| Association | assoc | en |
| association | An association of health | en |
| association | A physical grouping of young stars, such as the O and B associations or Tauri associations | en |
| association | Association models the is member of relationship set It is used when one object class is a set of objects from another object class | en |
| association | the act of consorting with or joining with others; "you cannot be convicted of criminal guilt by association" the process of bringing ideas or events together in memory or imagination; "conditioning is a form of learning by association" (ecology) a group of organisms (plants and animals) that live together in a certain geographical region and constitute a community with a few dominant species a formal organization of people or groups of people; "he joined the Modern Language Association" (chemistry) any process of combination (especially in solution) that depends on relatively weak chemical bonding a relation resulting from interaction or dependence; "flints were found in association with the prehistoric remains of the bear"; "the host is not always injured by association with a parasite" the state of being connected together as in memory or imagination; "his association of his father with being beaten was too strong to break | en |
| association | the state of being connected together as in memory or imagination; "his association of his father with being beaten was too strong to break | en |
| association | A correlation between a state and a conclusion, a condition-action pair being a rule Often empirically derived A correlation between two objects | en |
| association | organization; society; union; coalition; connection of ideas isim | en |
| association | In the EJB Development Environment, a relationship that exists between two container-managed persistence (CMP) entity beans There are two types of association: one-to-one and one-to-many | en |
| association | An association of health information management professionals AHIMA sponsors some HIPAA educational seminars | en |
| association | Statistical dependence between two or more events, characteristics, or other variables An association may be fortuitous or may be produced by various other circumstances; the presence of an association does not necessarily imply a causal relationship | en |
| association | Association contrasts with dissociation In dissociation, you see yourself "over there " Generally, dissociation removes emotion from the experience When we are associated we experience all the information directly and therefore emotionally | en |
| association | (chemistry) any process of combination (especially in solution) that depends on relatively weak chemical bonding a relation resulting from interaction or dependence; "flints were found in association with the prehistoric remains of the bear"; "the host is not always injured by association with a parasite" | en |
| association | (ecology) a group of organisms (plants and animals) that live together in a certain geographical region and constitute a community with a few dominant species a formal organization of people or groups of people; "he joined the Modern Language Association" | en |
| association | A connection to or an affiliation with something | en |
| association | A group of persons associated for a common purpose; an organization; society | en |
| association | The act of associating | en |
| association | The state of being associated | en |
| association | The act of associating, or state of being associated; union; connection, whether of persons of things | en |
| association | Mental connection, or that which is mentally linked or associated with a thing | en |
| association | the process of bringing ideas or events together in memory or imagination; "conditioning is a form of learning by association" | en |
| association | the act of consorting with or joining with others; "you cannot be convicted of criminal guilt by association" | en |
| association | Specifically, as among the Congregationalists, a society, consisting of a number of ministers, generally the pastors of neighboring churches, united for promoting the interests of religion and the harmony of the churches | en |
| association | Union of persons in a company or society for some particular purpose; as, the American Association for the Advancement of Science; a benevolent association | en |
| association | Association is the process of creating dynamic links that the OS must go through in order for a program to execute, and resolves every intermodule reference Details | en |
| association | Statistical dependence between two outcomes Autonomic nervous system: The portion of the nervous system concerned with regulation of the activity of cardiac muscle, smooth muscle, and glands There are two main components, the sympathetic and the parasympathetic nervous systems | en |
| association | a relation resulting from interaction or dependence; "flints were found in association with the prehistoric remains of the bear"; "the host is not always injured by association with a parasite" | en |
| association | In CL diagrams, associations are used to establish relationships between classes or objects A binary association appears as a simple line, while an N-ary association has a hexagon at its hub The ends of association lines may be marked by crowfeet or UML notation, indicating cardinality An association between two classes is known as a binary association; an association between two objects is known as a binary link | en |
| association | (chemistry) any process of combination (especially in solution) that depends on relatively weak chemical bonding | en |
| association | Associations are bi-directional semantic connections Put another way, they represent the relationship between two separate objects (UML Classes) Objects within an association are completely independent, though they may be linked together Data may be passed in either or both directions, and more than one association may exist between two classes In UML diagrams, associations are represented as links (lines between the two objects) An example of an association is the relationship between a user and a group From the level of object modeling, the two classes involved are User and Group and there is a many-to-many association between them In this case, the association is one of membership That is, a user "is a member of" a group Related Links Associations See Also: Composite | en |
| association | Use to make a functional connection between an element and a data object or an action object For example, you can associate an icon and an action so that clicking on the icon invokes the action association | en |
| association | the state of being connected together as in memory or imagination; "his association of his father with being beaten was too strong to break" | en |
| association | a formal organization of people or groups of people; "he joined the Modern Language Association" | en |
| association | An association is an official group of people who have the same job, aim, or interest. the British Olympic Association Research associations are often linked to a particular industry. see also housing association | en |
| association | Your association with a person or a thing such as an organization is the connection that you have with them. the company's six-year association with retailer J.C. Penney Co = affiliation | en |
| association | If something has particular associations for you, it is connected in your mind with a particular memory, idea, or feeling. He has a shelf full of things, each of which has associations for him | en |
| association | If you do something in association with someone else, you do it together. In psychology, the process of forming mental connections or bonds between sensations, ideas, or memories. Though discussed by the ancient Greeks (in terms of similarities, contrasts, and contiguities), the "association of ideas" was first proposed by John Locke and subsequently examined by David Hume, John Stuart Mill, Herbert Spencer, and William James. Ivan Pavlov used objective methods to study the phenomenon, resulting in his identification of the conditioned reflex (see conditioning). Within psychoanalysis, the therapist encourages "free association" in order to help identify latent conflicts. Practitioners of Gestalt psychology and others have criticized associationist theories as too all-embracing, while some theorists of cognitive psychology have made it central to their theory of memory. American Association of Retired Persons Association of Southeast Asian Nations association football Young Men's Christian Association Algerian Reformist Ulama' Association of American Bar Association American Medical Association American Protective Association Association of Caribbean States bar association commercial association European Free Trade Association International Working Men's Association Lions Clubs International Association of National Basketball Association National Collegiate Athletic Association National Education Association National Rifle Association savings and loan association Universal Negro Improvement Association Latin American Integration Association Latin American Free Trade Association LAFTA National Association for the Advancement of Colored People National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity. National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations | en |
| association | Two variables are associated if some of the variability of one can be accounted for by the other In a scatterplot of the two variables, if the scatter in the values of the variable plotted on the vertical axis is smaller in narrow ranges of the variable plotted on the horizontal axis (i e , in vertical "slices") than it is overall, the two variables are associated The correlation coefficient is a measure of linear association, which is a special case of association in which large values of one variable tend to occur with large values of the other, and small values of one tend to occur with small values of the other (positive association), or in which large values of one tend to occur with small values of the other, and vice versa (negative association) | en |
| association | a social or business relationship; "a valuable financial affiliation"; "he was sorry he had to sever his ties with other members of the team"; "many close associations with England" | en |
| association | (1) A commonly-occurring relationship between two or more species which can be readily recognized in the field and treated as an ecological unit; (2) An actual or concrete community, stand, or group of organisms characterized by a definite floristic composition, presenting uniformity in physiognomy and structure, and growing under uniform habitat conditions; (3) A group of things classified together because they meet certain standards of similarity; (4) A climatic climax unit that includes all of the successional stages preceding or associated with it Plant associations and animal associations emphasize populations of plants or animals respectively within an area | en |
| association | In PowerPlay, the process of defining the relationships between an item in a Transformer model (such as a level) and its associated columns, attributes, or tables in the data source An association specifies a type (such as a column), and a role (such as a source, label, description, or drill through target) In Visualizer, the link between a filter and the chart, panel, or scene that uses the same data source You define associations when you insert a filter, or by using the filter property sheet A filter associated with a data source is automatically applied to new charts that use the same data source You can remove the association at any time using the filter property sheet PowerPlay, Visualizer | en |
| association | In statistics, the correlation or relationship between one factor and one or more other pertinent factors as demonstrated by experimental data | en |
| association | In file name extension mapping, the linking of a file extension, such as asp, to an application, such as asp dll In Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI), an association class represents a relationship between two specific WMI classes The properties of an association class include pointers, or references, to the two classes or instances | en |
| association | in the Windows operating system, an association is defined through the registry, telling the Windows Shell to associate a particular program with a particular filename extension Thus, for example Notepad exe might be the default program to open TXT documents, and one would use montage3 exe to open MO3 files (montages) When Windows doesn't know what to associate with a given extension, it prompts you to point it to the right program You can review and change associations through Window Explorer's Folder Options dialog | en |
| association | (n ) name association, pointer association or storage association | en |
| association | Association is a bilateral connection in the meaning among classes The connections between data items can be in both directions | en |
| association | (I) A cooperative relationship between system entities, usually for the purpose of transferring information between them [RFC2828] (see also risk) | en |
| association | is the concept used to link terms to each other One could also use the term relation instead But the term relation is occupied by relational databases we decided to use association instead Moreover HyperTerms is a tool to build up associative memories (the knowledge base) Associating terms with each other is fundamental to thinking In many cases we do not care about the kind of association We simply state that term 'A' is somehow associated with term 'B' This is the way we build up hypertext However in many cases the kind of association matters Examples are the two types of association: abstraction and aggregation | en |
| association | Statistical relationship between two or more events, characteristics, or other variables | en |
| association | An association permits an entity to be referenced by different names in a scoping unit or by the same or different names in different scoping units Several kinds of association exist The principal kinds of association are pointer association, argument association, host association, use association, and storage association | en |
| associations | Membership rosters of professional or nonprofit groups, useful for business-to-business mailings | en |
| associations | the company one keeps, as in family, friends, and other role models who help shape one's life; important determinants of individual character | en |
| associations | plural of association | en |
| associations | Group, based on a continuing pattern of interactions, functioning as a bridge between persons in two or more institutionalized groups or subdivisions thereof | en |
| associations | Is placed on a vendor | en |
| associations | Finding or making association between concepts | en |
| associations | The phenomenon in learning that states we are better able to remember information if it is paired with something we are familiar with or otherwise stands out | en |
| associations | An association algorithm creates rules that describe how often events have occurred together For example, "When prospectors buy picks, they also buy shovels 14% of the time " Such relationships are typically expressed with a confidence interval | en |
| associations | A resource section of the Economic Development Contacts Network association defined special interest group defined associations defined assumptions | en |
| associations | MasterCard International, Visa U S A , or Visa International, which are licensing regulatory agencies for bankcard activities | en |
| associations | Associate particular situations to possible solutions, in the form of observation--conclusion pairs More than one pair may be applicable to a given situation Acquired by direct experience, or by compiling or specialing a more general representation Do not provide explicit solutions to situations, but are used by the operator to derive them Less specific,a nd so less efficient, than procedures; vice versa, apropos principles Typically used in traditional expert systems, in the form of rules | en |
| associations | Organization which administers and promotes different types of credit cards that are licensing and regulatory agencies for bankcard activities | en |