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: --
A sequence of transitions may be tracked with traces.
We show that the stereo system can focus on the object being tracked, no matter if it is out of its field of view.
Relational aggression and internalizing "tracked" together across the course of the study.
In these cases of locomotion on a so-called irregular terrain, legged robots demonstrate better mobility and versatility when compared to tracked or wheeled vehicles.
In this alternative formalism, the course of the optimisation is tracked in the final row (labelled ' cumulative ordering ').
The number of impulses per presentation was tracked to permit calculation of response variability.
It would then be 'tracked' (or 'needle-dropped') into the sequence where it was required.
In another simulation, a three-link manipulator mounted on a linear tracked base is considered.