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segmenting

Segmenting is the process of dividing a larger whole into smaller parts called segments. The purpose is to isolate units that are more manageable, homogeneous, or meaningful for analysis, processing, or action. Segmenting can be applied across natural, technical, and social systems, and the term is used in different disciplines with context-specific meanings.

In biology and developmental biology, segmentation refers to the division of an organism into repetitive units,

In computer science, segmentation denotes partitioning data into coherent regions. Image segmentation groups pixels into regions

In marketing, market segmentation divides a broad audience into subgroups with shared needs or characteristics to

Segmenting typically relies on criteria and metrics to determine segment boundaries. Evaluation may consider cohesion within

such
as
somites
in
vertebrates
or
segmental
nerve
ganglia.
Segmentation
underlies
body
plan
organization
and
can
involve
genetic
pathways
that
regulate
timing
and
boundaries
between
segments.
In
anatomy,
it
also
describes
the
organization
of
segmented
body
parts
such
as
arthropod
segments.
with
similar
color,
intensity,
or
texture;
methods
include
thresholding,
region
growing,
clustering,
and
deep
learning.
Video
segmentation
extends
this
over
time,
identifying
scenes
or
events.
Speech
and
text
segmentation
divides
continuous
data
into
tokens,
sentences,
or
phrase
units,
essential
for
processing.
tailor
products,
messaging,
and
distribution.
Segmentation
can
be
demographic,
geographic,
psychographic,
or
behavioral,
and
often
informs
targeting
and
positioning
strategies.
segments
and
separation
between
segments,
using
statistics
or
performance
measures
appropriate
to
the
domain.
Ethical
and
practical
considerations
include
data
quality,
privacy,
and
the
risk
of
over-segmentation.