| Lag. |
Something lags behind something else when it is behind it in position or time or thought processes. For example, a fish in a shoal lags behind the leader; changes in temperature inside an unheated house lag behind changes outside. Similar to "trail".
Ãâó: www.today.plus.com/3d/tuts/glossarylinks.html
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| Lag. |
a distance (h) parameter used during computation of the experimental covariance model. The lag distance typically has a tolerance of ?one-half the initial lag distance.
Ãâó: www.qgsi.com/Terms.html
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| Lag. |
the time delay between the start or finish of an activity and the start or finish of its successor(s).
Ãâó: www.palmtoppaper.com/ptphtml/30/pt300048.htm
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| Lag. |
logarithmic or exponential and stationary phases
Ãâó: www.biology.usu.edu/courses/biol5300-anderson/youk...
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| Lag. |
An index that reflects the gap (ie, lag) between a player's expected statistical output and his actual statistical output. The lag can occur for many reasons, but some of the more common reasons are lack of playing time, injury, and late-call-ups. High LAG ratings essentially mean "This player should be putting up better stats in my scoring categories than he is currently putting up", and they are therefore an excellent way of identifying "sleepers" for draft purposes or free agent bids. ...
Ãâó: www.prorank.net/baseball/xstatistics.htm
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