| convergence |
An evolutionary event which occurs in two independent sequences. If the sequences possess two different character states for a particular character, but change results in each of these characters independently acquiring an identical character state, this is said to be a convervence. Convergences differ from parallellisms because the ancestral sequences are not the same. In parallellisms, the ancestral sequences are the same.
Ãâó: www.bioinf.org/molsys/glossaryC.html
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|---|---|
| convergence |
The alignment of the red, green and blue video projected onto a screen; when the lines produced by the three color sources appear to form one clearly focused white line. The point at which the light from each of the three lenses align so that the perceived single image is clearly focused. Lack of convergence is a video problem when the displayed image appears to be outlined by red, green or blue because of misalignment of the colors. ...
Ãâó: www.christiedigital.com/projection101/glossary/ind...
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| convergence |
The alignment of the red, green, and blue video image signal on a projected display system.
Ãâó: www.kintronics.com/3m/601_gloss.html
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| convergence |
Tendency of members of the population to be the same. May be used to mean either their representation or behaviour are identical. Loosely a genetic algorithm solution has been reached.
Ãâó: www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~wbl/thesis.glossary.html
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| convergence |
Convergence is a reduction in the diversity of genes available in the population due to fitness proportionate operators.
Ãâó: www.cs.uga.edu/~potter/CompIntell/gaglossary.htm
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