What's the difference between traceable and tractable?

Traceable


Definition:

  • (a.) Capable of being traced.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The measurement procedure should define preanalytical requirements and be based upon traceability from tertiary and secondary reference materials with reference procedure values to primary reference materials.
  • (2) After the ruling, "the price at which a particular Bitcoin was acquired (and this is traceable) determines the capital gains on that particular bitcoin when spent," Levitin argues .
  • (3) Under the same conditions, at pH 1 and room temperature, unpurified and highly purified HAV antigens were traceable for 5 and 4 h respectively.
  • (4) The study group consisted of all traceable patients with Parkinson's disease living in a defined area, a total of 444 patients, and of control subjects for each patient, matched in sex and age, chosen from among the general population residing in the same area.
  • (5) Their new campaign is part of their scheme called Happerley Passports (the name taken from Apperley, their nearest village) designed to establish traceability across the food chain.
  • (6) To stop poached horn from entering the legal market, suppliers can fit legal horns with traceable transponders and DNA signatures for less than 200 dollars per horn, he says.
  • (7) This study supports the use of a standardized selected Lowry-sodium dodecyl sulfate method traceable to quantitative amino acid analysis as a point of reference for determining the protein concentration of primary calibration reference materials for apolipoproteins.
  • (8) Surroundings are chic but comfortable, children are welcome, staff are friendly, burgers are from traceable Scottish beef and start at £5.75, chips are thick and homemade, and they play old soul and r'n'b.
  • (9) In general, though, the apparent harmony between government policy and Ofsted's work may be traceable to a much simpler matter of mindset: its head, Michael Wilshaw, is the former head of the Mossbourne academy in Hackney, and prone to sound as if he has imbibed a huge draught of whatever the education secretary, Michael Gove, is drinking.
  • (10) Aging is probably not directly traceable to changes along the whole genome, but to a small portion thereof.
  • (11) The 9.1% female reactivity may be traceable to perfumed cosmetics.
  • (12) Even stronger progress should be seen in 2014 as leading food and drink manufacturers strive to meet updated company commitments by using only traceable supplies of sustainable palm oil.
  • (13) The participation of steroids in the regulation of centriole activities is taken into account since immunoreactive steroids are traceable by UV and electron microscopy at the level of this cell organelle by steroid antibodies.
  • (14) Independent from the preoperative low-back pain condition and the immediate postoperative results, the operated patients showed, several years after the operation, traceable differences in several psychosocial factors according to the socially and personally defined illness career and its stages.
  • (15) Part of this is ensuring full supply chain traceability and advocating industry-wide measures that support an end to deforestation, such as tightening of RSPO [Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil] criteria .” Fulfilling RSPO criteria still does not guarantee a company is completely free from palm oil unsustainably sourced from deforested regions or cleared peatlands.
  • (16) The La Ventan Aotus is additional support for the idea that the modern platyrrhine radiation includes long-lived genera or generic lineages, some of which may be traceable to the early Miocene, 20 Myr BP.
  • (17) In addition to the differences in accuracy in picture recognition based on picture complexity, there were significant differences on the chi-square test which confirmed the assertion of the question that picture recognition is traceable to the complexity of the picture.
  • (18) Immunoreactive processes were traceable from the NT through the medial as well as lateral olfactory tracts into the telencephalon and the area ventralis telencephali pars supracommissuralis (Vs).
  • (19) The substance showed a greater affinity to liver and fat tissue whilst, in general, in the muscle tissue, the lungs and kidneys only very small amounts were traceable.
  • (20) Therapy related patterns of attitudes are already traceable before starting autogenous training and can be considered to be predictors of therapeutic success.

Tractable


Definition:

  • (v. t.) Capable of being easily led, taught, or managed; docile; manageable; governable; as, tractable children; a tractable learner.
  • (v. t.) Capable of being handled; palpable; practicable; feasible; as, tractable measures.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The estimators are tractable even when there are incomplete observations.
  • (2) A smooth isolated, axisymmetric occlusion in a straight vascular tube is a tractable problem for pulsatile flow calculations via finite-difference approximations to the Navier-Stokes equation.
  • (3) Factor analysis was used as a statistical means to make the complex variables generated by the system more tractable to analysis.
  • (4) Evolutionary effects such as linkage disequilibrium and conservation of exons (DNA encoding structural proteins) as well as the fact that there are a tractable number of gene clusters involved, tend to make it quite likely that DNA pathology or DNA variation (polymorphism) predisposing to mental illness can be detected.
  • (5) Furthermore, the recognition of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in an early, tractable phase may be a matter of life and death.
  • (6) The model is distinctive in its ability to capture a significant broadening of auditory-nerve fiber frequency selectivity as a function of increasing sound-pressure level within a computationally tractable time-invariant structure.
  • (7) It is suggested that the use of biomarkers for persistent chemicals may be useful to mitigate the difficulty of determining exposure, while the use of more prevalent and timely end points, such as carcinogen-DNA adducts or oncogene proteins, may make the latency and rarity problems more tractable.
  • (8) Of particular interest to plant developmental biologists is the phenomenon of somatic embryogenesis in cultures of the domesticated carrot which, because of its tractable nature in experimental manipulations, is presently regarded as a suitable model for studying pattern formation in plants.
  • (9) The chain statistics problem is treated in an approximate manner using an approach motivated by scaled particle theory to describe the inter-chain steric repulsions in a mathematically tractable way.
  • (10) By ignoring cognitive factors and memory, a first-order Markov approach is taken, which is tractable for spatially homogeneous stimuli.
  • (11) The LI during the healing stage was higher than that during the active stage in both the tractable and intractable cases.
  • (12) In those cases where tractable models of heterogeneous systems can be developed, the experimental data are consistent with drops in PO2 on the order of a few hundredths of a Torr between cytosol and mitochondrion.
  • (13) In the world view Rubio outlined Wednesday, which he billed as a new doctrine, certain regional conflicts that look very difficult – the ongoing war in Syria, the failed state of Libya – in fact began as tractable problems that spun out of control due to tragic US negligence.
  • (14) Mathematically tractable alternatives are the linear formalism and the power-law formalism.
  • (15) With improvements in anaerobic handling procedures, this is beginning to change, and several experimentally tractable regulated systems of gene expression in methanogens are discussed.
  • (16) The main goals of the analysis are: to provide improved understanding of biochemical dynamics and their physiological significance, and to yield reduced dynamic models that are physiologically realistic but tractable for practical use.
  • (17) Results of this investigation suggest that bulimia displays a chronic but tractable course in that the majority of the patients continued to report bulimic behaviors at follow-up but the symptom intensity was greatly reduced from admission.
  • (18) Therefore, this review summarizes the rationale behind various experimental approaches, the nature and tractability of limitations, and the results which can be safely drawn from experimental studies to date.
  • (19) This approximation often makes the governing equations tractable, and analytical solutions may then be obtained.
  • (20) As a non-obligate metazoan, Dictyostelium discoideum has proven a particularly tractable system in which to identify and characterize cellular morphogens.

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