Noun
One who discriminates.
Source: Webster's dictionaryIt can be defined as a subdividing the customers based on already known good discriminator. Source: Internet
Markets punish the discriminator In The Economics of Discrimination (University of Chicago Press, 1957), economist Gary Becker asserts that markets automatically punish the companies that discriminate. Source: Internet
Networks that speak BGP to each other can engage in multi exit discriminator exchange with each other, although most do not. Source: Internet
Squelch can be 'opened', which allows all signals entering the receivers discriminator tap to be heard. Source: Internet
Made up of two competing neural networks, a generator and a discriminator, GAN-based models learn to create new content that's convincing enough to pass for the original. Source: Internet
The generator acts as the counterpart to the discriminator, generating samples the discriminator must try to identify as real or generated. Source: Internet