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Nesting (voting Districts)
Nesting may refer to: Science and technology Parenting behavior * Building or having a nest A nest is a structure built for certain animals to hold Egg (biology), eggs or young. Although nests are most closely associated with birds, members of all classes of vertebrates and some invertebrates construct nests. They may be composed of ... ** Nesting instinct, an instinct in pregnant animals to prepare a home for offspring Things within other things of the same kind * Nesting (computing), a concept of information organized recursively * Nesting (process), a process of efficiently manufacturing parts from flat raw material * Nesting algorithm for optimal packing * Nested sampling algorithm, a method in Bayesian statistics * Nested radical, a radical (i.e. mathematical notation for an ''n''th root) with other radicals inside it * Nested intervals, in mathematics, intervals within intervals * ''Nested variation'' or ''nested data'', described at restricted randomization ...
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Nest
A nest is a structure built for certain animals to hold Egg (biology), eggs or young. Although nests are most closely associated with birds, members of all classes of vertebrates and some invertebrates construct nests. They may be composed of organic material such as twigs, grass, and leaves, or may be a simple depression in the ground, or a hole in a rock, tree, or building. Human-made materials, such as string, plastic, cloth, or paper, may also be used. Nests can be found in all types of habitat. Nest building is driven by a biological urge known as the nesting instinct in birds and mammals. Generally each species has a distinctive style of nest. Nest complexity is roughly correlated with the level of parental care by adults. Nest building is considered a key adaptive advantage among birds, and they exhibit the most variation in their nests ranging from simple holes in the ground to elaborate communal nests hosting hundreds of individuals. Nests of prairie dogs and severa ...
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Nested Case-control Study
''Nested'' is the seventh studio album by Bronx-born singer, songwriter, and pianist Laura Nyro. It was released in 1978 on Columbia Records. Following on from her extensive tour to promote 1976's ''Smile'', which resulted in the 1977 live album '' Season of Lights'', Nyro retreated to her new home in Danbury, Connecticut, where she lived after spending her time in the spotlight in New York City. Nyro had a studio built at her home and recorded there the songs that comprised ''Nested''. The songs deal with themes such as motherhood and womanhood, and Nyro is notably more relaxed in her singing on the album. The instrumentation is laid back and smooth, similar to that of ''Smile'', but perhaps less jazz-inspired and more melodic. Nyro was assisted in production by Roscoe Harring, while Dale and Pop Ashby were chief engineers. Critics praised the album as a melodic return to form, and Nyro supported the album with a solo tour when she was heavily pregnant with her son Gil, who wa ...
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Nesting (film)
''Nesting'' is a 2012 American romantic comedy film written and directed by John Chuldenko and starring Todd Grinnell and Ali Hillis. The film premiered at the 2012 Cleveland Film Festival. Cast * Todd Grinnell as Neil * Ali Hillis as Sarah *Kevin Linehan as Graham * Erin Chambers as Katie *Alexi Wasser as Rachel *Jeffrey Stubblefield as Jeff * Sorel Carradine as Nikki * Erik Stocklin as Ben *Wes Armstrong as Kenny *Jeremy Radin as Ross *Jamal Thomas as Brian * Erin Gray as Mrs. Deegan Release The film had a limited release on May 11, 2012. Reception The film has a 0% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on nine reviews. Kalvin Henely of ''Slant Magazine ''Slant Magazine'' is an American online publication that features reviews of movies, music, TV, DVDs, theater, and video games, as well as interviews with actors, directors, and musicians. The site covers various film festivals like the New Yor ...'' awarded the film one star out of four and wrote, "The way ''Nesting'' goes o ...
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The Nesting
''The Nesting'' (later released as ''Massacre Mansion'') is a 1981 American supernatural horror film directed and co-written by Armand Weston, and starring Robin Groves, Michael Lally, John Carradine, and Gloria Grahame in her final film role. Its plot follows an agoraphobic novelist who rents a rural mansion that she comes to find is haunted by the prostitute victims of a mass murder that occurred there in the 1940s. Filmed in Irvington, New York at the Armour-Stiner House, ''The Nesting'' was given a limited theatrical release in the spring of 1981 before being reissued by William Mishkin Motion Pictures in 1983 under the alternate title ''Massacre Mansion''. While not prosecuted for obscenity, the film was seized and confiscated in the UK under Section 3 of the Obscene Publications Act 1959 during the video nasty panic Plot New York City novelist Lauren Cochran suffers from agoraphobia and, in a bid to overcome her ailment, she rents a stately Victorian mansion in upstat ...
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Nesting, Shetland
Nesting is a parish in the Shetland Islands, Scotland. It includes a part of the east Shetland Mainland, measuring about , along the seaboard from Gletness to Lunna Ness, and also the island of Whalsay and the Out Skerries. The coast is deeply indented by voes and headlands. The arable land comprises only about , the remainder being mostly open moorland. The total area is given as . This includes the ancient parish of Lunnasting in the North and the island parish of Whalsay to the east, which were added to Nesting in 1891. Before that, the ancient parishes of North Nesting and South Nesting were merged. The parish church, St Ola's Kirk, stands approximately north of Lerwick near the war memorial at Brettabister."Nesting"
Shetlopedia. Retrieved 9 Feb 2013.

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Nesting (voting Districts)
Nesting may refer to: Science and technology Parenting behavior * Building or having a nest A nest is a structure built for certain animals to hold Egg (biology), eggs or young. Although nests are most closely associated with birds, members of all classes of vertebrates and some invertebrates construct nests. They may be composed of ... ** Nesting instinct, an instinct in pregnant animals to prepare a home for offspring Things within other things of the same kind * Nesting (computing), a concept of information organized recursively * Nesting (process), a process of efficiently manufacturing parts from flat raw material * Nesting algorithm for optimal packing * Nested sampling algorithm, a method in Bayesian statistics * Nested radical, a radical (i.e. mathematical notation for an ''n''th root) with other radicals inside it * Nested intervals, in mathematics, intervals within intervals * ''Nested variation'' or ''nested data'', described at restricted randomization ...
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Nesting (child Custody)
Child custody is a legal term regarding '' guardianship'' which is used to describe the legal and practical relationship between a parent or guardian and a child in that person's care. Child custody consists of ''legal custody'', which is the right to make decisions about the child, and ''physical custody'', which is the right and duty to house, provide and care for the child. Married parents normally have joint legal and physical custody of their children. Decisions about child custody typically arise in proceedings involving divorce, annulment, separation, adoption or parental death. In most jurisdictions child custody is determined in accordance with the best interests of the child standard. Following ratification of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child in most countries, terms such as parental responsibility, " residence" and " contact" (also known as "visitation", "conservatorship" or "parenting time" in the United States) have superseded the concepts of ...
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Restricted Randomization
In statistics, restricted randomization occurs in the design of experiments and in particular in the context of randomized experiments and randomized controlled trials. Restricted randomization allows intuitively poor allocations of treatments to experimental units to be avoided, while retaining the theoretical benefits of randomization. For example, in a clinical trial of a new proposed treatment of obesity compared to a control, an experimenter would want to avoid outcomes of the randomization in which the new treatment was allocated only to the heaviest patients. The concept was introduced by Frank Yates (1948) and William J. Youden (1972) "as a way of avoiding bad spatial patterns of treatments in designed experiments." Example of nested data Consider a batch process that uses 7 monitor wafers in each run. The plan further calls for measuring a response variable on each wafer at each of 9 sites. The organization of the sampling plan has a hierarchical or nested structur ...
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Nesting Instinct
Nesting behavior is an instinct in animals during reproduction where they prepare a place with optimal conditions to nurture their offspring. The nesting place provides protection against predators and competitors that mean to exploit or kill offspring. It also provides protection against the physical environment. Nest building is important in family structure and is therefore influenced by different mating behaviours and social settings. It is found in a variety of animals such as birds, fish, mammals, amphibians, and reptiles. In mammals Female dogs may show signs of nesting behaviour about one week before they are due that include pacing and building a nest with items from around the house such as blankets, clothing, and stuffed animals. (They also sometimes do this in cases of false pregnancy, or pseudocyesis). Domestic cats often make nests by bringing straw, cloth scraps, and other soft materials to a selected nook or box; they particularly are attracted to haylofts as ...
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Nested Intervals
In mathematics, a sequence of nested intervals can be intuitively understood as an ordered collection of Interval (mathematics), intervals I_n on the Interval (mathematics), real number line with natural number, natural numbers n=1,2,3,\dots as an index. In order for a sequence of intervals to be considered nested intervals, two conditions have to be met: # Every interval in the sequence is contained in the previous one (I_ is always a subset of I_n). # The length of the intervals get arbitrarily small (meaning the length falls below every possible threshold \varepsilon after a certain index N). In other words, the left bound of the interval I_n can only increase (a_\geq a_n), and the right bound can only decrease (b_\leq b_n). Historically - long before anyone defined nested intervals in a textbook - people implicitly constructed such nestings for concrete calculation purposes. For example, the ancient Babylonia, Babylonians discovered a Methods of computing square roots, metho ...
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Nested Radical
In algebra, a nested radical is a radical expression (one containing a square root sign, cube root sign, etc.) that contains (nests) another radical expression. Examples include \sqrt, which arises in discussing the pentagon, regular pentagon, and more complicated ones such as \sqrt[3]. Denesting Some nested radicals can be rewritten in a form that is not nested. For example, \sqrt = 1+\sqrt\,, \sqrt[3] = \frac \,. Another simple example, \sqrt[3] = \sqrt[6] Rewriting a nested radical in this way is called denesting. This is not always possible, and, even when possible, it is often difficult. Two nested square roots In the case of two nested square roots, the following theorem completely solves the problem of denesting. If and are rational numbers and is not the square of a rational number, there are two rational numbers and such that \sqrt = \sqrt\pm\sqrt if and only if a^2-c~ is the square of a rational number . If the nested radical is real, and are the two ...
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