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  2. Response time (technology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Response_time_(technology)

    In real-time systems the response time of a task or thread is defined as the time elapsed between the dispatch (time when task is ready to execute) to the time when it finishes its job (one dispatch). Response time is different from WCET which is the maximum time the task would take if it were to execute without interference. It is also ...

  3. Response time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Response_time

    Response time (biology), the elapsed time from the presentation of a sensory stimulus to the completion of the subsequent behavioral response; Response time (technology), the time a generic system or functional unit takes to react to a given input Display response time, the amount of time a pixel in a display takes to change; Round-trip delay ...

  4. Mental chronometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mental_chronometry

    Response time on chronometric tasks are typically concerned with five categories of measurement: Central tendency of response time across a number of individual trials for a given person or task condition, usually captured by the arithmetic mean but occasionally by the median and less commonly the mode; intraindividual variability, the ...

  5. Time constant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_constant

    First order LTI systems are characterized by the differential equation + = where τ represents the exponential decay constant and V is a function of time t = (). The right-hand side is the forcing function f(t) describing an external driving function of time, which can be regarded as the system input, to which V(t) is the response, or system output.

  6. Settling time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Settling_time

    Settling time depends on the system response and natural frequency. The settling time for a second order , underdamped system responding to a step response can be approximated if the damping ratio ζ ≪ 1 {\displaystyle \zeta \ll 1} by T s = − ln ⁡ ( tolerance fraction ) damping ratio × natural freq {\displaystyle T_{s}=-{\frac {\ln ...

  7. Turnaround time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turnaround_time

    Lead Time vs Turnaround Time: Lead Time is the amount of time, defined by the supplier or service provider, that is required to meet a customer request or demand. [5] Lead-time is basically the time gap between the order placed by the customer and the time when the customer get the final delivery, on the other hand the Turnaround Time is in order to get a job done and deliver the output, once ...

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  9. M/M/1 queue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M/M/1_queue

    The average response time or sojourn time (total time a customer spends in the system) does not depend on scheduling discipline and can be computed using Little's law as 1/(μ − λ). The average time spent waiting is 1/(μ − λ) − 1/μ = ρ/(μ − λ). The distribution of response times experienced does depend on scheduling discipline.