| segmentation |
In many animals, the body is divided into repeated subunits called segments, such as those in centipedes, insects, and annelids. Segmentation is the state of having or developing a body plan in this way.
Ãâó: paleo.cortland.edu/tutorial/Glossary/glossary.htm
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| segmentation |
The division of breaking larger segments (ring) into multiple small segments (rings)
Ãâó: www.iec-usa.com/Browse02/GLSS.html
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| segmentation |
Splitting a large or heavily used network into smaller, interconnected portions to spread out the data traffic.
Ãâó: www.theebusinesssite.com/IT%20Terms/Health%20Terms...
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| segmentation cavity |
The fluid-filled cavity of the mass of cells produced by cleavage of a fertilized ovum.
Ãâó: nmhm.washingtondc.museum/collections/hdac/Glossary...
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| segmentation |
The process of deciding whether a pixel is part of an object to be measured or processed, or is merely part of the background and to be excluded from analysis. This process generally uses the intensity of the pixel to make the decision. For example, you might segment the image by selecting an upper and lower threshold to define a range of acceptable grayscale levels, and the image processor would group all of the contiguous pixels that fall within that range into "objects."
Ãâó: www.universal-imaging.com/products/glossary.cfm
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