1. weighting - Noun
2. weighting - Verb
of Weight
Source: Webster's dictionaryWe have now isolated four "ideal types" of causal texture, approximations to which may be thought of as existing simultaneously in the "real world" of most organizations--though, of course, their weighting will vary enormously from case to case. Fred Emery
A psophometer usually incorporates a weighting network. Source: Internet
Another use of weighting is in television, where the red, green and blue components of the signal are weighted according to their perceived brightness. Source: Internet
A successive approximations approach to character weighting. Source: Internet
Both groups gave care the highest over-all weighting, but conservatives valued fairness the lowest, whereas liberals valued purity the lowest. Source: Internet
As the density increases or the temperature decreases, the number of accessible states per particle becomes smaller, and at some point, more particles will be forced into a single state than the maximum allowed for that state by statistical weighting. Source: Internet