Capture
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Capture can refer to a number of things aside from its usual dictionary definitions:
Radio
- FM capture is also a phenomenon of frequency modulation. See that article for more.
Public service
In public choice theory and political science, capture is said to occur when bureaucrats or politicians, who are supposed be acting in the public interest, end up acting systematically to favour particular vested interests. The theory of capture is associated with nobel laureate economist George Stigler, one of its main developers.
Public choice theory holds that capture is inevitable, because vested interests have a concentrated financial stake in the outcomes of political decisions, thus ensuring that they will find means -- direct or indirect -- to capture decision makers.
While this inevitablist application of rational actor theory appears to be excessively pessimistic about government, the fact remains that capture is a commonly observable phenomenon.
Rivers
Sometimes the upper courses of rivers can be captured by other rivers eroded through the watershed.
- Teays River captured by Ohio River