recency

NOUN
  1. a time immediately before the present
  2. the property of having happened or appeared not long ago
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How To Use recency In A Sentence

  • The classic lie about globalization is its recency.
  • Among these contributors will be some of the movers and shakers of criminology in the coming years: and the sharpness and recency of their experience can be expected to resonate with those of the generation to come.
  • The recency of the campaigns creates major challenges for them, of course, but both historical accounts are written as sensibly as time and space would allow.
  • The prior art on continuity vs. flighting comes from John Philip Jones and Erwin Ephron, who used IRI panel data to show that Recency is what really counts – the Ebbinghaus memory curve's effect on ROI – reaching consumers just before shopping trips (so they actually remember you at the moment of truth – psychologic term of art: Priming), driving up ROI. In Terms Of ROI: What Do We Know About Continuity Vs. Flighting? - Bill Harvey - MediaBizBloggers
  • I had thought it was just either some short-term diminution in frequency that might be over soon, or a case of the recency illusion. Pharyngula
  • Research has also shown, however, that self-reported drug use increases as recency decreases.
  • Because of the relative recency of Internet forums for intellectual interchanges, a number of precedents may be set that will determine the future course of peer commentary.
  • This is suggested since the new version of the questionnaire generated more consistent responses to the questions on recency of drug use.
  • Ebbinghaus found that people are better at recalling items from the beginning ( "primacy effect") and end ( "recency effect") of a list rather than the middle. Simulmedia: Lessons Learned from Promo Positioning - Yuliya Torosjan - MediaBizBloggers
  • We then computed a recency of use measure by subtracting the difference between the respondent's actual age and the age he or she last reported any use of a particular substance.
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