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Table 2: Results of the decision support of Promedas. At visit 1, a small number of patient ndings are entered in the system (not shown). Promedas displays the most likely diagnoses. After selecting Pernicious Anemia, Promedas computes the expected information for all unknown tests. We select the test apos;Anti- parietal cel antibodies apos;, whose subsequent measurement yields apos;Yes apos;. Ranking of hidden mechanisms are not shown. For subsequent visits of the patient we see how the additional test results change the likelihood of the diagnoses. Acknowledgements This research is supported by the Technology Foundation STW, applied science division of NWO and the technology programme of the Ministry of Economic A airs

in Approximate Inference for Medical Diagnosis
by W.A.J.J. Wiegerinck, H.J. Kappen, E.W.M.T. ter Braak, W.J.P.P. ter Burg, M.J. Nijman, Y.L. O, J.P. Neijt
"... In PAGE 7: ... In addition, Promedas provides help information, medical background information and pointers to the literature. In Table2 , we illustrate the capability of the system to guide the medical decision-making process. 5 Discussion The development of a DSS for comprehensive medical diagnosis in internal medicine represents a great challenge for AI.... ..."

Table 5: Evolutionary forecasting models. Series STW

in Evolving Time Series Forecasting Neural Network Models
by Paulo Cortez, Miguel Rocha, José Neves
"... In PAGE 5: ... 1 2 13 12 11 8 3 Figure 3: The best model for the sunspots series. Table5 shows the best models achieved by the GEA, for all series of Table 1. As an example, Figure 3 plots the best ANN topology for the sunspots series.... ..."

Table 1: The George Washington University/National Science Foundation Workshop on Priority Policy Issues in a National Information Infrastructure PARTICIPANTS

in Civilizing Cyberspace:
by Priority Policy Issues, Lance J. Hoffman
"... In PAGE 5: ... Their mission was to examine important policy issues related to computer networks today and, whenever possible, to produce directions for possible policy and/or technological solutions. The participants chosen were knowledgeable leaders from the science and technology research communities, the legal community, scholarly institutions, public interest groups, and the federal government (see Table1 ). The National Science Foundation Division of Networking and Communications Research funded the symposium.... In PAGE 36: ... Their mission was to examine important policy issues related to computer networks today and, whenever possible, to produce directions for possible policy and/or technological solutions. The participants chosen were knowledgeable leaders from the science and technology research communities, the legal community, scholarly institutions, public interest groups, and the federal government (see Table1 ). The National Science Foundation Division of Networking and Communications Research funded the symposium.... ..."

Table 1: The George Washington University/National Science Foundation Workshop on Priority Policy Issues in a National Information Infrastructure PARTICIPANTS

in Civilizing Cyberspace:
by Priority Policy Issues, Lance J. Hoffman
"... In PAGE 5: ... Their mission was to examine important policy issues related to computer networks today and, whenever possible, to produce directions for possible policy and/or technological solutions. The participants chosen were knowledgeable leaders from the science and technology research communities, the legal community, scholarly institutions, public interest groups, and the federal government (see Table1 ). The National Science Foundation Division of Networking and Communications Research funded the symposium.... In PAGE 36: ... Their mission was to examine important policy issues related to computer networks today and, whenever possible, to produce directions for possible policy and/or technological solutions. The participants chosen were knowledgeable leaders from the science and technology research communities, the legal community, scholarly institutions, public interest groups, and the federal government (see Table1 ). The National Science Foundation Division of Networking and Communications Research funded the symposium.... ..."

Table 1: The George Washington University/National Science Foundation Workshop on Priority Policy Issues in a National Information Infrastructure

in Civilizing Cyberspace: Priority Policy Issues in a National Information Infrastructure
by Lance J. Hoffman, I. Today's Networks
"... In PAGE 6: ... Their mission was to examine important policy issues related to computer networks today and, whenever possible, to produce directions for possible policy and/or technological solutions. The participants chosen were knowledgeable leaders from the science and technology research communities, the legal community, scholarly institutions, public interest groups, and the federal government (see Table1 ). The National Science Foundation Division of Networking and Communications Research funded the... ..."

Table 5: Miss rates in the marking code (%) STW GEN INCGEN

in Software prefetching for mark-sweep garbage collection: hardware analysis and software redesign
by Chen-yong Cher 2004
"... In PAGE 8: ... The non-mark column shows that times spent in the application (mutator) and for sweeping (ie, not marking), do not vary much from the base case. Table5 shows L1 and L2 demand-load miss rates in the GC marking code for STW, GEN and INCGEN. To put things in per- spective, because the number of L2 accesses is the number of L1 misses, the reduction in both L1 and L2 miss rates actually reflects a larger reduction in L2 misses.... ..."
Cited by 4

Table 6: Speedup without tracing pollution (%) STW GEN INCGEN

in Software prefetching for mark-sweep garbage collection: hardware analysis and software redesign
by Chen-yong Cher 2004
"... In PAGE 9: ... The sim- ulator treats an access that hits in either L2 cache as a hit, so the run benefits from tracing locality but does not suffer from tracing pol- lution. Table6 shows the resulting speedups for the base case when tracing pollution is avoided in this way. We see only 2-3% overall improvement for GC-intensive benchmarks.... ..."
Cited by 4

Table 3b. The results of the tonal and toneless STW experiments for the BiGram, the BiGram with the WPI and the BiGram with the WPM.

in Knowledge Discovery and Management Group Teaching and Researching Talk KDM TR-Talk Vol.1(2) Paper#2 (2006-10) Applying Word Pair Model to the Chinese Syllable-to-Word Problem
by Jia-lin Tsai
"... In PAGE 6: ...le-word first strategies (Chen et al., 1986; Tsai et al., 2004). The system dictionary of the BiGram is same with that of the WPI and the WPM. Table3 a compares the results of the MSIME, the MSIME with the WPI and the MSIME with the WPM on the closed and open testing sentences. Table 3b compares the results of the BiGram, the BiGram with the WPI and the BiGram with the WPM on the closed and the open testing sentences.... In PAGE 6: ... Table 3a compares the results of the MSIME, the MSIME with the WPI and the MSIME with the WPM on the closed and open testing sentences. Table3 b compares the results of the BiGram, the BiGram with the WPI and the BiGram with the WPM on the closed and the open testing sentences. In this experiment, the STW output of the MSIME/BiGram with the WPI and the WPM were collected by directly replacing the identified words of the WPI and the WPM from the corresponding STW output of the MSIME and the BiGram.... In PAGE 6: ... In this experiment, the STW output of the MSIME/BiGram with the WPI and the WPM were collected by directly replacing the identified words of the WPI and the WPM from the corresponding STW output of the MSIME and the BiGram. From Table3 a, the tonal and toneless STW improvements of the MSIME by the WPI and the WPM are (18.... In PAGE 6: ...oneless STW improvements of the MSIME by the WPI and the WPM are (18.9%, 10.1%) and (24.4%, 15.5%), respectively. From Table3 b, the tonal and toneless STW improvements of the BiGram by the WPI and the WPM are (8.... In PAGE 6: ...ess STW accuracies of the BiGram and the TriGram are less than 0.3%. The results of Tables 3a and 3b indicate that the MSIME and the BiGram with WPM is able to achieve better tonal and toneless STW improvements than the two Chinese input systems with the WPI. Table3 a. The results of the tonal and toneless STW experiments for the MSIME, the MSIME with the WPI and the MSIME with the WPM.... In PAGE 6: ...3% (21.0%) a STW accuracies and STW improvements of the words identified by the BiGram with the WPI b STW accuracies and STW improvements of the words identified by the BiGram with the WPM Table3 c is the results of the MSIME and the BiGram by using the WPM as an adaptation processing with the mixed system/user WP database for the closed and the open testing sentences. From Table 3c, the average tonal and toneless STW improvements of the MSIME and the BiGram by using the WPM as an adaptation processing are 32.... In PAGE 6: ...7.3% (21.0%) a STW accuracies and STW improvements of the words identified by the BiGram with the WPI b STW accuracies and STW improvements of the words identified by the BiGram with the WPM Table 3c is the results of the MSIME and the BiGram by using the WPM as an adaptation processing with the mixed system/user WP database for the closed and the open testing sentences. From Table3 c, the average tonal and toneless STW improvements of the MSIME and the BiGram by using the WPM as an adaptation processing are 32.... In PAGE 6: ...2.9% and 31.1%, respectively. Table3 c. The results of the tonal and toneless STW experiments for the MSIME and the BiGram using the WPM as an adaptation processing.... ..."

TABLE 1. Theoretical foundation for ISP.

in unknown title
by unknown authors 1991
Cited by 84

Table 1.6 - --- - - Subaru of America Foundation The Toyota Foundation.

in Acknowledgments
by David E. Cole, Sean P. Mcalinden, Brett C. Smith, George A. Fulton, Donald R. Grimes, Lucie G. Schmidt 1998
"... In PAGE 80: ....S. Department of Commerce, International Trade Administration. quot; Table1 5: Total New Passenger Vehicle and Truck Exports, 1996 quot; (online). Available: htt~:llwww,ita.... ..."
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