MPR
MPR may refer to:
Medicine
- The MMR vaccine, from Latin morbilli (measles), parotitis (mumps) and rubella
- Mannose 6-phosphate receptor, a family of transmembrane proteins that help transport proteins from the Golgi apparatus
- Median price ratio, for drug costs
- Membrane progesterone receptor, a group of cell surface receptors for progesterone
- Multi-planar reformatting, or multiplanar reconstruction, a medical imaging technique – see CT scan#Multiplanar_reconstruction
- Monthly Prescribing Reference, an online drug reference for healthcare professionals
Organizations
- A local abbreviation for Popular Movement of the Revolution, a political party in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Chadian People's Revolutionary Movement, a Chadian rebel group that operated in the 1980s
- Minnesota Public Radio
- Missouri Pacific Railroad
- Mongolian People's Republic
- People's Consultative Assembly, Majelis Permusyawaratan Rakyat, the Indonesian body comprising both legislative houses
- Swedish National Board for Measurement and Testing, later changed to Swedish Board for Accreditation and Conformity Assessment (SWEDAC)
Other uses
- Matched precipitation rate, an irrigation term when all sprinkler heads in a zone apply water equally
- Magnetic proton recoil neutron spectrometer
- Microparticle performance rating, used to measure an air filter's ability to capture small particles (< 1 micrometre)
- Minkowski Portal Refinement, a computer algorithm for detecting collision (overlap) between convex shapes
- Montpelier (Amtrak station), Amtrak code for a station in Vermont, United States
- MPR Hopf algebra in mathematics
- Multipacket Reception, a term in wireless receiver technology.
- Multipoint relay in Computer Networks
- Multi-Purpose Room (Gym)
- My Pokémon Ranch, a video game
- Moisture to Protein Ratio, commonly used in the production of Salami
- Mid-Pleistocene Revolution, a climax change involving glacial periodicity in quaternary geology, around 900,000 years ago.
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gollark: It's incomprehensible and also doesn't have Rust's nice ecosystem.
gollark: ... no.
gollark: But this is wrong™, because that stuff lets you focus on the LOGIC and not the boilerplate.
gollark: Go advocates, who are wrong, claim that stuff like not having iterators makes it easier to understand code.
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