Encoding

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Look up encoding in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Encoding is the process of transforming information from one format into another. The opposite operation is called decoding.

There are a number of more specific meanings that apply in certain contexts:

  • Encoding (in cognition) is a basic perceptual process of interpreting incoming stimuli; technically speaking, it is a complex, multi-stage process of converting relatively objective sensory input (e.g., light, sound) into subjectively meaningful experience.
  • A content format is a specific encoding format for converting a specific type of data to information.
  • Character encoding is a code that pairs a set of natural language characters (such as an alphabet or syllabary) with a set of something else, such as numbers or electrical pulses.
  • Text encoding uses a markup language to tag the structure and other features of a text to facilitate processing by computers. (See also Text Encoding Initiative.)
  • Semantics encoding of formal language A in formal language B is a method of representing all terms (e.g. programs or descriptions) of language A using language B.
  • Electronic encoding transforms a signal into a code optimized for transmission or storage, generally done with a codec.
  • Neural encoding is the way in which information is represented in neurons.
  • Memory encoding is the process of converting sensations into memories.
  • Encryption transforms information for secrecy.

Wikipedia content modification information:

  • This page was last modified on 15 November 2008, at 21:05.

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