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model
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   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Financial, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

model

Simplified version of some aspect of the real world. Models are produced to show the relationships between two or more factors, such as land use and the distance from the centre of a town (for example, concentric-ring theory). Because models are idealized, they give only a general guide to what may happen.

model

In computing, set of assumptions and criteria based on actual phenomena, used to conduct a computer simulation. Models are used to predict the behaviour of a system such as the movement of a hurricane or the flow of goods from a store. In industry, they are important tools for testing new products: engineers subject virtual prototypes of aircraft or bridges to various scenarios to find out what adjustments are necessary to the design. However, a model is only as good as the assumptions that underlie it.

Models may run at the same speed of the real situation (real-time models) or run at faster or slower speeds.

Models are also the basis for expert systems, which simulate the knowledge of a human expert.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Velasco-Hernandez, An epidemiological model for the dynamics of Chagas disease, Biosystem, 26(1991), 127-134.
What she is developing differs from some more conventional epidemiological models by taking into account characteristics and behaviors of individuals, the relationships among them and with their environments, and how those interactions change over time and space.
The model uses unique data," Park said, "and the approach is an important improvement over basic epidemiological models, which assume that all horses are equally likely to become infectious, or a proportion of horses are protected.
 
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