| targeting |
1. The process of selecting targets and matching the appropriate response to them taking account of operational requirements and capabilities. 2. The analysis of enemy situations relative to the commander's mission, objectives, and capabilities at the commander's disposal, to identify and nominate specific vulnerabilities that, if exploited, will accomplish the commander's purpose through delaying, disrupting, disabling, or destroying enemy forces or resources critical to the enemy. ...
Ãâó: https://www-nshspts.med.navy.mil/Courses/Intel/man...
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| target theory |
A theory that predicts response curves based on the number of events required to cause the phenomenon. Used to determine whether point mutations are single events.
Ãâó: helios.bto.ed.ac.uk/bto/glossary/tuvwxyz.htm
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| target cell |
A cell whose activity is affected by a particular hormone.
Ãâó: www.nutrabio.com/Definitions/definitions_t.htm
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| target cell |
A cell that a hormone binds and directly affects. 660
Ãâó: www.mhhe.com/biosci/genbio/life/glossaryt.mhtml
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| target |
1. Any objective of economic policy. 2. The value of an economic variable that policy makers regard as ideal and use as the basis for setting policy. Contrasts with instrument. 3. The level of an exchange rate that guides exchange market intervention by a central bank or exchange stabilization fund.
Ãâó: www-personal.umich.edu/~alandear/glossary/t.html
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