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['sensɪ'tɪvɪtɪ] n | |
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gen. |
"sensitivité" f; champ d'action |
agric., tech. |
acuité f |
anal.chem. |
sensibilité f (of analytical method); sensibilité d’une réaction analytique |
antenn., opt. |
seuil de détection d'un récepteur optique |
astr. |
sensibilité f (à la lumière); rapidité d'une émulsion |
chem. |
sensibilité de l'essence |
comp., MS |
niveau de confidentialité (The degree of confidentiality of an e-mail message or calendar item, ranging from normal to confidential) |
el. |
sensibilité d'un récepteur radioélectrique; seuil du flux lumineux |
IT |
sensibilité f |
mater.sc., industr., construct. |
sévérité f |
nat.sc. |
sensitivité f |
paraglid. |
manoeuvrabilité f |
radiat. |
sensibilité f (of a detector, d'un détecteur) |
tech. |
sensibilité d'un carburant; coefficient de sensibilité |
telecom. |
sensibilité f (measuring instrument) |
work.fl., IT |
taux de rappel; coefficient d'exhaustivité; exhaustivité interne; facteur de rappel |
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biol. |
sensibilité aux rayons gamma; sensibilité aux rayons γ; sensibilité au rayonnement gamma; sensibilité au rayonnement γ |
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UN, AIDS. |
sensibilité f (d'un test) |
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el., acoust. |
efficacité d'un transducteur |
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health., anim.husb. |
sensibilité d'une méthode |
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English thesaurus |
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abbr., biol. |
s |
IT |
A measure of the impact that improper disclosure of information may have on an enterprise |
med. |
The probability that a medical test will detect the condition being tested for in people who actually have the condition. In other words, a sensitive test is one that produces true positive results. For example, the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay ELISA HIV antibody test is highly sensitive, which means the test can detect HIV in most people infected with HIV. However, because the ELISA can sometimes mistakenly recognize antibodies to other diseases as antibodies to HIV a false positive result, a Western Blot or other HIV test is used to confirm a positive ELISA HIV antibody test. see also specificity, true positive |
metrol. |
The change in the response of a measuring instrument divided by the corresponding change in the stimulus |