Some articles on systems, system:
... the living, and its various expanded usages, such as applying it to self-organizing systems in general or social systems in particular ... have argued that the term fails to define or explain living systems and that, because of the extreme language of self-referentiality it uses without any ... Realization of the Living and develops applications in his own work on cybernetics and the viable system model ...
... These specific systems are widely studied in Human anatomy ... "Human" systems are also present in many other animals ... Circulatory system pumping and channelling blood to and from the body and lungs with heart, blood and blood vessels ...
... Adaptive biometric Systems aim to auto-update the templates or model to the intra-class variation of the operational data ... The two-fold advantages of these systems are solving the problem of limited training data and tracking the temporal variations of the input data through adaptation ... First, with an adaptive biometric system, one no longer needs to collect a large number of biometric samples during the enrollment process ...
... Multi-biometric systems use multiple sensors or biometrics to overcome the limitations of unimodal biometric systems ... For instance iris recognition systems can be compromised by aging irides and finger scanning systems by worn-out or cut fingerprints ... While unimodal biometric systems are limited by the integrity of their identifier, it is unlikely that several unimodal systems will suffer from identical limitations ...
... science engineering Education Electrical and electronic systems engineering Graphic design Industrial engineering International business trade Law Management information systems ...
Famous quotes containing the word systems:
“What avails it that you are a Christian, if you are not purer than the heathen, if you deny yourself no more, if you are not more religious? I know of many systems of religion esteemed heathenish whose precepts fill the reader with shame, and provoke him to new endeavors, though it be to the performance of rites merely.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“The skylines lit up at dead of night, the air- conditioning systems cooling empty hotels in the desert and artificial light in the middle of the day all have something both demented and admirable about them. The mindless luxury of a rich civilization, and yet of a civilization perhaps as scared to see the lights go out as was the hunter in his primitive night.”
—Jean Baudrillard (b. 1929)
“People stress the violence. Thats the smallest part of it. Football is brutal only from a distance. In the middle of it theres a calm, a tranquility. The players accept pain. Theres a sense of order even at the end of a running play with bodies stewn everywhere. When the systems interlock, theres a satisfaction to the game that cant be duplicated. Theres a harmony.”
—Don Delillo (b. 1926)