| skewness |
This is a reference to the shape of a histogram of tree lengths that can be produced after searching through treespace. Studies of random datasets have shown that the distribution of tree lengths is approximately normal, whereas in general datasets with a reasonable amount of signal have few shortest trees and few trees nearly as short. There is a G-statistic for the skewness of a histrogram.
Ãâó: www.bioinf.org/molsys/glossaryS.html
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| skew |
A distortion in the cloth where warp and weft do not fall at exact right angles to one another resulting in a skew.
Ãâó: www.thetextileguide.com/tgterms.htm
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| skew |
Blade Centre Line is curvilinear sweeping back from the direction of rotation. Contour of the blade is not radially symmetrical about blade centre axis.
Ãâó: www.olds.com.au/marine/terminology.html
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| skew |
The crooked representation of a scanned document. The automatic correction of skew is called "deskew".
Ãâó: www.imageware.de/en/support/glossar/
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| skew |
the difference in the time that a pair of identical signals takes to get from point A to point B going down two different paths. Skew is the result of different electrical lengths which in turn are the result of different physical lengths (ie 12 inches vs. 12.5 inches) and different velocities of propagation. This property is important in relation to the synchronization of data signals to clock signals. See phase timing.
Ãâó: www.meritec.com/Pages/custom/glossary.html
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