Invariant prescriptions involve a type of ritual and are given to parents with children who are psychotic or anorexic in an attempt to break up the family's "dirty game." Also known as psychotic family games (Selvini Palazzoli, 1986), dirty games refers to the power struggle between generations which is sustained by symptomatic behaviors.
The invariant prescription is used when children have inappropriately taken a parent's role or place and aligned with the other parent, such as becoming mother's protector or father's confidante. The invariant prescription requires parents to unite so that children cannot manipulate or stereotype them as winners or losers and thus side with them (Gladding, 1998). In essence, the technique is to have parents tell their children that they have a secret, but never reveal what the secret is. The parents then go out together for varying periods of time, never telling their children where they are going or when they will return. This mysterious behavior allies the parents in a new way and provides them with the opportunity to observe and discuss the family's reactions (Gladding, 1998).
A Zeuthen-Segre invariant is an invariant of complex projective surfaces.
A set function (or setter) is an object mutator. You use it to modify a property of an object such that the object's invariant is maintained. If the object has no invariant, a setter is not required. A get function (or getter) is an object accessor. You use it to obtain a property from an object such that the object's invariant is maintained. If the object has no invariant, you do not need a getter.
yes
Andrzej Pelc has written: 'Invariant measures and ideals on discrete groups' -- subject(s): Discrete groups, Ideals (Algebra), Invariant measures
If the coefficients of the linear differential equation are dependent on time, then it is time variant otherwise it is time invariant. E.g: 3 * dx/dt + x = 0 is time invariant 3t * dx/dt + x = 0 is time variant
monotectic : L1 = L2 + S
clebsch Hilbert
Using loop invariant.
Michael E Lord has written: 'Validation of an invariant embedding method for Fredholm integral equations' -- subject(s): Invariant imbedding, Numerical solutions, Integral equations
Invariant prescriptions involve a type of ritual and are given to parents with children who are psychotic or anorexic in an attempt to break up the family's "dirty game." Also known as psychotic family games (Selvini Palazzoli, 1986), dirty games refers to the power struggle between generations which is sustained by symptomatic behaviors. The invariant prescription is used when children have inappropriately taken a parent's role or place and aligned with the other parent, such as becoming mother's protector or father's confidante. The invariant prescription requires parents to unite so that children cannot manipulate or stereotype them as winners or losers and thus side with them (Gladding, 1998). In essence, the technique is to have parents tell their children that they have a secret, but never reveal what the secret is. The parents then go out together for varying periods of time, never telling their children where they are going or when they will return. This mysterious behavior allies the parents in a new way and provides them with the opportunity to observe and discuss the family's reactions (Gladding, 1998).
It is a part of a mathematical object which does not change when the object undergoes a transformation.
a point on a graph where if the graph is transformed the point stays the same.