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24 Definitions

Model

For Model we have terms and definitions in 24 topics. The topics are Agile Modeling, Animation, Anthromorphemics, Anthropology, Automotive, Business Process, Egyptian, Financial Modeling, Health Informatics, Hydrology, International Economics, Land Management, Learning, Maps, Non-Profit Accountability, Non-Profit Leadership, Options, Organizational Capacity, Physical Geography, Public Speaking, Sanitation, Science And Religion, Teacher Evaluation and Technology.



Model (Agile Modeling)

An abstraction that describes one or more aspects of a problem or a potential solution addressing a problem. Traditionally, models are thought of as zero or more diagrams plus any corresponding documentation. However non-visual artifacts such collections of CRC cards, a textual description of one or more business rules, or the structured English description of a business process are also considered to be models.


Model (Animation)

Drawings made as a guide for the establishment of color and form and detail of a character.


Model (Anthromorphemics)

A system of hypothetical principles that represents the characters of a phenomenon and from which predictions can be made.


Model (Anthropology)

A system of hypothetical principles that represents the characters of a phenomenon and from which predictions can be made.


Model (Automotive)

The style of the vehicle produced by the manufacturer (Ford Mustang, Chrysler LeBaron, Honda Civic).


Model (Business Process)

A representation of a complex, real world phenomenon such that it can answer questions about the real world phenomenon within some acceptable and predictable tolerance


Model (Egyptian)

A small scale reproduction or representation.


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Model (Financial Modeling)

Any financial tool used to analyze a type of transaction or a series of transactions.


Model (Health Informatics)

An representatio o rea objec o phenomenon o templat fo th creatio o a objec o phenomenon.


Model (Hydrology)

The process of providing to a computer, usually in the form of mathematical equations, a precise and unambiguous description of a system including the relationships between system inputs and outputs, and using this description to simulate.


Model (International Economics)

A stylized simplification of reality in which behavior is represented by variables and assumptions about how they are determined and interact. Models enable one to think consistently and logically about complex issues, to work out how changes in an economic system matter, and (sometimes) to make predictions about economic performance.


Model (Land Management)

Graphic representation of a set of components of a process, system, data. A model is usually developed to facilitate understanding, communication, analysis, improvement, and/or replacement of the process.


Model (Learning)

(1) A person that serves as a target subject for a learner to emulate. (2) A representation of a process or system that show the most important variables in the system in such a way that analysis of the model leads to insights into the system.


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Model (Maps)

Something built or drawn to show how something much larger would look


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Model (Non-Profit Accountability)

Describes processes or strategies that are difficult to understand directly. A model may be a description, a representation, or an analogy. See also:Ideal, Prototype


Model (Non-Profit Leadership)

Describes processes or strategies that are difficult to understand directly. A model may be a description, a representation, or an analogy. See also:Ideal, Prototype


Model (Options)

A mathematical formula designed to price an option as a function of certain variables - generally stock price, striking price, volatility, time to expiration, dividends to be paid, and the current risk-free interest rate. The Black-Scholes model is one of the more widely used models.


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Model (Organizational Capacity)

Describes processes or strategies that are difficult to understand directly. A model may be a description, a representation, or an analogy. See also:Ideal, Prototype


Model (Physical Geography)

(1) Generalization of reality.
(2) System describing how a phenomenon functions.
(3) Mathematical representation of a system from which predictions or inferences can be made.


Model (Public Speaking)

An object, usually built to scale, that represents another object in detail.


Model (Sanitation)

(1) A scaled reproduction or representation of an entity, treatment process, or environmental domain. (2) A series of mathematical equations approximating a real situation.


Model (Science And Religion)

1. a small representation of a planned or existing object 2. a hypothetical description often based on an analogy, used in analyzing something.


Model (Teacher Evaluation)

An example of a coherent method, approach, procedure, or strategy of teaching or of teacher evaluation, as defined by its key or unique assumptions, propositions, attributes, supportive theory, research, practical precedent, or foundation, and which implicitly defines accomplished or good teaching. See Criterion, Foundation.


Model (Technology)

A mathematical or graphical representation of a real-world situation or object--for example, a mathematical model of the distribution of matter in the universe, a spreadsheet (numeric) model of business operations, or a graphical model of a molecule. Models can generally be changed or manipulated so that their creators can see how the real version might be affected by modifications or varying conditions. See also modeling, simulation.




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