0 reacting to events or situations rather than acting first to change or prevent something: --
1 reacting to events or situations rather than doing something first in order to change or prevent something: --
Our findings suggest that children who were avoidantly attached in infancy may be more reactive to variations in maternal depressive symptomatology later on.
Many species of highly reactive radicals participate in biological processes.
Under this approach, government funding is essentially reactive in that it normally responds to submissions from provider organisations.
To model reactive systems it is necessary to have the ability to describe notions as timeout or preemption.
And it is not just the policy fragments which have emerged piecemeal and reactive, it is the institutions which they have breathlessly created.
In the 1990s economic policy-making has been largely reactive : either to crises, like drought, or to donor pressure.
Reactive samples were retested in duplicate and were only considered positive if at least 2 of 3 test determinations were reactive.
To address the challenge, it is necessary to endow the robot with reactive behaviour, planning and learning abilities.