In addition to data fragmentation, there is the issue of data completeness and quality. |
|
Disk fragmentation is a normal occurrence that happens over time as you edit and save files. |
|
The fragmentation among progressive groups has, in turn, fragmented our message. |
|
Meanwhile, the country continued to descend deeper into fragmentation, general pauperism, and mutual predacity. |
|
Because of the fragmentation of nuclei and the disruption of cellular membranes, coarse granular particles are formed. |
|
The very fact that they could succeed in splitting the vote was indicative of a general degeneration and fragmentation of the Left. |
|
But due to fragmentation and increased human habitation, the big cat's habitat has shrunk further. |
|
This plasmodial fragmentation should be a good system for studying the size control of a multinucleate cellular system. |
|
Some people think fragmentation is unhealthy or it's schizophrenia or madness. |
|
Such fragmentation speaks of a polity based on sharp-edged dissensus rather than a reconciliation of positions. |
|
Thompson enumerates a number of the strategies of domination, including legitimation, dissimulation, unification, fragmentation, and reification. |
|
Popular music has undergone increasing fragmentation and diversification, a process symptomatic of wider social and cultural trends. |
|
The production of mass amounts of giclees also allows more fragmentation and more transient competitors. |
|
Such vacuoles resemble the smaller vacuoles which arise by fragmentation of the larger central vacuole. |
|
The policy process indicated that fragmentation of the labour market was well advanced. |
|
It reportedly reproduces exclusively by parthenogenetic female gametes and fragmentation. |
|
Habitat fragmentation is as serious a threat to the eastern indigo snake as outright habitat destruction. |
|
There is no evolution in his work, but a continual alternation between structure and disorder, equilibrium and fragmentation. |
|
This can then be developed through fragmentation of the integral component parts and the interpolation of rogue or stray texts. |
|
What is certain is that the ostrich-like behaviour of Europe's policy elite hastens the fragmentation process. |
|
|
These collisions result in subsequent fragmentation and product ions that are a direct consequence of dissociation of the precursor ion. |
|
Many of these problems seem to stem from fragmentation of electoral law and processes. |
|
But there was a price to be paid, one of fragmentation, or at least bifurcation. |
|
Most of the rock formations have been metamorphosed, folded, and faulted during the fragmentation and collision of plates of the earth's crust. |
|
Their multiple reflections presented a cubistic fragmentation of the sky, the skylight lattice and bits of the adjacent building. |
|
Our study underscores the importance of elastin fragmentation in the vessel wall as an accelerator of atherosclerosis. |
|
Poetry forged a common identity, overcoming this fragmentation to provide the basis for a homogeneous memory. |
|
The oxidative stress can begin a cascade of events leading to cell shrinkage, DNA fragmentation, and activation of protease. |
|
Postmodernism, in contrast, doesn't lament the idea of fragmentation, provisionality, or incoherence, but rather celebrates that. |
|
The fragmentation and shaped charge warhead is equipped with a proximity fuse and an impact fuse. |
|
The major problems seem to be fragmentation, deficient base in popular constituencies and insufficient links between civic and political efforts. |
|
The process of fragmentation and diversification has continued and, indeed, intensified. |
|
The real culprit is the unchecked fragmentation of land holdings in the rural areas. |
|
One cold and soggy morning about 0400 hours, we received word to change the bomb loads from 500-pounders to fragmentation bombs. |
|
Radiographic features include radiolucent defects in the femoral head and fragmentation of the femoral head. |
|
Two important trends within the process of religious fragmentation in Mexico have to be emphasized. |
|
The high explosive fragmentation warhead is fitted with an active laser proximity fuse. |
|
The problems facing the troubled suburbs are due in part to the growing fragmentation of our metropolitan areas. |
|
On explosion, the warhead produces a great fragmentation effect and shock wave. |
|
High disarticulation, fragmentation, and abrasion indicate high environmental energy and turbulence and significant lateral transport. |
|
|
Essential then to Hyde's approach is spontaneity, change, open-endedness, and fragmentation. |
|
The medieval period was one of political fragmentation even as the state administrative bureaucracy grew. |
|
The principal effect of a bomb is explosive blast, which may be combined with fragmentation or incendiary effects. |
|
Personally, I don't necessarily see such fragmentation as a bad thing, as it acts as a check on majoritarian power. |
|
With the collapse of Spartan hegemony in 371, the fragmentation of Greece was such that it became harder to find allies than to hire troops. |
|
Thus some nationalism has involved movements that aim to break up existing states, through secession or fragmentation of various forms. |
|
Models of planetesimal disks suggest that low relative velocities between the bodies produce accretion rather than fragmentation. |
|
The eliding of text in the lyric is a great intensifier, if qualification or fragmentation of narrative consciousness is what you're after. |
|
The biggest threat to their existence is habitat fragmentation caused by development, says Douglas. |
|
Does the fragmentation of her body undo any sense of corporeal affinity we might feel, and so foreclose the possibility of identification? |
|
Policymakers are increasingly worried about social fragmentation within local communities. |
|
Many of the works on the political side of the spectrum relied on fragmentation, appropriation and postmodern distancing to make their points. |
|
Poetic anti-discourse is dependent on the fragmentation of capitalism, modernity, and individualism, to which it counterposes social cohesion. |
|
The pattern of DNA fragmentation is qualitatively the same in both stimulated and unstimulated cells. |
|
Political fragmentation has been a problem, and coalitions between parties have been unstable. |
|
These include display fragmentation and the need to changeably prioritize information elements. |
|
This did little to endanger his position, as he continued to profit from the ongoing fragmentation and disunity of his opposition. |
|
Rounding out their arsenal were fragmentation grenades, claymore mines, and AT-4 anti-tank rockets. |
|
This meant hurling a fragmentation bomb into the tent of a gung-ho officer. |
|
To these bomb loads would have to be added a number of tons of antipersonnel fragmentation bombs to inflict comparable casualties. |
|
|
The accidental explosion of a fragmentation grenade in a munitions factory at St Marys injured four workers, two critically. |
|
As for why the other drive is becoming fragmented, something must be causing the fragmentation. |
|
Historically, the most important hand grenade is the fragmentation grenade. |
|
Since the fragmentation of the railway in Britain railwaymen have constantly complained about the situation and the results have not been good. |
|
The most significant threats include habitat loss, fragmentation, and degradation. |
|
He says that Ulster Protestantism may be split beyond repair and that this fragmentation poses a real threat to the Union. |
|
Neither did they appreciate the peasants' practice of offsetting land fragmentation through repartition and private land exchanges. |
|
The number of casualties due to the fragmentation bombs has reached 17 martyrs and 72 wounded persons. |
|
If I was going to carry more weight, I'd choose the traditional fragmentation grenade every time. |
|
With our fear, ignorance, alienation, mindlessness, indifference, and fragmentation we do not realize that such beliefs are not natural. |
|
He shows how the fragmentation and intensification of territorial communities continued to cement horizontal values of communal identity. |
|
The mine is a ground blast fragmentation mine activated by disturbing one of four tripwires. |
|
Similar to a disk defragmenter, Registry Compactor analyzes the Registry and checks for fragmentation. |
|
He was a visual researcher, a cataloguer and collagist, producing densely packed, allusively wired images based on fragmentation and collision. |
|
Any data that is written to the drive after it is optimized will contribute to fragmentation of the drive. |
|
In 1991 the process of fragmentation there was more rapid and more complete than in the south. |
|
Less easy to state was a possible solution, given both the vast complexity of modern science and the fragmentation of the humanities. |
|
Recent population numbers have declined most often due to habitat fragmentation and loss. |
|
After conjugation, chromosomes in the transcriptionally active macronucleus develop by fragmentation, elimination, and amplification of germ line chromosomes. |
|
Additionally, care must be taken when dissecting the carotid vessels to avoid disturbing the atheromatous lesions causing fragmentation and subsequent embolization and stroke. |
|
|
The containers in which the soldiers live and operate could be sandbagged on the exterior to protect the occupants from small arms fire and fragmentation. |
|
For example, fragmentation in scleractinian corals can reduce fecundity in polyps surrounding the damaged region or even entire coral colonies, by an unknown mechanism. |
|
My hand fell to my belt webbing, cupping a fragmentation grenade. |
|
Perhaps if we see ourselves in this human story, we can recommit ourselves to ending the fragmentation, the divisiveness, and the horror we see around us. |
|
Changes in the structure and ultrastructure of protoplasts during regeneration of the cell wall, mitotic cell division and amitotic nuclear fragmentation. |
|
This fragmentation makes it harder to pool money to fund projects. |
|
Among the different forms of meteoroidal disintegration in the atmosphere described above, the quasi-continuous fragmentation is of greatest interest. |
|
Fragmentation of government implies fragmentation of policy processes. |
|
At its most extreme, it involved a guerrilla strategy of selectively assassinating particularly gung-ho or oppressive officers through the use of fragmentation bombs. |
|
Proto-industrializarion and the fragmentation of holdings which it promoted presented new occasions for personalistic ties between landlord and tenant. |
|
In each case, pseudopollen is formed by the fragmentation of uniseriate, moniliform hairs into individual component cells or short chains of cells rich in protein. |
|
This seems entirely fitting for a composer who has often been content to embrace classicist formal integration and resist modernist formal fragmentation. |
|
The class war is a war, with the other side continually trying to take advantage of weak points on our side, to encourage division and fragmentation. |
|
Networks to overcome isolation and fragmentation are patchy and uneven. |
|
In an experimental laboratory study, Daley showed that weakening in the hinge area facilitates rapid fragmentation of the shell even before disarticulation is achieved. |
|
The problem is not with the discontinuities imposed by immigration, but with the fragmentation of the self caused by the brutality and horrors of the flight itself. |
|
These videos are accompanied by independently looping soundscapes that create surprising convergences and discordances through their fragmentation, distortion and repetition. |
|
The basic explanations offered for endangerment are habitat destruction or fragmentation, the impact of non-native animals and plants, and small and disjunct population sizes. |
|
Wrap the lower portions of cables on cable-stayed bridges and suspension bridges with CFRP or other types of armor to protect them from blasts and fragmentation. |
|
This result may provide some support not that fifty-fifty divisions are unfavorable for democracy, but that more fragmentation leads to less democracy. |
|
|
Fragmentation barriers consisting of common office furniture, mattresses, doors, or books can be effective against the fragmentation grenade inside rooms. |
|
The diversity and fragmentation within ethnic groupings and the balance of tensions between those groups during the twentieth century prevented interethnic civil conflict. |
|
It does no good in our age of specialization and fragmentation to be a know-it-all smarty-pants, especially if some of that knowledge is at times sadly so superficial. |
|
Instead, we have irony, allusion, meta commentary, fragmentation, parody, and pastiche. |
|
In this sense the fragmentation of the opposition could also work against Netanyahu. |
|
A related black swan is the fragmentation of the European Union, which would also damage U.S. strategic interests. |
|
So too is the fragmentation of the FSA when it comes to command and control. |
|
Given the fragmentation of Syrian society, disarmament will be a major challenge. |
|
With the fragmentation of extended Indian families and tribes, the unwritten knowledge of elders that was once a counterweight to Anglo hegemony is in danger of being lost. |
|
The inevitable result is social fragmentation and moral nihilism. |
|
For years, arson investigators looked for telltale signs of chipped concrete based on the assumption that fire accelerants like gasoline cause such fragmentation. |
|
Other social forces and popular movements were co-opted or repressed during the period of military government, leading to their demobilization and fragmentation. |
|
One of the wounded said he saw a 32-piece fragmentation grenade roll into the moneychangers' section of the city's central market before the explosion. |
|
There are unexploded fragmentation bombs everywhere in the fields. |
|
Soldiers concentrated their weapons on the opening until the clearing team stacked outside it, pitched in a fragmentation grenade and rushed inside after the blast. |
|
The biplanes came in waves of nine-across formations, wingtip to wingtip, each carrying six 22-pound fragmentation bombs and dropping them simultaneously. |
|
It now appears, however, that, while on patrol, he had stepped on an unexploded fragmentation grenade dropped by US forces in the area the day before. |
|
The steady toll of attrition on both sides in the conflict in Syria may well be about to explode like the mother-of-all fragmentation bombs. |
|
We ran each set of tests for three iterations, and then defragmented the storage using Diskeeper to reduce or eliminate the disk fragmentation. |
|
Mass spectra of dimethylalkanes and the effect of the number of methylene units between methyl groups on fragmentation. |
|
|
The army's standard fragmentation grenade has a blast radius of 15 meters. |
|
Any explosion mitigating litterbin must stop the primary fragmentation from escaping as this is the primary threat to the public. |
|
The M36 fragmentation grenade had been in use since World War Two and was notoriously unreliable. |
|
Deforestation can also create fragmentation, allowing the survival of only patches of habitat in which species can live. |
|
At the same time people talk about today's connected world, they also talk about individualization, social fragmentation, and alienation. |
|
In this case, a professional grade defragmenter will handle the job more efficiently by tackling fragmentation rapidly, as it occurs. |
|
It provides lethal overpressurization effects without the fragmentation associated with the more commonly used M67 fragmentation hand grenade. |
|
Supravital exposure to propidium iodide identities apoptotic cells in the absence of nucleosomal DNA fragmentation. |
|
The technique of chemically assisted fragmentation was used to obtain de novo amino acid sequence data from tryptic peptides. |
|
All four high-explosive VOG 17 fragmentation grenades from the second launcher plopped right into the center of mass of the rebel group. |
|
The explosive device was found to be an AO-10 fragmentation bomb, heavily corroded and therefore very hazardous. |
|
During the operation Ilhom and one other armed insurgent engaged the security force with fragmentation grenades. |
|
They are particularly vulnerable to overexploitation and other threats, including pollution and habitat fragmentation. |
|
Eisenman's project for Galicia summed up several years of research into fragmentation, striation, and interstitial space. |
|
Police said the blasts near Victory Monument, in the north of the city, were caused by fragmentation grenades. |
|
The apoptotic features noted included, chromatin condensation, nuclear pyknosis and nuclear fragmentation. |
|
In particular, economic fragmentation removed many of the political, cultural and economic forces that had held the empire together. |
|
It appears increasingly likely that UK citizen Linda Norgrove was killed on October 8, 2010, by an American fragmentation grenade. |
|
Macchi's art embraces the fragmentation of what can be spoken as a defense against the looming specter of its own replicability. |
|
They consider the possibility of rediscovering the sense of belonging as an alternative to fragmentation and atomization. |
|
|
Relationship of myofibril fragmentation index to certain chemical physical and sensory characteristics of bovine longuissimus muscle. |
|
It was considered that long term depletion in numbers and habitat fragmentation can reduce population persistence in such urban environments. |
|
Holland and colleagues noted that partial stone fragmentation caused the embedding of stone fragments submucosally. |
|
Mycelial fragmentation occurs when a fungal mycelium separates into pieces, and each component grows into a separate mycelium. |
|
European government leaders welcomed the fragmentation of the ascendant American Republic. |
|
This sphere of influence system depended upon the fragmentation of the German and Italian states, not their consolidation. |
|
It is likely that humans have caused the extinction and fragmentation of bear populations and their habitats since prehistorical times. |
|
Leo's reform did much to reduce the previous fragmentation of the Empire, which henceforth had one center of power, Constantinople. |
|
Imperial authority was severely weakened, and the growing power vacuum at the center of the Empire encouraged fragmentation. |
|
The fragmentation of the Mongol Empire loosened the political, cultural, and economic unity of the Silk Road. |
|
The most harm is being done by chemical pollution from road construction and road provoked habitat fragmentation. |
|
Consequently, the fall of the dynasty following Zhu Wen's usurpation led to an era of fragmentation. |
|
Habitat fragmentation can be ameliorated to some extent by the provision of wildlife corridors connecting the fragments. |
|
This discussion forms part of a larger discussion on fragmentation of international law. |
|
Then there are the changes in habitats brought on by alterations in farming practices, tourism, pollution, fragmentation and climate change. |
|
Hence the seeming intractability of racism, among other consequences of fragmentation. |
|
The loss of land is often exacerbated by habitat fragmentation of surrounding areas caused by the reservoir. |
|
Microscale autoradiographic method for the qualitative and quantitative analysis of apoptotic DNA fragmentation. |
|
Gametophytes have substantial asexual reproduction by fragmentation, producing much of the living material in sphagnum peatlands. |
|
Habitat fragmentation has reduced the availability of habitat patches to these birds through reducing patch size and increasing patch isolation. |
|
|
The late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries saw a fragmentation of the Church of Scotland that had been created in the Reformation. |
|
After culture, the spermatozoa were flash frozen and analyzed for the percent damaged chromatin using the DNA fragmentation index. |
|
The perceived problems and fragmentation of the Scottish school system led to a process of secularisation, as the state took increasing control. |
|
The most common in animals is allopatric speciation, which occurs in populations initially isolated geographically, such as by habitat fragmentation or migration. |
|
Each genre experienced a fragmentation of styles at this time, and many metal bands from the new wave of British heavy metal onwards displayed progressive rock influences. |
|
Trenches, machine guns, air reconnaissance, barbed wire, and modern artillery with fragmentation shells helped bring the battle lines of World War I to a stalemate. |
|
He attributes this trend to increased trade with poor countries and the fragmentation of the means of production, resulting in low skilled jobs becoming more tradeable. |
|
A fragmentation bomb caused the explosion,' Aksu told reporters. |
|
The second conventional warhead version is a fragmentation version that would disperse thousands of tungsten rods which could obliterate an area of 3000 square feet. |
|
This observation has significant implications for conservation biology, because habitat fragmentation can also lead to the insularization of stranded populations. |
|
Among the crew, fragmentation wounds are the most common form of damage. |
|
Competition with humans for livestock and game species, concerns over the danger posed by wolves to people, and habitat fragmentation pose a continued threat to the species. |
|
Robinson argues not only are economic activities expanded across national boundaries but also there is a transnational fragmentation of these activities. |
|
With the fragmentation of political power, the style of writing changed and varied greatly throughout the Middle Ages, even after the invention of the printing press. |
|
One way to avoid this possible fragmentation of society would be to find something to say to those who insist that their conception of the good life is not transhuman. |
|
The Insight also found that the concentration of market share at the country level has decreased, suggesting a fragmentation of monopolistic or duopolistic markets. |
|
Indeed this is not helped by the unprecedented process of pluralisation and fragmentation of religious authority, comparable to that initiated by the Protestant Reformation. |
|
In most cases, sleep disorders with frequent sleep fragmentation and characteristic periodic limb movements during sleep can be identified during a polysomnographic recording. |
|
Here we show that Chlamydia infection in human epithelial cells induces Golgi fragmentation to generate Golgi ministacks surrounding the bacterial inclusion. |
|
The tiny possum is already struggling to cope with habitat destruction and fragmentation, predation by feral animals and threats to its main food source, the Bogong moth. |
|
|
Continued clearing of habitat, destruction of riparian areas, and fragmentation of blocking of corridors could prevent jaguars from recolonizing previously inhabited areas. |
|
Specifically, the ubiquitous images of bodily fragmentation in her film reveal the traces of traditional bunraku puppetry and Javanese wood-carving formative to her art. |
|
A statement from the alliance said Ilham and one other armed insurgent engaged the security force with fragmentation grenades during the operation. |
|
They were the first modern fragmentation grenades in the world. |
|
Police confiscated seven firearms and four fragmentation grenades at the scene, as well as five vehicles believed to have belonged to the assailants, the government said. |
|
This resulted in some fragmentation of the line as the boats in some cases closed to just 50 metres as they concertinaed in and out of sight of each other. |
|
Federating whole tribes of Germanic people into the Empire marked a whole new phase of encroachment and facilitated the fragmentation of Rome from within its own borders. |
|