| specialization |
the limited range of activities in which a single individual is likely to be engaged.
Ãâó: farahsouth.cgu.edu/dictionary/
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| specialization |
When a business focuses on producing a limited number of goods and leaves the production of other goods to other businesses. Specialization also describes how each person working to produce a good might work on one part of the production instead of producing the whole good (eg, in a shoe factory one person cuts the leather, another person sews it, another glues it to the sole).
Ãâó: www.nmlites.org/standards/socialstudies/glossary.h...
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| specialization |
Specialization is the process of converting a generic application or View into a version suitable for a specific target device.
Ãâó: publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/weahelp/topic/co...
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| specialization |
of the current hypothesis through negative examples; value of near misses Example of a bad negative example: A robot is being trained to recognize a soda can. It is shown a can from two different angles. Then in order that it doesn't produce too general a concept, it is shown a chair and told that that is not an example of a soda can. The robot does not seem to improve.
Ãâó: www.indiana.edu/~gasser/Q351/learning2.html
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| specialist |
"Specialist" means an appropriately licensed and credentialed health care provider with specialized training and clinical expertise. [1999, c. 742, ? (new).]
Ãâó: janus.state.me.us/legis/statutes/24-A/title24-Asec...
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