- integrated pest management (agriculture)
integrated pest management, Technique for agricultural disease- and pest-control in which as many pest-control methods as possible are used in an ecologically harmonious manner to keep infestation within manageable limits. Integrated pest management addresses the serious ecological problems created
- integrated product and process development (technology)
aerospace industry: Design methods: …teams, is a method called integrated product and process development (IPPD). IPPD ensures that the needs of the users and those who bring the product to the customer through manufacturing and outside procurement are considered at the beginning of the design/build cycle. In cases in which maintenance plays a major…
- integrated services digital network (communications)
ISDN, all-digital high-speed network provided by telephone carriers that allowed voice and data to be carried over existing telephone circuits. In the early 1980s ISDN was developed as an offshoot of efforts to upgrade the telephone network from analog to digital using fibre optics. The expense of
- integration (mathematics)
integration, in mathematics, technique of finding a function g(x) the derivative of which, Dg(x), is equal to a given function f(x). This is indicated by the integral sign “∫,” as in ∫f(x), usually called the indefinite integral of the function. The symbol dx represents an infinitesimal
- integration (nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy)
chemical compound: Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy: …spectrometers have a feature, called integration, which, when selected by the user, calculates the area under each peak and plots the result as a line that is displaced vertically at a peak by an amount proportional to the area under the peak. The integration of the bromoethane spectrum, for example,…
- integration by parts (mathematics)
gamma function: …technique from calculus known as integration by parts, it can be proved that the gamma function has the following recursive property: if x > 0, then Γ(x + 1) = xΓ(x). From this it follows that Γ(2) = 1 Γ(1) = 1; Γ(3) = 2 Γ(2) = 2 × 1…
- integration host factor (protein)
nucleic acid: Site-specific recombination: …DNA binding protein called the integration host factor. A third protein, called excisionase, recognizes the hybrid sites formed on integration and, in conjunction with integrase, catalyzes an excision process whereby the λ chromosome is removed from the bacterial chromosome.
- integration mode (radiation detection)
radiation measurement: Integrating mode: There are circumstances in which the current from the detector is simply integrated during the time of exposure, and the accumulated total charge is measured at its completion. This integration mode of operation produces information that is related to the total exposure, but…
- Integration of American Society, The (work by Angell)
Robert Cooley Angell: …Family Encounters the Depression (1936); The Integration of American Society (1941); The Moral Integration of American Cities (1951); Free Society and Moral Crisis (1958); A Study of Values of Soviet and of American Elites (1963); Peace on the March (1969); and The Quest for World Order (1979).
- integration principle (law)
environmental law: The integration principle: Environmental protection requires that due consideration be given to the potential consequences of environmentally fateful decisions. Various jurisdictions (e.g., the United States and the EU) and business organizations (e.g., the U.S. Chamber of Commerce) have integrated environmental considerations into their decision-making processes through…
- Integration, Cooperation, and Development, Treaty for (Argentina-Brazil [1988])
Mercosur: The 1988 Treaty for Integration, Cooperation, and Development committed Argentina and Brazil to work toward the establishment of a common market within 10 years, and it invited other Latin American countries to join. Mercosur was created in 1991 by the Treaty of Asunción, which was signed by…
- integration, economic
economic integration, process in which two or more states in a broadly defined geographic area reduce a range of trade barriers to advance or protect a set of economic goals. The level of integration involved in an economic regionalist project can vary enormously from loose association to a
- integration, racial
baseball: Integration: Several major league teams either discussed or attempted the racial integration of professional baseball in the 1940s. The interest in integration in the 1940s was sparked by several factors—the increasing economic and political influence of Black people in urban areas, the success of Black…
- Integration, Society for (Japanese organization)
burakumin: …rival national organization, Dōwakai (Society for Integration), was founded; it came to be led by Liberal Democratic politicians, some of whom were elected to the national Diet. A third organization, the Zenkoku Buraku Kaihō Undō (All-Japan Buraku Liberation Movement), was formed in 1976.
- integration, theory of (mathematics)
Joseph Liouville: This was followed by his theory of integration in finite terms (1832–33), the main goals of which were to decide whether given algebraic functions have integrals that can be expressed in finite (or elementary) terms. He also worked in differential equations and boundary value problems, and, together with Charles-François Sturm—the…
- Integrative Action of the Nervous System, The (work by Sherrington)
Sir Charles Scott Sherrington: In his classic work, The Integrative Action of the Nervous System (1906), he distinguished three main groups of sense organs: exteroceptive, such as those that detect light, sound, odour, and tactile stimuli; interoceptive, exemplified by taste receptors; and proprioceptive, or those receptors that detect events occurring in the interior…
- integrative agnosia (pathology)
agnosia: Types of agnosia: Some persons are diagnosed with integrative agnosia, a form of visual agnosia in which symptoms of both associative and apperceptive disorders are present.
- integrative bargaining (industry)
industrial relations: Collective bargaining: In contrast, with an integrative bargaining approach the parties engage in cooperative problem solving in an effort to achieve a resolution from which each party benefits.
- integrator (instrument)
integrator, instrument for performing the mathematical operation of integration, important for the solution of differential and integral equations and the generation of many mathematical functions. The earliest integrator was a mechanical instrument called the planimeter (q.v.). The illustration
- integrity, data (computing)
computer science: Information management: Data integrity refers to designing a DBMS that ensures the correctness and stability of its data across all applications that access the system. When a database is designed, integrity checking is enabled by specifying the data type of each column in the table. For example,…
- integron (genetics)
Enterobacter: …genetic element known as an integron. Integrons contain genes that confer antibiotic resistance capabilities and are incorporated into bacterial genomes via genetic recombination. They are efficiently exchanged and disseminated among circulating bacterial populations, such as those occurring in nosocomial environments. In E. cloacae resistance to the aminoglycoside gentamicin has been…
- integument (biology)
integument, in biology, network of features that forms the covering of an organism. The integument delimits the body of the organism, separating it from the environment and protecting it from foreign matter. At the same time it gives communication with the outside, enabling an organism to live in a
- integumentary system (biology)
integument, in biology, network of features that forms the covering of an organism. The integument delimits the body of the organism, separating it from the environment and protecting it from foreign matter. At the same time it gives communication with the outside, enabling an organism to live in a
- Intel (American company)
Intel, a leading American brand and manufacturer of semiconductor computer circuits. It is headquartered in Santa Clara, California. The company’s name comes from “integrated electronics.” Intel was founded in July 1968 by American engineers Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore. Unlike the archetypal
- Intel 1103 (microprocessor)
Intel: Early products: However, its sibling, the 1103, a one-kilobit dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) chip, was successful and the first chip to store a significant amount of information. It was purchased first by the American technology company Honeywell Incorporated in 1970 to replace the core memory technology in its computers. Because DRAMs…
- Intel 4004 (microprocessor)
computer: The Intel 4004: In 1969 Busicom, a Japanese calculator company, commissioned Intel Corporation to make the chips for a line of calculators that Busicom intended to sell. Custom chips were made for many clients, and this was one more such contract, hardly unusual at the time.
- Intel 8008 (microprocessor)
computer: The Intel 4004: …introduced an eight-bit processor, the 8008, in November 1972. (In 1974 the 8008 was reengineered with a larger, more versatile instruction set as the 8080.) In 1972 Intel was still a small company, albeit with two new and revolutionary products. But no one—certainly not their inventors—had figured out exactly what…
- Intel 80386 (microprocessor)
Intel: Early products: …the most important was the 80386, a 32-bit chip released in 1985 that started the company’s commitment to make all future microprocessors backward-compatible with previous CPUs. Application developers and PC owners could then be assured that software that worked on older Intel machines would run on the newest models.
- Intel 8080 (microprocessor)
Intel: Early products: …central processing unit (CPU); the 8080, which was 10 times faster than the 8008, came two years later; and in 1978 the company built its first 16-bit microprocessor, the 8086.
- Intel 8088 (microprocessor)
Intel: Early products: …Machines (IBM) chose Intel’s 16-bit 8088 to be the CPU in its first mass-produced personal computer (PC). Intel also provided its microprocessors to other manufacturers that made PC “clones” that were compatible with IBM’s product. The IBM PC and its clones ignited the demand for desktop and portable computers. IBM…
- Intel Corporation (American company)
Intel, a leading American brand and manufacturer of semiconductor computer circuits. It is headquartered in Santa Clara, California. The company’s name comes from “integrated electronics.” Intel was founded in July 1968 by American engineers Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore. Unlike the archetypal
- Intellectual Cooperation, Committee on (League of Nations)
Marie Curie: Later work: …made a member of the International Commission on Intellectual Co-operation by the Council of the League of Nations. In addition, she had the satisfaction of seeing the development of the Curie Foundation in Paris and the inauguration in 1932 in Warsaw of the Radium Institute, of which her sister Bronisława…
- intellectual disability
intellectual disability, any of several conditions characterized by subnormal intellectual functioning and impaired adaptive behaviour that are identified during the individual’s developmental years. Increasingly, sensitivity to the negative connotations of the label mentally retarded prompted the
- intellectual history (discipline)
intellectual history, branch of history that deals with the historical propagation and dissemination of ideas. Intellectual history is closely related to the history of ideas, a branch of history that treats ideas as objects of formal analysis. Like the history of ideas, intellectual history
- intellectual monotheism (religion)
monotheism: Exclusive monotheism: In intellectual monotheism, the one god is nothing but the logical result of questions concerning the origin of the world. In many African religions the one god postulated behind the many gods that are active in the world and in human life is little more than…
- Intellectual Things (work by Kunitz)
Stanley Kunitz: …them in his first book, Intellectual Things (1930). He served for two years in the U.S. Army during World War II, after which he began working as a professor and visiting lecturer at several universities. His collection Passport to the War (1944), like his first book, contains meticulously crafted, intellectual…
- intellectual virtue (philosophy)
Aristotle: Happiness: …temperance, and liberality; the key intellectual virtues are wisdom, which governs ethical behaviour, and understanding, which is expressed in scientific endeavour and contemplation.
- intellectual-property law
intellectual-property law, the legal regulations governing an individual’s or an organization’s right to control the use or dissemination of ideas or information. Various systems of legal rules exist that empower persons and organizations to exercise such control. Copyright law confers upon the
- intellectualism
rationalism, in Western philosophy, the view that regards reason as the chief source and test of knowledge. Holding that reality itself has an inherently logical structure, the rationalist asserts that a class of truths exists that the intellect can grasp directly. There are, according to the
- intellectus agens (philosophy)
epistemology: Aristotle: …passive intellect, the second the active intellect, of which Aristotle speaks tersely. “Intellect in this sense is separable, impassible, unmixed, since it is in its essential nature activity.…When intellect is set free from its present conditions, it appears as just what it is and nothing more: it alone is immortal…
- Intelligence (British television series)
David Schwimmer: Other film and TV credits: He then starred in Intelligence (2020– ), a British comedy series revolving around the country’s cyber crimes unit. Schwimmer also provided the voice of a giraffe in the animated films Madagascar (2005), Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa (2008), and Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted (2012).
- intelligence (international relations)
intelligence, in government and military operations, evaluated information concerning the strength, activities, and probable courses of action of foreign countries or nonstate actors that are usually, though not always, enemies or opponents. The term also is used to refer to the collection,
- intelligence agent (intelligence)
intelligence: Levels of intelligence: …to prevent spies or other agents of a foreign power from penetrating the country’s government, armed services, or intelligence agencies. Counterintelligence also is concerned with protecting advanced technology, deterring terrorism, and combating international narcotics trafficking. Counterintelligence operations sometimes produce positive intelligence, including information about the intelligence-gathering tools and techniques of…
- Intelligence and Research, Bureau of (United States government)
intelligence: The United States: Through its Bureau of Intelligence and Research, the Department of State collects, analyzes, and disseminates large quantities of political, economic, and cultural information about countries in which the United States has accredited representation. The bureau, known in the intelligence community by the acronym INR, has the dual…
- Intelligence and Security, Ministry of (Iranian intelligence agency)
intelligence: Iran: …of Intelligence and Security (MOIS), which is responsible for both intelligence and counterintelligence. It also has conducted covert actions outside Iran in support of Islamic regimes elsewhere; for example, it was said to have provided military support to Muslim fighters in Kosovo and in Bosnia and Herzegovina in the…
- intelligence appraisal
military intelligence: Types of intelligence: …which is usually called an intelligence appraisal or intelligence assessment, contains some incorrect information.
- intelligence assessment
military intelligence: Types of intelligence: …which is usually called an intelligence appraisal or intelligence assessment, contains some incorrect information.
- Intelligence Corps of the Defense Forces (Israeli intelligence agency)
intelligence: Israel: …Forces, commonly referred to as Military Intelligence (or Aman), constitutes a third major Israeli intelligence organization. Some observers view it as a rival to Mossad, and conflicts between the two agencies have been reported. Its chief is the military intelligence adviser to the minister of defense.
- Intelligence Directorate (United States government)
Central Intelligence Agency: Organization and responsibilities: The Intelligence Directorate analyzes intelligence gathered by overt means from sources such as the news media and by covert means from agents in the field, satellite photography, and the interception of telephone, mobile phone, and other forms of communication. Those analyses attempt to incorporate intelligence from…
- Intelligence of Flowers, The (work by Maeterlinck)
Maurice Maeterlinck: …and L’Intelligence des fleurs (1907; The Intelligence of Flowers), in which Maeterlinck sets out his philosophy of the human condition. Maeterlinck was made a count by the Belgian king in 1932.
- Intelligence of Flowers, The (work by Maeterlinck)
Maurice Maeterlinck: …and L’Intelligence des fleurs (1907; The Intelligence of Flowers), in which Maeterlinck sets out his philosophy of the human condition. Maeterlinck was made a count by the Belgian king in 1932.
- intelligence quotient (psychology)
IQ, (from “intelligence quotient”), a number used to express the relative intelligence of a person. It is one of many intelligence tests. IQ was originally computed by taking the ratio of mental age to chronological (physical) age and multiplying by 100. Thus, if a 10-year-old child had a mental
- Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 (United States)
director of national intelligence: …came into existence with the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004, which amends the National Security Act of 1947. Under the law, the director has a number of responsibilities, including providing intelligence to the executive and legislative branches of government, establishing the IC’s objectives and priorities, handling the…
- intelligence satellite (espionage technology)
space exploration: Motivations for space activity: …quickly developed an array of intelligence satellites, and later a few other countries instituted their own satellite observation programs. Intelligence-gathering satellites have been used to verify arms-control agreements, provide warnings of military threats, and identify targets during military operations, among other uses.
- intelligence test (psychology)
intelligence test, series of tasks designed to measure the capacity to make abstractions, to learn, and to deal with novel situations. The most widely used intelligence tests include the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale and the Wechsler scales. The Stanford-Binet is the American adaptation of the
- intelligence, animal (animal behavior)
animal learning: Complex problem solving: …that animals might differ in intelligence, with those more closely related to humans sharing more of their intellectual abilities, is commonly traced back to Charles Darwin. This is because the acceptance of Darwin’s theory of evolution was at the expense of the ideas of the French philosopher René Descartes, who…
- intelligence, artificial
artificial intelligence (AI), the ability of a digital computer or computer-controlled robot to perform tasks commonly associated with intelligent beings. The term is frequently applied to the project of developing systems endowed with the intellectual processes characteristic of humans, such as
- intelligence, human (psychology)
human intelligence, mental quality that consists of the abilities to learn from experience, adapt to new situations, understand and handle abstract concepts, and use knowledge to manipulate one’s environment. Much of the excitement among investigators in the field of intelligence derives from their
- intelligence, military (military science)
military intelligence, in military science, information concerning an enemy or an area. The term is also used for an agency that gathers such information. Military intelligence is as old as warfare itself. Even in biblical literature, Moses sent spies to live with the Canaanites in order to learn
- Intelligence, Office of (United States government agency)
Federal Bureau of Investigation: 21st century: …2003 the FBI established an Office of Intelligence to manage its intelligence-gathering activities and to coordinate its efforts with the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).
- intelligence-gathering satellite (espionage technology)
space exploration: Motivations for space activity: …quickly developed an array of intelligence satellites, and later a few other countries instituted their own satellite observation programs. Intelligence-gathering satellites have been used to verify arms-control agreements, provide warnings of military threats, and identify targets during military operations, among other uses.
- intelligent agent (science)
complexity: The science of complexity: Intelligent and adaptive agents. Not only are there a medium-sized number of agents, but these agents are “intelligent” and adaptive. This means that they make decisions on the basis of rules and that they are ready to modify the rules on the basis of new…
- intelligent design
intelligent design (ID), argument intended to demonstrate that living organisms were created in more or less their present forms by an “intelligent designer.” Intelligent design was formulated in the 1990s, primarily in the United States, as an explicit refutation of the theory of biological
- Intelligent Homosexual’s Guide to Capitalism and Socialism with a Key to the Scriptures, The (play by Kushner)
Tony Kushner: Kushner’s The Intelligent Homosexual’s Guide to Capitalism and Socialism with a Key to the Scriptures (2009) is a naturalistic drama about an extended family of intellectuals dealing with their patriarch’s desire to die by suicide.
- intelligentsia (social group)
Vladimir Lenin: Formation of a revolutionary party of Vladimir Lenin: …by many of the Russian intelligentsia was their adherence to the widespread belief of the Populists (Russian pre-Marxist radicals) that Marxism was inapplicable to peasant Russia, in which a proletariat (an industrial working class) was almost nonexistent. Russia, they believed, was immune to capitalism, owing to the circumstances of joint…
- intelligentsiya (social group)
Vladimir Lenin: Formation of a revolutionary party of Vladimir Lenin: …by many of the Russian intelligentsia was their adherence to the widespread belief of the Populists (Russian pre-Marxist radicals) that Marxism was inapplicable to peasant Russia, in which a proletariat (an industrial working class) was almost nonexistent. Russia, they believed, was immune to capitalism, owing to the circumstances of joint…
- Intelligenzprüfungen an Menschenaffen (work by Köhler)
Wolfgang Köhler: …classic Intelligenzprüfungen an Menschenaffen (1917; The Mentality of Apes), a work that emphasized insight and led to a radical revision of learning theory. Another major work, Die physischen Gestalten in Ruhe und im stationären Zustand (1920; “Physical Gestalt in Rest and Stationary States”), was based on an attempt to determine…
- intelligibility objection (philosophy)
free will and moral responsibility: Libertarianism: …to what is called the “intelligibility” objection. This objection points out that people can have no more control over a purely random action than they have over an action that is deterministically inevitable; in neither case does free will enter the picture. Hence, if human actions are indeterministic, free will…
- Intellympiad (games)
bridge: Bridge tournaments: …the World Mind Games, or Intellympiad, to be held in the Olympic city directly after a Winter or Summer Games.
- Intelsat (company)
Intelsat, company that provides satellite communication services. Intelsat owns more than 50 communications satellites and the ground stations from which they are controlled. Its headquarters are in Luxembourg. Intelsat was founded as a public-private consortium in 1964 by the telecommunication
- Intelsat 2 (satellite)
satellite communication: Development of satellite communication: Early Bird was followed by Intelsat 2B and 2D, launched in 1967 and covering the Pacific Ocean region, and Intelsat 3 F-3, launched in 1969 and covering the Indian Ocean region. Intelsat’s satellites in geostationary orbit provided nearly global coverage, as Arthur C. Clarke had envisioned 24 years earlier. Nineteen…
- Intelsat 3 (satellite)
satellite communication: Development of satellite communication: Nineteen days after Intelsat 3 F-3 was placed over the Indian Ocean, the landing of the first human on the Moon on July 20, 1969, was broadcast live through the global network of Intelsat satellites to over 600 million television viewers.
- Intelsat I (satellite)
Intelsat: …was Early Bird, later renamed Intelsat I, which was placed in a stationary orbit over the Atlantic Ocean at the Equator in 1965. Early Bird was the first operational commercial satellite providing regular telecommunications and broadcasting services between North America and Europe. Early Bird was followed by Intelsat II F-2…
- Intelsat, Ltd. (company)
Intelsat, company that provides satellite communication services. Intelsat owns more than 50 communications satellites and the ground stations from which they are controlled. Its headquarters are in Luxembourg. Intelsat was founded as a public-private consortium in 1964 by the telecommunication
- intendancy (Spanish colonial district)
history of Latin America: The Bourbon reforms: …creation of large districts called intendancies (the word and model were French). Each was headed by an official with extensive powers called an intendant, who was directly responsible to the crown in Spain. The measure was meaningful because royal government in the provinces, outside the seats of the viceroy (the…
- intendant (historical French official)
intendant, administrative official under the ancien régime in France who served as an agent of the king in each of the provinces, or généralités. From about 1640 until 1789, the intendancies were the chief instrument used to achieve administrative unification and centralization under the French
- intendant (Spanish official)
intendente, royal official appointed by the 18th-century kings of the Bourbon dynasty in Spain. Modeled after the French intendants, the intendentes were to serve as instruments of royal centralization and administrative reform but were frequently resisted as conflicting with local privileges. In
- intendant (theater)
directing: 19th-century directing: …German practice of appointing an Intendant to run a theatre company is an early example of the function now referred to in the British theatre as artistic director, combining practical and artistic control over the work of a dramatic company. Goethe, for example, was appointed Intendant of the court theatre…
- intendant (Chinese official)
China: Unification: Within these circuits, intendants were charged with overseeing the civil administration. Below these intendants were the actual administrators. These included prefects, whose positions were divided into several grades according to an area’s size and importance. Below the prefects there were district magistrates (subprefects) in charge of areas corresponding…
- intendente (Spanish official)
intendente, royal official appointed by the 18th-century kings of the Bourbon dynasty in Spain. Modeled after the French intendants, the intendentes were to serve as instruments of royal centralization and administrative reform but were frequently resisted as conflicting with local privileges. In
- Intense Pulsed Neutron Source (particle accelerator)
Argonne National Laboratory: …Advanced Photon Source (APS), the Intense Pulsed Neutron Source (IPNS), the Argonne Tandem Linear Accelerator System (ATLAS), and the High-Voltage Electron Microscope- (HVEM-) Tandem Facility—have been designated official U.S. Department of Energy National User Facilities.
- intensifier screen
radiation measurement: Radiographic films: …sandwich the photographic emulsion between intensifier screens that consist of thin layers of light-emitting phosphors of high atomic number, such as calcium tungstate, cesium iodide, or rare earth phosphors. If an X ray interacts in the screen, the light that is produced darkens the film in the immediate vicinity through…
- intension and extension (logic and semantics)
intension and extension, in logic, correlative words that indicate the reference of a term or concept: “intension” indicates the internal content of a term or concept that constitutes its formal definition; and “extension” indicates its range of applicability by naming the particular objects that
- intensional entity (philosophy)
analytic philosophy: Quine: …to what he calls “intensional entities.” Among such entities are many items that analytic philosophers had thought they could talk about without difficulty, such as meanings, propositions, and the properties—attributed to statements—of being necessarily true or possibly true. Because he did not accept the existence of entities that did…
- intensional logic
history of logic: Leibniz: …in what is called an “intensional” rather than an “extensional” logic—one whose terms stand for properties or concepts rather than for the things having these properties. Leibniz’ basic notion of the truth of a judgment was that the concepts making up the predicate were “included in” the concept of the…
- intensity (color)
painting: Color: …attributes of hue, tone, and intensity. Red, yellow, and blue are the basic hues from which all others on the chromatic scale can be made by mixtures. These three opaque hues are the subtractive pigment primaries and should not be confused with the behavior of the additive triads and mixtures…
- intensity (physics)
sound intensity, amount of energy flowing per unit time through a unit area that is perpendicular to the direction in which the sound waves are travelling. Sound intensity may be measured in units of energy or work—e.g., microjoules (10-6 joule) per second per square centimetre—or in units of
- intensity interferometry (astronomy)
Robert Hanbury Brown: …thus developing the technique of intensity interferometry. Brown and Twiss set up an intensity interferometer at Narrabri in New South Wales, Australia, for the measuring of hot stars. From 1964 to 1981 Brown was a professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Sydney. He later served as president…
- intensity just noticeable difference (sound)
sound: Dynamic range of the ear: …can be observed, called the intensity just noticeable difference, is about one decibel (further reinforcing the value of the decibel intensity scale). One decibel corresponds to an absolute energy variation of a factor of about 1.25. Thus, the minimum observable change in the intensity of a sound wave is greater…
- intensity theory of pain
human nervous system: Theories of pain: There have always been two theories of the sensation of pain, a quantitative, or intensity, theory and a stimulus-specific theory. According to the former, pain results from excessive stimulation (e.g., excessive heat or cold or excessive damage to the tissues). This theory…
- intensive agriculture
intensive agriculture, in agricultural economics, system of cultivation using large amounts of labour and capital relative to land area. Large amounts of labour and capital are necessary to the application of fertilizer, insecticides, fungicides, and herbicides to growing crops, and capital is
- intensive animal farming (agriculture)
intensive animal farming, system of animal agriculture intended to maximize output while minimizing space requirements and resource expenditures. Animals commonly farmed in this method include fish, poultry, pigs, and cattle. Because of the compact animal housing setup involved, with the use of
- Intensive Care (novel by Frame)
Janet Frame: Intensive Care (1970) combines a story of thwarted love with a dystopian tale of a society that eliminates its weakest members. Her later novels include Daughter Buffalo (1972), an intricately structured work fixated on death; Living in the Maniototo (1979), a surreal exploration of the…
- intensive care unit (medicine)
intensive care unit, hospital facility for care of critically ill patients at a more intensive level than is needed by other patients. Staffed by specialized personnel, the intensive care unit contains a complex assortment of monitors and life-support equipment that can sustain life in once-fatal
- intensive farming
intensive agriculture, in agricultural economics, system of cultivation using large amounts of labour and capital relative to land area. Large amounts of labour and capital are necessary to the application of fertilizer, insecticides, fungicides, and herbicides to growing crops, and capital is
- intensive margin (economics)
rent: The classical economic view: …was pushed to the “intensive margin” through more intensive use of the more fertile land. As long as the additional cost of cultivation was less than the addition to the value of the product, it paid to apply more labour and capital to any given piece of land until…
- intention (logic)
intention, (Latin: intentio), in scholastic logic and psychology, a concept used to describe a mode of being or relation. In knowing, the mind is said to “intend” or “tend toward” its object, and a thing as known, or in the knowing mind, has “intentional being.” Intention may mean either the mind
- intention (criminal law)
crime: Intention: One of the most-important general principles of criminal law is that an individual normally cannot be convicted of a crime without having intended to commit the act in question. With few exceptions, the individual does not need to know that the act itself is…
- intention (psychology)
infancy: …thus begin to show greater intentionality, and he eventually begins to invent new actions in a form of trial-and-error experimentation. By the 18th month the child has begun trying to solve problems involving physical objects by mentally imagining certain events and outcomes, rather than by simple physical trial-and-error experimentation.
- intention tremor (pathology)
cerebellar ataxia: Manifestations of ataxia and other symptoms: …shaking during any movement) or intention tremor (involuntary shaking during purposeful movement). In both forms of tremor, shaking disappears when the muscles are at rest. Cerebellar damage can also cause a speech disturbance called dysarthria, in which words become slurred and difficult to understand. Dysarthria tends to be a major…