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{{wiktionary|spillover}} |
{{wiktionary|spillover}} |
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'''Spillover''' may refer to: |
'''Spillover''' may refer to: |
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*[[Spillover (imaging)]], an imaging effect |
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*Spillover, a component of the [[spillover-crossover model]] in psychology |
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*[[Work-life balance]] |
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*The influence on [[effective demand]] in one economic market resulting from disequilibrium in another market |
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*A military conflict 'spilling over' into other countries, e.g. the [[Syrian Civil War spillover]] |
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*[[Spillover |
* [[Catalyst support#Spillover]] |
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* [[Behavioral spillover]], the effect that one behavior has on other behaviors with a shared motive |
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* [[Hydrogen spillover]] |
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* [[Spillover (book)|''Spillover'' (book)]], or ''Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic'', a 2012 book by David Quammen |
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* [[Spillover (economics)]], an economic event that occurs because of an event in a seemingly unrelated context |
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* [[Spillover (imaging)]], in e.g. tomography, an imaging effect that exaggerates small objects, because of limited resolution |
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* [[Spillover infection]] or pathogen spillover occurs when an infectious reservoir population affects a novel host |
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* [[Spillover-crossover model]], in psychology distinguishes spillover from crossover as components of transfer of well-being |
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*{{intitle|Spillover}} |
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{{disambiguation}} |
{{disambiguation}} |
Latest revision as of 10:43, 14 April 2024
Spillover may refer to:
- Adsorption spillover, a chemical phenomenon involving the movement of atoms adsorbed onto a metal surface
- Catalyst support#Spillover
- Behavioral spillover, the effect that one behavior has on other behaviors with a shared motive
- Hydrogen spillover
- Knowledge spillover, exchange of ideas among individuals
- Spillover (book), or Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic, a 2012 book by David Quammen
- Spillover (economics), an economic event that occurs because of an event in a seemingly unrelated context
- Spillover (imaging), in e.g. tomography, an imaging effect that exaggerates small objects, because of limited resolution
- Spillover infection or pathogen spillover occurs when an infectious reservoir population affects a novel host
- Spillover-crossover model, in psychology distinguishes spillover from crossover as components of transfer of well-being
See also
- All pages with titles containing Spillover
- Spillover II, an artwork by Jaume Plensa