A Jones diagram is a type of Cartesian graph developed by Lloyd A. Jones in the 1940s, where each axis represents a different variable. In a Jones diagram, unlike in a Cartesian graph, the +X and -X (and +Y and -Y) axes represent different quantities, not positive or negative intensities of the same quantity. The diagram therefore represents four variables, where the first depends on the next, which depends on the next, and so on.
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- A Jones diagram is a type of Cartesian graph developed by Lloyd A. Jones in the 1940s, where each axis represents a different variable. In a Jones diagram, unlike in a Cartesian graph, the +X and -X (and +Y and -Y) axes represent different quantities, not positive or negative intensities of the same quantity. The diagram therefore represents four variables, where the first depends on the next, which depends on the next, and so on. The overall system response is in quadrant I; the variables that contribute to it are in quadrants II through IV.
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- Method and apparatus for automatically calibrating a CRT display
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- A Jones diagram is a type of Cartesian graph developed by Lloyd A. Jones in the 1940s, where each axis represents a different variable. In a Jones diagram, unlike in a Cartesian graph, the +X and -X (and +Y and -Y) axes represent different quantities, not positive or negative intensities of the same quantity. The diagram therefore represents four variables, where the first depends on the next, which depends on the next, and so on.
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