0 present participle of capture --
1 to take someone as a prisoner, or to take something into your possession, especially by force: --
2 to represent or describe something very accurately using words or images: --
3 If something captures your imagination or attention, you feel very interested and excited by it: --
We also examine the absolute size of the latent knowledge-consistency correlation to determine the extent to which the two factors are capturing the same information.
This is the first half of capturing the recursive structure of terms.
Recent development in methods of capturing data (digital techniques) have reduced the problem of measuring small-scale traits accurately.
The paper concludes with recommendations to reduce the disadvantages that smallholders may face in capturing the opportunities offered by carbon markets.
As a consequence, the concept of agents is much more adequate for capturing autonomous and flexible behaviour at the cognitive and the social level.
Capturing marginal districts is essential to winning an election.
Capturing this overlap properly is critical for understanding what is happening in the dialogue.
The type system also makes clear the relationship between heap allocation and stack allocation of continuation closures, capturing both allocation strategies in a single calculus.