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English
Etymology
Learned borrowing from Latin regressio. Equivalent to regress + -ion.
The statistics sense comes from regression to the mean.
Pronunciation
Noun
regression (countable and uncountable, plural regressions)
- An action of regressing, a return to a previous state.
- An action of travelling mentally back in time.
2001, Carol DeCuffa, In Search of Home: An Essential Guide for the Evolving Soul:I have done past life regressions on my own through self-hypnosis techniques that I learned in Brian Weiss's book Many Lives, Many Masters as well as with past life regression tapes.
- (psychotherapy) A psychotherapeutic method whereby healing is facilitated by inducing the patient to act out behaviour typical of an earlier developmental stage.
- (statistics) An analytic method to measure the association of one or more independent variables with a dependent variable.
(Can we date this quote?), (Please provide the book title or journal name):Supervised learning problems are categorized into "regression" and "classification" problems. In a regression problem, we are trying to predict results within a continuous output, meaning that we are trying to map input variables to some continuous function.
- (statistics) An equation using specified and associated data for two or more variables such that one variable can be estimated from the remaining variable(s).
- (programming) The reappearance of a bug in a piece of software that had previously been fixed.
- (medicine) The diminishing of a cellular mass like a tumor, or of an organ size.
- (exercise) The making an exercise less straining to perform by manipulating the details of its performance like loaded weight, range of motion, angle, speed.
Antonyms
Hyponyms
Derived terms
Translations
return to a previous state
- Bulgarian: връщане назад n (vrǎštane nazad)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 回歸/回归 (zh) (huíguī), 迴歸/回归 (zh) (huíguī)
- Dutch: teruggang (nl) m
- Finnish: taantuminen (fi), regressio
- French: régression (fr) f
- German: Rückbildung (de) f, Rückfall (de) m, Rückgang (de) m, Rückschritt (de) m
- Greek: οπισθοδρόμηση (el) f (opisthodrómisi), υποστροφή (el) f (ypostrofí), υποχώρηση (el) f (ypochórisi)
- Irish: aischéimniú m
- Italian: regressione (it)
- Japanese: 回帰 (ja) (かいき, kaiki)
- Korean: 회귀 (hoegwi)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: پاشۆچوون (paşoçûn)
- Macedonian: назадување n (nazaduvanje), уназадување n (unazaduvanje)
- Maori: tauhekenga
- Norwegian: regresjon m
- Polish: regres (pl) m, uwstecznienie n, cofnięcie n, regresja (pl) f
- Portuguese: regressão (pt)
- Russian: регре́ссия (ru) f (regréssija), регре́сс (ru) m (regréss), возвраще́ние (ru) n (vozvraščénije)
- Serbo-Croatian: регресија f, regresija (sh) f, nazadovanje n
- Spanish: regresión (es) f, retroceso (es) m
- Turkish: gerileme (tr)
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action of travelling mentally back in time
psychotherapy: method of healing
statistics: analytic method
programming: reappearance of a bug in a previously fixed software
medicine: diminishing of a cellular mass
exercise: making an exercise less straining
References
Finnish
Noun
regression
- genitive singular of regressio