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Kinesis, like a taxis or tropism, is a movement or activity of a cell or an organism in response to a stimulus (such as gas exposure, light intensity or ambient temperature). Unlike taxis, the response to the stimulus provided is non-directional.
Amazon Kinesis is a family of services provided by Amazon Web Services (AWS) for processing and analyzing real-time streaming data at a large scale. Launched in November 2013, it offers developers the ability to build applications that can consume and process data from multiple sources simultaneously. [ 2 ]
Kinesis may refer to: Kinesis (biology), a movement or activity of a cell or an organism in response to a stimulus; Kinesis (band), an alternative rock band from Bolton, England; Kinesis, a genus of earwigs; Kinesis (keyboard), a line of ergonomic computer keyboards; Kinesis (magazine), a magazine published by Vancouver Status of Women
Photokinesis is a change in the velocity of movement of an organism as a result of changes in light intensity. [1] The alteration in speed is independent of the direction from which the light is shining.
Consumer–resource interactions are the core motif of ecological food chains or food webs, [1] and are an umbrella term for a variety of more specialized types of biological species interactions including prey-predator (see predation), host-parasite (see parasitism), plant-herbivore and victim-exploiter systems.
Chemokinesis is chemically prompted kinesis, a motile response of unicellular prokaryotic or eukaryotic organisms to chemicals that cause the cell to make some kind of change in their migratory/swimming behaviour. Changes involve an increase or decrease of speed, alterations of amplitude or frequency of motile character, or direction of migration.
Kinetic (Ancient Greek: κίνησις “kinesis”, movement or to move) may refer to: Kinetic theory, describing a gas as particles in random motion; Kinetic energy, the energy of an object that it possesses due to its motion
Ideokinesis is an approach to improving posture, alignment, and fluency of movement through structured guided imagery [1] that uses metaphors, such as visualizing an object moving in a specific direction along various muscle groups throughout the body, while lying completely still.