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Table 1. Experimental Results of Intelligent Information Integration Facility

in Constructing Information Bases using Associative Structures
by Harumi Maeda, Kazuto Koujitani
"... In PAGE 10: ... We measured the precision and recall for the class people (Test 1) and projects (Test 2), respectively. Table1 summarizes the result of the performance evaluation we have made so far. In the case of HTML documents, we obtained 90% as precision and 83% as recall for Test 1, and 68% as precision and 73% as recall for Test 2.... ..."

Table 1 summarizes the intelligibility data associated with the audio-visual, audio-alone and visual-alone conditions for all nine subjects. The intelligibility data for the audio- visual integration conditions (only) are plotted in Figure 3. For the audio-alone conditions, intelligibility ranges between 9% and 31% for the lateral (A

in SPEECH INTELLIGIBILITY DERIVED FROM ASYNCHRONOUS PROCESSING OF AUDITORY-VISUAL INFORMATION
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 5: ...two subjects, intelligibility is greater than 60%. When the audio signal leads the video all subjects exhibit an appreciable decline in recognition performance, relative to the synchronous condition for asynchronies as short as 40 or 80 ms ( Table1 , Figures 3 and 4). For most subjects there is a relatively progressive decline in intelligibility as the audio signal increasingly leads the video.... ..."

Table 2 Comparison of Intelligent Multimedia Systems

in TELEMORPH: BANDWIDTH-DETERMINED MOBILE MULTIMODAL PRESENTATION
by Anthony Solon, Paul Mckevitt, Kevin Curran
"... In PAGE 13: ... The method employed by TeleMorph to process these various constraints and utilize this information effectively to design the most suitable combinations of output modalities is the main challenge within this research project. Table2 shows that TeleMorph and TeleTuras uti- lize similar input and output modalities to those employed by other mobile intelligent multimedia presentation systems. (Please note that due to space restrictions, output modalities have been omitted.... In PAGE 13: ... (Please note that due to space restrictions, output modalities have been omitted.) One point to note about the intelligent multimedia presentation systems in Table2 is that on input none of them integrate vision, while only one system uses speech and two use haptic deixis. In comparison, all of the mobile intelligent multimedia systems inte- grate speech and haptic deixis on input.... ..."

Table 1. Hybrid intelligent system basic ingredients. Methodology Advantage

in Nature and Scope of AI Techniques
by Ajith Abraham
"... In PAGE 7: ...open, instead of conservative, concept, that is, it is evolv- ing those relevant techniques together with the important advances in other new computing methods. Table1 lists the three principal ingredients together with their advan- tages (Abraham, 2002). Experience has shown that it is crucial for the design of HIS to primarily focus on the integration and interaction of different techniques rather than merge different methods to create ever-new techniques.... ..."

Table 1 General guideline for three options to implement onboard intelligence: ASICs, FPGAs, and microprocessors Characteristic ASIC FPGA Microprocessor

in Development
by Chetan Kapoor, Jin-song Pei 2006
"... In PAGE 2: ... For embedding intelligence, a hardware designer typically has three options. One could design a digital system using the traditional microprocessor (a Digital Signal Processor (DSP) or Reduced Instruction Set Computer (RISC) can be considered as subsets), develop an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC), or use an FPGA ( Table1 ). ASICs are restricted to applications which require mass production due to their high initial setup costs (e.... ..."

Table 2. Comparison of CORBA, DCOM, Intelligent Agent - based Approach, and DIAS/DEEM

in Using DCOM to support interoperability in forest ecosystem management decision support systems
by W. D. Potter, S. Liu, X. Deng, H. M. Rauscher 2000
"... In PAGE 8: ... These four approaches are designed to provide various sorts of software interoperability and easy integration of legacy systems. Table2 compares and contrasts the four approaches. CORBA and DCOM are two mature, interoperable object models that prov ide well - designed integration and communication standards.... ..."
Cited by 7

Table 2. Time results of other CP approaches for social golfers in comparison with our Intelligent Backtracking method

in An Attempt to Dynamically Break Symmetries in the Social Golfers Problem
by Francisco Azevedo 2006
"... In PAGE 11: ... 4.3 Results and Limitations In Table2 we present the results in seconds of our method (IB) to find a solution (or prove its impossibility) to each of the instances of Table 1, with a C++ implementation on the same 2.4 GHz machine.... In PAGE 12: ... Thus, instead of trying in turn a specific number of weeks, the maximum is constructed incrementally. Using this method, we extended results of Table2 to the more complete and organised Table 3 where, given g and s, an upper bound is computed and solutions keep coming (in a time limit of 5 minutes) until the maximum number of weeks is achieved (marked with ) either by reaching the upper bound or by exhausting the search space. Table 3.... In PAGE 13: ... The described technique can be used to obtain fast results, or may serve as heuristics integrated in a complete tool. Notice that we did not include instances with s=2 or with g=s in Table2 , cases where usually solutions are easier to obtain (although not always). In such cases, IB is particularly fast; for example, for 7-7 the optimum 8-weeks solution is found and proved in just 0.... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 1. Definitions of intelligence

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 2: ... How can this controversial and subjective concept be defined accurately? I confronted this dilemma by examining its definition in different fields. Table1 lists different concepts of the term intelligence. 130 The systemic theory of living systems part II Figure 1.... In PAGE 3: ...131 Intelligence H11549 informational entity By analyzing common traits within the definitions given in Table1 , intelligence may be defined as that emergent informa- tional entity, capable of learning, exerting control, emitting and receiving communication, handling energy flows, establishing feedback mechanisms and creating organization for survival. Emergent implies a higher level of intelligence of the whole, stemming from the intelligence of its parts.... ..."

Table 2. Intelligibility scores

in Dynamic unit selection for Very Low Bit Rate coding at 500 bits/sec
by Marc Padellini, Francois Capman, Geneviève Baudoin
"... In PAGE 7: ... The test was performed on 10 listeners using the voice of a female speaker coded with three different coders: the MELP (Stanag 4591), the HSX (Stanag 4479), and the VLBR. The results gathered in Table2 are the mean recognition score per coder. The VLBR is ranked before the Stanag 4479 but does not reach Stanag 4591 performances.... ..."

Table 2. Intelligence Cycles

in Making Informed Decisions : Intelligence Analysis for New Forms of Conflict
by Sara-jayne Farmer
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