| mask |
A device placed in front of a lens to reduce the horizontal or vertical size of the frame or to create a particular shape (for example, periscope eyepiece, binoculars, or gun-sight).
Ãâó: www.psu.edu/dept/inart10_110/inart10/film.html
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| masking |
The practice of keeping the trial participants, care providers, data collectors, and sometimes those analyzing data unaware of which intervention is being administered to which participant. Blinding is intended to prevent bias on the part of study personnel. The most common application is double-blinding, in which participants, caregivers, and outcome assessors are blinded to intervention assignment. The term masking may be used instead of blinding.
Ãâó: rctbank.ucsf.edu/BaT/html-files/glossary.html
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| masking |
A technique used to get the effect of stamped images behind each other, in front of another, or coming out of or going into one another
Ãâó: www.scrapjazz.com/glossary/list.php
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| masking |
A technique whereby a portion of the movie image is blocked out, thus temporarily altering the dimensions of the screen's aspect ratio.
Ãâó: pages.slc.edu/~sersauli/filmcourse/Liste%20e%20inf...
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| masking |
The act of removing areas from an analysis in spatial data.
Ãâó: www.ispe.arizona.edu/climas/forecasts/glossary.htm...
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