robustness

  • 21robustness — See: robust …

    English dictionary

  • 22Mutational robustness — describes the extent to which an organism’s phenotype remains constant in spite of mutation.[1] Natural selection can directly induce the evolution of mutational robustness only when mutation rates are high and population sizes are large.[2] The… …

    Wikipedia

  • 23Compliance and Robustness — Compliance and Robustness, sometimes abbreviated as C R, refers to the legal structure or regime underlying a Digital Rights Management (DRM) system. In many cases, the C R regime for a given DRM is provided by the same company that sells the DRM …

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  • 24Info-gap decision theory — is a non probabilistic decision theory that seeks to optimize robustness to failure – or opportuneness for windfall – under severe uncertainty,[1][2] in particular applying sensitivity analysis of the stability radius type[3] to perturbations in… …

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  • 25Degeneracy (biology) — Within biological systems, degeneracy refers to circumstances where structurally dissimilar components/modules/pathways can perform similar functions (i.e. are effectively interchangeable) under certain conditions, but perform distinct functions… …

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  • 26Canalisation (genetics) — Norms of reaction for two genotypes. Genotype B shows a strongly bimodal distribution indicating differentiation into distinct phenotypes. Each phenotype is buffered against environmental variation it is canalised. Canalisation (canalization in… …

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  • 27Control theory — For control theory in psychology and sociology, see control theory (sociology) and Perceptual Control Theory. The concept of the feedback loop to control the dynamic behavior of the system: this is negative feedback, because the sensed value is… …

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  • 28Evolvability — is a concept within the Darwinian understanding of biological evolution. Darwin s theory of evolution by natural selection requires that plants, animals, and other organisms be able to produce offspring that are sometimes better adapted to the… …

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  • 29Mandatory access control — In computer security, mandatory access control (MAC) refers to a type of access control by which the operating system constrains the ability of a subject or initiator to access or generally perform some sort of operation on an object or target.… …

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  • 30Codenomicon — Type Privately held company Founded 2001 Headquarters Oulu, Finland Area served worldwide Products …

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