Associations to the word «Predictive»
Noun
- Disease
- Genetic
- Error
- Variability
- Fulfillment
- Approach
- Application
- Diffraction
- Pixel
- Cancer
- Customer
- Medicine
- Learning
- Understanding
- Char
- Distribution
- Severity
- Parity
- Text
- Computing
- Diode
- Led
- Coping
- Adjustment
- Consistency
- Filter
- Divergence
- Processing
- Attribute
- Retina
- Computation
- Imaging
- Selection
- Researcher
- Pulse
- Schema
- Therapy
- Cutler
- Tory
- Context
- Personality
- Pattern
- Vector
- Intelligence
- Lesion
- Cal
- Observation
- Explanation
- Constraint
- Detecting
- Response
- Analyst
- Dysfunction
Adjective
- Cervical
- Relevant
- Future
- Pancreatic
- Analytical
- Tested
- Receptive
- Vivo
- Orthogonal
- Benign
- Heterogeneous
- Useful
- Spatial
- Traumatic
- Prostate
- Cortical
- Molecular
- Phonological
- Sample
- Thyroid
- Physiological
- Sensory
- Analogue
- Potential
- Occupational
- Variable
- Constrained
- Biochemical
- Resultant
- Plausible
- Psychological
- Patient
- Planetary
- Sequential
- Demographic
- Applicable
- Hierarchical
- Pediatric
- Mobile
- Ethical
Wiktionary
PREDICTIVE, adjective. Useful in predicting.
PREDICTIVE, adjective. (computing) Describing a predictor.
PREDICTIVE, adjective. (Medicine) Expressing the expected accuracy of a statistical measure or of a diagnostic test
PREDICTIVE CODING, noun. The mathematical process of estimating future values of a signal based on previous values.
PREDICTIVE CODINGS, noun. Plural of predictive coding
PREDICTIVE MARKET, noun. Prediction market
PREDICTIVE PARSER, noun. (computing) a recursive descent parser that does not require backtracking
PREDICTIVE TEXT, noun. (computing) A function on certain text messaging software that attempts to predict which word is being typed as the user types it, thus allowing the user to type faster
Dictionary definition
PREDICTIVE, adjective. Of or relating to prediction; having value for making predictions.
Wise words
Life has no meaning unless one lives it with a will, at
least to the limit of one's will. Virtue, good, evil are
nothing but words, unless one takes them apart in order to
build something with them; they do not win their true
meaning until one knows how to apply them.