modification


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modification

[‚mäd·ə·fə′kā·shən]
(cell and molecular biology)
In nucleic acid metabolism, any changes made to deoxyribonucleic acid or ribonucleic acid after their original incorporation into a polynucleotide chain.
(engineering)
A major or minor change in the design of an item, effected in order to correct a deficiency, to facilitate production, or to improve operational effectiveness.
(metallurgy)
Treatment of molten aluminum alloys containing 8-13% silicon with small amounts of a sodium fluoride or sodium chloride mixture; improves mechanical properties.
(science and technology)
Any change brought about by external or internal factors.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

modification

1. A written amendment to the contract document signed by both parties.
3. A written or graphic interpretation issued by the architect.
4. A written order for a minor change in the work, 1 issued by the architect.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

modification

An alteration or change meant to rectify faults or shortcomings or which offers improved capability. A modification involves changes in the design of equipment or components.
An Illustrated Dictionary of Aviation Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Modification

 

in biology, nonhereditary changes in the visible characters (phenotype) of an organism; these changes occur under the influence of altered environmental conditions.

Modifying factors in the environment (temperature, illumination, diet) act on the organism during sensitive periods of its development, precipitating changes in the organism’s internal makeup (for example, changes in hormone level) and altering the course of ontogeny. Modificational variation consists in changes within the limits of the genotypically conditioned norm of reaction. Depending on the temperature of its environment, the Himalayan rabbit may change from black in cold weather to rusty brown in mild temperatures to pure white in high temperatures. However, the coloration of the parent rabbits is not inherited by their young; only the capacity to change color according to temperature change is inherited.

In nature, modifications are, as a rule, adaptive reactions of organisms to environmental factors. Thus, in lake Sagittaria sagittifolia, the shape of the leaves depends on where they grow: the above-water leaves are arrow-shaped, the leaves that float are heart-shaped with stomata on the upper side, and the underwater leaves are ribbon-like. Nonadaptive modifications often consist of all kinds of developmental disturbances, the extreme expression of which includes deformities and morphological and physiological malfunctions. These modifications occur, as a rule, in response to strong external stimuli, to which individuals of a given species are rarely exposed under normal conditions.

In contrast to mutations, modifications are not transmitted by heredity. Modifications develop in individuals of a given generation only when the conditions under which these modifications normally arise are present. However, in unicellular and occasionally multicellular organisms, prolonged modifications are found when changes in visible characters that have arisen as a result of environmental factors are retained for several generations, even after the disappearance of the inducing factors. This type of modification is apparently caused by changes in relatively stable self-reproducing cytoplasmic structures. Since they are nonhereditary, modifications have no direct evolutionary significance. If, however, a phenotype formed as a result of modification has a high adaptive value, the phenotype may become fixed in evolution only through the selection of those mutants that retain a given modification, but discard other modifications of a given character.

REFERENCES

Lobashev, M. E. Genetika, 2nd ed. Leningrad, 1967.
Shmal’gauzen, I. I. Faktory evoliutsii. Moscow, 1968.

N. V. TIMOFEEV-RESOVSKII, V. I. IVANOV and V. A. MGLINETS

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
Services include equipment and graphics installation, pre-delivery inspections, cab modifications and custom vehicle modifications.
Citation: Yang Wang et al.,"N6-methyladenosine RNA modification regulates embryonic neural stem cell self-renewal through histone modifications," Nature Neuroscience 2018; DOI: 10.1038/s41593-017-0057-1
"It's a way to discover nucleic acid modifications that you didn't know existed," says Peter Dedon, the Underwood-Prescott Professor of Biological Engineering at MIT.
He said: "Speeding is the most attractive part of modifications for youngsters.
Because the department received "a considerable amount of comments both in support and in opposition" to the modification request, NMED Secretary-Designate Ryan Flynn determined that the issue has generated significant public interest and that the permit modification request should be subject to the Class 3 process to allow "for a more extensive review...(and) additional time for the submittal and consideration of comments by the public."
Vallaro's website, official911.org is a repository of information pertaining to loan modifications, short sales and other foreclosure relief options.
Bank of America Corp (NYSE: BAC) has announced that it has completed 160,000 mortgage modifications in the first half of 2010.
Mulligan finds that the income target and collateral value tests combine to "create a tradeoff between the number of foreclosures prevented in the short term and the durability of foreclosure prevention efforts, because they make it impossible to both write down principal and offer modification to a wide range of borrowers." Another consequence of this tradeoff, he continues, "is to reduce collections, increase foreclosures and their costs, and reduce efficiency as compared to alternative means tested mortgage modification rules."

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