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Sift

Sift is a word with several related senses. As a verb, it means to separate and remove larger particles from a mixture by passing it through a sieve or mesh. It can also mean to examine something carefully in order to sort or select items, for example, to sift through records or evidence. As a noun, a sift is a device—typically a small frame with a mesh screen—used to perform this operation.

In cooking and food preparation, sifting is used to aerate dry ingredients such as flour, cocoa powder,

In computer vision, SIFT stands for Scale-Invariant Feature Transform. Introduced by David Lowe in 1999, it

The term sift is also used more broadly to indicate filtering or sorting large volumes of information

See also: sieve; flour sifting; scale-invariant feature transform.

or
powdered
sugar
and
to
break
up
clumps.
Kitchen
sifters
include
hand-held
sifters,
sifter
baskets,
and
attachments
for
mixers.
Sifting
improves
texture
and
measurement
accuracy
in
some
recipes.
describes
a
method
to
detect
and
describe
local
features
in
images
that
are
stable
under
changes
of
scale,
rotation,
and
illumination.
SIFT
features
enable
tasks
such
as
image
matching,
object
recognition,
panorama
stitching,
and
3D
reconstruction.
The
algorithm
has
been
widely
cited
and
has
influenced
many
successor
methods;
patents
historically
restricted
its
use
in
some
contexts,
leading
to
alternative
descriptors
in
open
implementations.
or
materials,
for
example,
to
sift
through
data
or
sift
a
supply
chain
for
quality.
The
usage
ranges
from
everyday
kitchen
tasks
to
formal
analyses
and
technical
literature.