0 past simple and past participle of track
1 to follow a person or animal by looking for proof that they have been somewhere, or by using electronic equipment:
2 If a film or video camera tracks in a particular direction, it moves along while it is filming:
3 to follow the level of an interest rate, share price, etc.:
4 to group and teach together school students with similar abilities who are approximately the same age:
His book tracks the development of modern English.
When the tracker is not sure that a sequence is being repeated, or when the tracked sequence finishes, it returns control to the neural network.
This cage can then be tracked or manipulated further downstream in the analysis using an electric field.
If there is no relative motion between the feature being tracked and the sensor, then the random processes can be viewed as stationary.