0 past simple and past participle of encode
1 to change something into a system for sending messages secretly, or to represent complicated information in a simple or short way:
Many satellite broadcasts are encoded so that they can only be received by people who have paid to see them.
Some music CDs are encoded with information about the performers and their music.
Grammatical information helps learners to encode sentences.
The implicit memory tasks may also rely more on the encoded meaning of concepts than on the perceptual record of the items.
Second, crossover is per formed at random points during reproduction allowing genes to be spliced, resulting in significant changes in the encoded values.
Other virulence factors include the ability to cause attaching-and-effacing lesions in the intestine and plasmid encoded haemolysins.
This post-optimization process yields the actual plan encoded by the action variables, and is a simple yet general strategy to derive valid plans.
When representing data, we must ensure that all relevant features needed for prediction are encoded; each case will require some minimal representation.
We encoded secondary structure in the alignment, identifying stems, loops and bulges, and manually excluded regions of ambiguous alignment from the final dataset.
This fact cannot be encoded in the underlying representation because syllabification is not distinctive.
However, the point remains that the same predicate-argument structure can be encoded in a fashion that does not include a verb as a sentential head.