0 present participle of spy
1 to secretly collect and report information about the activities of another country or organization:
2 to see or notice someone or something usually when it involves looking hard:
Part of the presented problem is to reach the border of the target's view field for spying purposes.
We need an additional arbitrage condition between improving/spying and introducing a new intermediate good.
This expectation was erroneous, especially on the spying and libelliste charges.
Policing and military fields are examples where covert robots can be used for applications such as surveillance, spying, and crime prevention missions.
Given the macroeconomic focus of this paper, we capture this asymmetric exposure to spying by assuming that only vertical innovation can be spied.
Sensing great utility in detachable eyes - for spying, or looking two ways at once - the white man formulated a deal.
Or perhaps she will simply deny the moral permissibility of spying.
Spying on the brain, one neuron at a time.