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Table 3. Issues discussed on the campaign websites and blogs of Bush and Kerry

in Blogging and Hyperlinking: use of the Web to enhance viability during the 2004 US campaign
by Andrew Paul, Williams Virginia, Kaye D. Trammell

Table 2: Re-election Probabilities and Financial Variables Through the Campaign

in Abstract
by Erik Snowberg, Justin Wolfers, Eric Zitzewitz
"... In PAGE 9: ... Financial variables are daily Our Election-night natural experiment yields different results from the pure time series methods previously employed in the literature. Table2 reports regressions of daily closing prices for financial variables on the most recent trade in the Bush reelection contract as of 4 pm Eastern time from the start of prediction market trading in June 2003 to October 31, 2004. As above, we analyze longer differences to allow for slow incorporation of information into the Bush reelection ... ..."

Tables Campaign Specification

in Verification of Fault Tolerance by Means of Fault Injection into VHDL Simulation Models
by Rome Bou, Jean Arlat, Yves Crouzet

Table 3: E ect of di erent weighting schemes on the estimated support for the Presidential candi- dates, based on the average estimates from the late CBS polls conducted during the two weeks pre- ceding the Presidential election. The following weighting schemes were considered: (1) no weights, (2) weights proportional to number of adults in household, (3) the CBS weights (which include weights proportional to household size along with other adjustments), and (4) iterative proportional tting applied to the CBS weights so as to match the Census on household size and also agree with the CBS poststrati cation variables. The table shows that the CBS weights have a large e ect, but the treatment of household size is irrelevant for this particular outcome.

in Improving Upon Probability Weighting for Household Size
by Andrew Gelman Department
"... In PAGE 4: ... For each of the CBS surveys, we compute the average response to the Presidential preference question, considering four di erent weighting schemes: (1) no weights, (2) weights proportional to number of adults in household, (3) the CBS weights (which include weights proportional to household size along with other adjustments), and (4) iterative proportional tting applied to the CBS weights so as to match the Census on household size and also agree with the CBS poststrati cation variables. Table3 displays the averages for the early and late CBS polls. The averages for the two sets of polls di er (there was a shift in preference from Dukakis toward Bush during the campaign), but in both cases, the household weights have virtually no e ect.... ..."

Table 1. Stratospheric Ozone Intercomparison Campaign

in Stratospheric Ozone Intercomparison Campaign (stoic) 1989:
by Overview Mccormick August, J. J. Margitanl, R. A. Barnes, G. B. Brothers, J. Butlers, J. Burris, R. A. Ferrare, J. B. Kerry, W. D. Komhyr, M. P. Mccormick, C. T. Mcelroy, T. J. Mcgee, A. J. Miller, M. Owensio, C. L. Parsons, A. L. Torres, J. J. Tsou, T. D. Walshl, Corporation Lanham Md
"... In PAGE 7: ...1 August 31,1994 STOIC Overview Page 6 INSTRUMENTS The participating instruments listed in Table1 are briefly described in following subsections. The main site for the campaign was TMF at an altitude of 7500 ft.... ..."

Table 1. ACTS Propagation Campaign Objectives and Approach

in ACTS Propagation Campaign
by F. Davarian
"... In PAGE 2: ... 2. ACTS Canwa ian Obiectives and ADWOadl Table1 lists the objectives of the ACTS propagation campaign. The table also shows the approach adopted to reach each objective.... ..."

Table 1: Statistics of fault injection campaign

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 5: ... In particular, we show the trend of minimum value of the vehicle sideslip angle (index number 4) for yaw rate and steer angle faults. Tables 1 and 2 show some statistics; particular Table1 reports the number of errors or warnings occurred, during the yaw-rate and the steer angle fault campaign. For each fault campaign (Fyaw_rate and Fsteer), Table 1 shows the number of error flag activations, the number of 3 to 4 warning flags activation, the number of 1 or 2 warning flags activation, and the number of correct executions.... In PAGE 5: ... Tables 1 and 2 show some statistics; particular Table 1 reports the number of errors or warnings occurred, during the yaw-rate and the steer angle fault campaign. For each fault campaign (Fyaw_rate and Fsteer), Table1 shows the number of error flag activations, the number of 3 to 4 warning flags activation, the number of 1 or 2 warning flags activation, and the number of correct executions. Table 2 shows the statistics of error occurrence: for each fault campaign (Fyaw_rate and Fsteer), table 2 shows the minimum and the maximum fault start time that generated error activation (Tinj_min, Tinj_max), and the minimum and the maximum fault duration that overcame the error threshold.... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 2.|European campaign (1985-1991)

in ORBIT10: adding the medium arc to the very short arc method
by Catastini Milani Carpino, G. Catastini, A. Milani, M. Carpino, A. Rossi
"... In PAGE 6: ... In the last part of Table 1 we give the results of the stability test for this campaign: rst we report the instability of the coordinates and baselines at a reference epoch (1990), then we give in the last line the instabilities of the velocities and baseline rates, measured with the same metric we used for the coordinates, in cm/year. Table2 gives the statistical summary of the residuals: there is a slight increase in the size of the residuals with respect to the one-year test campaign, but this may be due to the constraint of a linear behaviour of the SLR station positions. Table 3 gives the 7 year solution, i.... ..."

Table 2. Summary of Results from NGST Campaign

in Automated Fault-Inject Based Dependability Analysis of Distributed Computer Systems
by David Thomas Stott
"... In PAGE 35: ...ffending address was 0xEB6E654C (i.e., the corrupt value plus 4). The results from this campaign are shown in Table2 . Each row represents one set of runs; a set executes the application 25 times with the same injection parameters (location is either heap memory or register file; injection rate is constant and given in faults per seconds).... ..."

Table 2. Summary of Results from NGST Campaign

in Automated Fault-Inject Based Dependability Analysis of Distributed Computer Systems
by David Thomas Stott
"... In PAGE 35: ...ffending address was 0xEB6E654C (i.e., the corrupt value plus 4). The results from this campaign are shown in Table2 . Each row represents one set of runs; a set executes the application 25 times with the same injection parameters (location is either heap memory or register file; injection rate is constant and given in faults per seconds).... ..."
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