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Definitions

invariant

[in-vair-ee-uhnt] / ɪnˈvɛər i ənt /


Example Sentences

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"They have learned to be invariant to these particular dimensions in the stimulus space, and it's model-specific, so other models don't have those same invariances."

From Science Daily • Oct. 16, 2023

In particular, both theories were scale invariant, meaning the physics of the systems the theories described didn’t change as the systems got larger or smaller.

From Scientific American • Nov. 30, 2022

Holding that number invariant required balancing out any population shifts within a state.

From Science Magazine • Sep. 2, 2021

Conway’s discovery of a new knot invariant — used to tell different knots apart — called the Conway polynomial became an important topic of research in topology.

From Nature • May 22, 2020

Second, developmental sequences are not invariant, so examples pigeonholed under the same stage are inevitably heterogeneous.

From "Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies" by Jared M. Diamond