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  1. Indicator (distance amplifying instrument): In various contexts of science, technology, and manufacturing (such as machining, fabricating, and additive manufacturing), an indicator is any of various instruments used to accurately measure small distances and angles, and amplify them to make them more obvious. The name ... (Distance amplifying instrument) [100%] 2024-02-04 [Dimensional instruments] [Metalworking measuring instruments]...
  2. Indicator: An indicator is a substance which turns different colors in the presence of acids and/or bases. Cabbage water is a common indicator, and is often used in simple acid/base experiments. [100%] 2023-02-26 [Acid–base chemistry] [Chemistry]...
  3. Indicator: Indicator, that which points out or records. In engineering, the word is specifically given to a mechanical device for registering the pressure of the working fluid in an engine cylinder during a stroke of the piston, the record so provided ... [100%] 2022-09-02
  4. Indicador (química): Un indicador en química, es una sustancia, natural o sintética, cuyas propiedades fisicoquímicas cambian en función del medio en el que se encuentre, lo que permite seguir la marcha de los cambios químicos que se producen durante las reacciones u ... (Química) [87%] 2024-07-25
  5. Laeken indicators: The Laeken indicators is a set of common European statistical indicators on poverty and social exclusion, established at the European Council of December 2001 in the Brussels quarter of Laeken, Belgium. They were developed as part of the Lisbon Strategy ... (European statistical indicators on poverty) [79%] 2023-12-30 [Economy of the European Union] [Welfare economics]...
  6. Housing indicators: Housing indicators are policy indicators designed to measure progress toward achieving housing policy goals. A housing indicator is a single, usually dimensionless number that points the way to improving housing outcomes. (Finance) [79%] 2023-10-07 [Economic indicators]
  7. Laeken indicators: The Laeken indicators is a set of common European statistical indicators on poverty and social exclusion, established at the European Council of December 2001 in the Brussels quarter of Laeken, Belgium. They were developed as part of the Lisbon Strategy ... (Finance) [79%] 2023-12-17 [Welfare economics]
  8. Humanities Indicators: The Humanities Indicators is a project of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences that provides statistical tools for answering questions about humanities education in the United States. Researchers use the Indicators analyze primary and secondary humanities education, undergraduate and ... [79%] 2023-12-16 [Humanities] [Data]...
  9. Humanities Indicators: The Humanities Indicators is a project of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences that provides statistical tools for answering questions about humanities education in the United States. Researchers use the Indicators analyze primary and secondary humanities education, undergraduate and ... [79%] 2024-05-11 [Humanities] [Data]...
  10. Macroeconomic indicators: Macroeconomic indicators are aggregated statistics for a geography, population, or political jurisdiction gathered by agencies and bureaus of various government statistical organization, and sometimes by private organizations using similar techniques. (Finance) [79%] 2024-07-28 [Macroeconomic indicators]
  11. Community indicators: Community indicators are "measurements that provide information about past and current trends and assist planners and community leaders in making decisions that affect future outcomes". They provide insight into the overall direction of a community: whether it is improving, declining ... (Measurements of local data and trends) [79%] 2024-09-07 [Information] [Community building]...
  12. Ecological design: Ecological design or ecodesign is an approach to designing products and services that gives special consideration to the environmental impacts of a product over its entire lifecycle. Sim Van der Ryn and Stuart Cowan define it as "any form of ... (Design approach sensitive to environmental impacts) [78%] 2024-01-02 [Environmental design] [Environmental social science]...
  13. Ecological inheritance: Ecological inheritance occurs when organisms inhabit a modified environment that a previous generation created; it was first described in Odling-Smee (1988) and Odling-Smee et al. (1996) as a consequence of niche construction. [78%] 2023-12-25 [Ecology] [Evolutionary biology]...
  14. Ecological economics: Ecological economics, bioeconomics, ecolonomy, eco-economics, or ecol-econ is both a transdisciplinary and an interdisciplinary field of academic research addressing the interdependence and coevolution of human economies and natural ecosystems, both intertemporally and spatially. By treating the economy as ... (Social) [78%] 2023-01-20 [Ecological economics] [Environmental social science]...
  15. Ecological self: In environmental philosophy, ecological self is central to the school of Experiential Deep Ecology, which, based on the work of Norwegian philosopher Arne Næss, argues that through the process of self-actualisation, one transcends the notions of the individuated "egoic ... (Philosophy) [78%] 2023-12-20 [Deep ecology] [Self]...
  16. Ecological psychology: Ecological psychology is the scientific study of perception-action from a direct realist approach. Ecological psychology is a school of psychology that follows much of the writings of Roger Barker and James J. (Scientific study) [78%] 2022-12-27 [Enactive cognition]
  17. Ecological design: Ecological design or ecodesign is an approach to designing products and services that gives special consideration to the environmental impacts of a product over its entire lifecycle. Sim Van der Ryn and Stuart Cowan define it as "any form of ... (Earth) [78%] 2023-09-19 [Environmental social science] [Environmental terminology]...
  18. Ecological competence: Ecological competence is a term that has several different meanings that are dependent on the context it is used. The term "Ecological competence" can be used in a microbial sense, and it can be used in a sociological sense. (Earth) [78%] 2022-04-15 [Ecology]
  19. Ecological health: Ecological health or ecological integrity or ecological damage is used to refer to symptoms of an ecosystem's pending loss of carrying capacity, its ability to perform nature's services, or a pending ecocide, due to cumulative causes such as ... [78%] 2023-12-12 [Environment] [Health]...
  20. Ecological succession: Ecological succession, a fundamental concept in ecology, refers to more-or-less predictable and orderly changes in the composition or structure of an ecological community. Succession may be initiated either by formation of new, unoccupied habitat (e.g., a lava ... [78%] 2023-06-15

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