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BICEP, a project of Ceres, was founded in November 2008 and is an advocacy coalition of businesses committed to working with policy makers to pass meaningful energy and climate legislation and giving consumer-facing businesses a stronger voice in the formation of progressive climate change legislation.
Read, retrieve, search, or view existing entries; Update, or edit existing entries; Delete, deactivate, or remove existing entries; Because these operations are so fundamental, they are often documented and described under one comprehensive heading such as "contact management" or "document management" in general. [citation needed]
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A bicep or biceps is a two-headed muscle that lies on the upper arm. Bicep or BICEP may also refer to: Bicep (duo), a duo from Belfast, Northern Ireland Bicep (2017) BICEP and Keck Array (Background Imaging of Cosmic Extragalactic Polarization) Business for Innovative Climate and Energy Policy
The proper plural form of the Latin adjective biceps is bicipites, [23] a form not in general English use. Instead, biceps is used in both singular and plural (i.e., when referring to both arms). The English form bicep, attested from 1939, is a back formation derived from misinterpreting the s of biceps as the English plural marker -s. [24] [25]
A file which was "squeezed" had the middle initial of the name changed to "Q", so that a squeezed text file would end with .TQT, a squeezed executable would end with .CQM or .EQE. Typically used with .LBR archives, either by storing the squeezed files in the archive, or by storing the files decompressed and then compressing the archive, which ...
Flow Cytometry Standard (FCS) is a data file standard for the reading and writing of data from flow cytometry experiments. The FCS specification has traditionally been developed and maintained by the International Society for Advancement of Cytometry (ISAC). [1] FCS used to be the only widely adopted file format in flow cytometry.
Muscle coactivation occurs when agonist and antagonist muscles (or synergist muscles) surrounding a joint contract simultaneously to provide joint stability, [1] [2] and is suggested to depend crucially on supraspinal processes involved in the control of movement. [3]