CHAIN OF UNDERWATER LISTENING POSTS
SOund SUrveillance System; Sosus; Sound Surveillance System; Sound Surveillance Systems; Integrated Undersea Surveillance System; Equatorial Pacific Ocean autonomous hydrophone array; Project Caesar
The Sound Surveillance System (SOSUS) was a passive sonar system developed by the United States Navy to track Soviet submarines. The system's true nature was classified with the name and acronym SOSUS themselves classified.
United States Space Surveillance Network         
  • Baker-Nunn satellite tracking camera
  • GEODSS atop the Haleakala crater
  • [[Midcourse Space Experiment]]
  • The Space Surveillance Network
NETWORK FEEDING ORBITAL DATA TO THE UNITED STATES SPACE COMMAND
Us space surveillance network; US space surveillance network; Ground-based Electro-Optical Deep Space Surveillance; GEODSS; U.S. Space Surveillance Network; Ground-Based Electro-Optical Deep Space Surveillance System; Space Surveillance Network; Space Surveillance Telescope program; Space Object Catalog; AN/FPS-80; Ground-Based Electro-Optical Deep Space Surveillance
The United States Space Surveillance Network (SSN) detects, tracks, catalogs and identifies artificial objects orbiting Earth, e.g.
surveillance         
  • The headquarters of UK intelligence activities is [[Government Communications Headquarters]], [[Cheltenham]], England (2017)
  • Graffiti expressing concern about the proliferation of video surveillance
  • A surveillance camera in [[Cairns, Queensland]]
  • Diagram of GPS satellites orbiting Earth
  • A payload surveillance camera manufactured by Controp and distributed to the U.S. government by ADI Technologies
  • IPTO]] ([[DARPA]]) official website
  •  Official seal of the [[Information Awareness Office]] – a U.S. agency which developed technologies for [[mass surveillance]]
  • graph]] of the relationships between users on the [[social networking]] site [[Facebook]]. [[Social network analysis]] enables governments to gather detailed information about peoples' friends, family, and other contacts. Since much of this information is voluntarily made public by the users themselves, it is often considered to be a form of [[open-source intelligence]]
  • Micro Air Vehicle with attached surveillance camera
  • RFID chip pulled from a new credit card
  • Hand with planned insertion point for Verichip device
  • Surveillance lamppost brought down in Hong Kong by citizens fearing state surveillance
  • A card containing an identification number
  • A traffic camera atop a high pole oversees a road in the Canadian city of Toronto
  • Surveillance Camera to support the Washington DC Police
  • Surveillance cameras such as these are installed by the millions in many countries, and are nowadays monitored by automated computer programs instead of humans.
  • Fingerprints being scanned as part of the [[US-VISIT]] program
  • graffito]] in Columbus, Ohio, depicting state surveillance of [[telecommunications]]
MONITORING OF BEHAVIOR, ACTIVITIES, OR OTHER CHANGING INFORMATION, FOR THE PURPOSE OF INFLUENCING, MANAGING OR DIRECTING
Electronic surveillance; Electronic Eavesdropping; Surveillance technology; Survelliance; Shadow (verb); Surveillence; Stakeout; Surveillance device; Surveillance devices; Covert surveillance; Home Surveillance Systems; Steakout; Electronic eavesdropping; Reading messages; Government surveillance; US government surveillance; Surveilance; Stake out; Surveillance controversies; Opposition to surveillance; Telephone surveillance; Anti-surveillance activists; Psychological effects of surveillance; Social effects of surveillance; Police surveillance; Biometric surveillance; Surveillance system; Geolocation and surveillance; Social network surveillance; Satellite surveillance; Data mining and surveillance; Wireless tracking
n.
1) to conduct, maintain surveillance
2) to keep; place smb. under surveillance
3) around-the-clock, constant; close, strict surveillance (she was placed under strict surveillance)
4) electronic surveillance
5) under surveillance
Surveillance         
  • The headquarters of UK intelligence activities is [[Government Communications Headquarters]], [[Cheltenham]], England (2017)
  • Graffiti expressing concern about the proliferation of video surveillance
  • A surveillance camera in [[Cairns, Queensland]]
  • Diagram of GPS satellites orbiting Earth
  • A payload surveillance camera manufactured by Controp and distributed to the U.S. government by ADI Technologies
  • IPTO]] ([[DARPA]]) official website
  •  Official seal of the [[Information Awareness Office]] – a U.S. agency which developed technologies for [[mass surveillance]]
  • graph]] of the relationships between users on the [[social networking]] site [[Facebook]]. [[Social network analysis]] enables governments to gather detailed information about peoples' friends, family, and other contacts. Since much of this information is voluntarily made public by the users themselves, it is often considered to be a form of [[open-source intelligence]]
  • Micro Air Vehicle with attached surveillance camera
  • RFID chip pulled from a new credit card
  • Hand with planned insertion point for Verichip device
  • Surveillance lamppost brought down in Hong Kong by citizens fearing state surveillance
  • A card containing an identification number
  • A traffic camera atop a high pole oversees a road in the Canadian city of Toronto
  • Surveillance Camera to support the Washington DC Police
  • Surveillance cameras such as these are installed by the millions in many countries, and are nowadays monitored by automated computer programs instead of humans.
  • Fingerprints being scanned as part of the [[US-VISIT]] program
  • graffito]] in Columbus, Ohio, depicting state surveillance of [[telecommunications]]
MONITORING OF BEHAVIOR, ACTIVITIES, OR OTHER CHANGING INFORMATION, FOR THE PURPOSE OF INFLUENCING, MANAGING OR DIRECTING
Electronic surveillance; Electronic Eavesdropping; Surveillance technology; Survelliance; Shadow (verb); Surveillence; Stakeout; Surveillance device; Surveillance devices; Covert surveillance; Home Surveillance Systems; Steakout; Electronic eavesdropping; Reading messages; Government surveillance; US government surveillance; Surveilance; Stake out; Surveillance controversies; Opposition to surveillance; Telephone surveillance; Anti-surveillance activists; Psychological effects of surveillance; Social effects of surveillance; Police surveillance; Biometric surveillance; Surveillance system; Geolocation and surveillance; Social network surveillance; Satellite surveillance; Data mining and surveillance; Wireless tracking
This involves the monitoring of trade practices to help ensure that governments implement their obligations under trade agreements. One of the objectives of the negotiating group on Functioning of the GATT System (FOGS) is to improve GATT surveillance of trade policies and practices of Contracting Parties.
stakeout         
  • The headquarters of UK intelligence activities is [[Government Communications Headquarters]], [[Cheltenham]], England (2017)
  • Graffiti expressing concern about the proliferation of video surveillance
  • A surveillance camera in [[Cairns, Queensland]]
  • Diagram of GPS satellites orbiting Earth
  • A payload surveillance camera manufactured by Controp and distributed to the U.S. government by ADI Technologies
  • IPTO]] ([[DARPA]]) official website
  •  Official seal of the [[Information Awareness Office]] – a U.S. agency which developed technologies for [[mass surveillance]]
  • graph]] of the relationships between users on the [[social networking]] site [[Facebook]]. [[Social network analysis]] enables governments to gather detailed information about peoples' friends, family, and other contacts. Since much of this information is voluntarily made public by the users themselves, it is often considered to be a form of [[open-source intelligence]]
  • Micro Air Vehicle with attached surveillance camera
  • RFID chip pulled from a new credit card
  • Hand with planned insertion point for Verichip device
  • Surveillance lamppost brought down in Hong Kong by citizens fearing state surveillance
  • A card containing an identification number
  • A traffic camera atop a high pole oversees a road in the Canadian city of Toronto
  • Surveillance Camera to support the Washington DC Police
  • Surveillance cameras such as these are installed by the millions in many countries, and are nowadays monitored by automated computer programs instead of humans.
  • Fingerprints being scanned as part of the [[US-VISIT]] program
  • graffito]] in Columbus, Ohio, depicting state surveillance of [[telecommunications]]
MONITORING OF BEHAVIOR, ACTIVITIES, OR OTHER CHANGING INFORMATION, FOR THE PURPOSE OF INFLUENCING, MANAGING OR DIRECTING
Electronic surveillance; Electronic Eavesdropping; Surveillance technology; Survelliance; Shadow (verb); Surveillence; Stakeout; Surveillance device; Surveillance devices; Covert surveillance; Home Surveillance Systems; Steakout; Electronic eavesdropping; Reading messages; Government surveillance; US government surveillance; Surveilance; Stake out; Surveillance controversies; Opposition to surveillance; Telephone surveillance; Anti-surveillance activists; Psychological effects of surveillance; Social effects of surveillance; Police surveillance; Biometric surveillance; Surveillance system; Geolocation and surveillance; Social network surveillance; Satellite surveillance; Data mining and surveillance; Wireless tracking
also stake-out (stakeouts)
If police officers are on a stakeout, they are secretly watching a building for evidence of criminal activity.
N-COUNT

Википедия

Serology

Serology is the scientific study of serum and other body fluids. In practice, the term usually refers to the diagnostic identification of antibodies in the serum. Such antibodies are typically formed in response to an infection (against a given microorganism), against other foreign proteins (in response, for example, to a mismatched blood transfusion), or to one's own proteins (in instances of autoimmune disease). In either case, the procedure is simple.