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  2. Satiety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satiety

    Satiety (/səˈtaɪ.ə.ti/ sə-TYE-ə-tee) is a state or condition of fullness gratified beyond the point of satisfaction, the opposite of hunger.Following satiation (meal termination), satiety is a feeling of fullness lasting until the next meal. [1]

  3. Economic satiation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_satiation

    The economic principle of satiation [1] is the effect whereby the more of a good one possesses, the less one is willing to give up to get more of it. This effect is caused by diminishing marginal utility, the effect whereby the consumer gains less utility per unit of a product the more units consumed.

  4. Satiety value - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satiety_value

    [1] [2] Highest satiety value is expected when the food that remains in the stomach for a longer period produces greatest functional activity of the organ. [3] [4] Limiting the food intake after reaching the satiety value helps reduce obesity problems. [5] [6] Foods with the most satiation per calorie are often:

  5. Point and figure chart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_and_figure_chart

    All New Guide to the Three-Point Reversal Method of Point and Figure, 116 pages, ringbound, ISBN 99931-2-861-9. Cohen, A.W. How to Use the Three-Point Reversal Method of Point & Figure Stock Market Timing first edition 1947 - Out Of Print; Cohen, A.W. The Chartcraft method of point and figure trading - A technical approach to stock market trading

  6. RICE chart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RICE_chart

    An ICE table or RICE box or RICE chart is a tabular system of keeping track of changing concentrations in an equilibrium reaction. ICE stands for initial, change, equilibrium . It is used in chemistry to keep track of the changes in amount of substance of the reactants and also organize a set of conditions that one wants to solve with. [ 1 ]

  7. Pick chart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pick_chart

    A pick chart allows visual comparison of action items relative to their impact to the problem being addressed vs. the ease/cost of implementation. In VERY rudimentary terms, PICK charts are a Return On Investment (ROI) method. When faced with multiple improvement ideas a PICK chart may be used to determine the most useful.

  8. Blank (solution) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blank_(solution)

    A blank solution is a solution containing little to no analyte of interest, [1] usually used to calibrate instruments such as a colorimeter. According to the EPA, the "primary purpose of blanks is to trace sources of artificially introduced contamination." [2] Different types of blanks are used to identify the source of contamination in the ...

  9. 2-satisfiability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2-satisfiability

    A nondeterministic algorithm for determining whether a 2-satisfiability instance is not satisfiable, using only a logarithmic amount of writable memory, is easy to describe: simply choose (nondeterministically) a variable v and search (nondeterministically) for a chain of implications leading from v to its negation and then back to v. If such a ...