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overlaps

Overlaps refers to the situation where two or more things share some portion of space, time, or attributes. The term is used across disciplines to denote an area of commonality, as opposed to being completely separate (disjoint) or entirely contained within another object. Overlaps can be partial or complete and may vary in significance depending on the context.

In mathematics and geometry, overlap is often formalized as the intersection of sets or regions. Two intervals

In time management and scheduling, temporal overlaps occur when two events share one or more time points.

In data processing and signal analysis, overlap describes portions of data that appear in multiple segments,

Practical considerations include recognizing overlaps to avoid redundancy, to merge related information, or to ensure adequate

[a,b]
and
[c,d]
overlap
if
their
intersection
is
nonempty,
equivalently
max(a,c)
≤
min(b,d).
In
geometry,
two
polygons
or
shapes
overlap
when
their
interiors
share
points.
Overlap
can
be
quantified
by
the
area
or
measure
of
the
intersecting
region.
Overlaps
can
cause
conflicts
and
require
adjustment,
rescheduling,
or
constraints
to
ensure
resources
or
participants
are
not
double-booked.
In
project
planning,
deliberate
overlaps
between
tasks
can
facilitate
handoffs
or
parallel
work,
though
they
may
raise
coordination
needs.
windows,
or
samples.
Overlapping
windows
are
commonly
used
to
improve
continuity,
coverage,
or
feature
estimation,
such
as
in
spectral
analysis
or
streaming
applications.
In
genetics
and
bioinformatics,
genes
or
reading
frames
may
physically
overlap
along
a
nucleotide
sequence,
with
a
region
contributing
to
more
than
one
annotation
or
product.
coverage
in
sampling.
Quantitative
measures
such
as
the
overlap
coefficient
or
Jaccard
index
provide
ways
to
assess
the
extent
of
overlap
between
sets
or
features.