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Table 4: Internal observations of Aj:

in Distributed Reflective Architectures
by Catriona M. Kennedy, Supervisor Prof, Aaron Sloman, Prof John Barnden, Dr. William Edmondson

Table 1 International Comparisons of Hot Burglary Rates

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2002
"... In PAGE 7: ...7 There have been occasional crime surveys in other nations, which suggest that other countries tend to have a higher percentage of residential burglaries involving occupied dwellings than for the United States. Table1 (top panel) lists some of the relevant estimates that have been reported by Kleck (1997) and Kopel (2001). One obvious problem with these comparisons is that the hot burglary rate for each country or city is measured at a different point in time.... In PAGE 7: ... But comparability problems remain. The bottom panel of Table1 highlights one difference. In 28 percent of American burglaries NCVS respondents did not know their whereabouts at the time of the burglary, a category that is not included in the British Crime Survey (BCS).... In PAGE 8: ...ead us to either over- or under-state the hot burglary rate in the U.S. depending on what fraction of the unreported burglary attempts are to occupied homes. -8- seen in the last row of Table1 , adjusting for this coding discrepancy between the BCS and NCVS lowers the hot burglary rate in the UK from 46% to between 36% and 45%.9 More importantly, even if we had comparable data there would remain the fact that a variety of potential explanations are plausible for an observed difference in the percentage of residential burglaries that involve occupied dwellings.... ..."

Table 5.6 shows all our performance metrics (disk accesses are in brackets) for K-FPQ using the (USrr, USrd) configuration with a global LRU buffer of 256 pages. From these measurements, we can observe the reduced number of disk accesses needed for this query, even for large K values. The ex- planation is that MAXMAXDIST is the function for pruning in the extended branch-and-bound algo- rithms instead of MINMINDIST, and MAXMAXDIST is very effective in this case. In addition, SDR and NSDI have the best behavior, and they are notably better that NSDR. For the other performance measurements, SDR and NSDI are considerably better than NSDR. In particular, NSDI consumes slightly less time to report the result, although the number of distance computations is greater. This behavior is due to the sorting of MAXMAXDIST of all possible pairs of MBRs from two internal nodes that SDR needs to execute the query. Moreover, we have executed the algorithms for the (NArd, NApp) configuration (lines, points) over R*-trees with different heights and we have obtained similar results and conclusions with respect to the (USrr, USrd) configuration.

in Algorithms for processing K-closest-pair queries in spatial databases
by A. Corral, Y. Manolopoulos, Y. Theodoridis, M. Vassilakopoulos 2004
Cited by 7

Table 15: Material Internal Energy for 62 mph Corner Impact into a Rigid Barrier Material Parts Internal Energy

in Development And Evaluation Of A C-1500 Pick-Up Truck Model For Roadside Hardware Impact Simulation
by Mr Abdullatif Zaouk, K. Zaouk, Dr. Nabih, E. Bedewi, Dr. Cing-dao Kan, Mr. Dhafer Marzougui 1997
"... In PAGE 26: ...Figure 21: Top view of simulation and test for truck into 42-inch vertical barrier t = 0 msec t = 75 msec t = 120 msec t = 240 msec Figure 22: Front view of simulation and test for truck into 42-inch vertical barrier Time History Records at Different Locations - Data for this level of evaluation was still under study at the time of this writing. Energy Absorption by Different Components - Table15 shows the percent of total energy mitigated through the different components. Similar to the detailed model, the energy absorption is distributed along a large region.... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 4. Effects on I/O performance due to different internal buffer sizes

in External A*
by Stefan Edelkamp, Shahid Jabbar, Stefan Schrödl 2004
"... In PAGE 13: ...Table 4. Effects on I/O performance due to different internal buffer sizes The impact of internal buffer size on the I/O performance is clearly observable in Table4 . We show the I/O performance of two instances by varying the internal buffer size B.... ..."
Cited by 16

Table A.7: Comparison of demographic characteristics of examined and not examined persons among interviewed persons, NHANES III ,1988-94

in unknown title
by unknown authors

Table 3: Internal factors.

in Evaluating User-perceived Benefits of Content Distribution Networks
by Claudia Canali, Valeria Cardellini
"... In PAGE 6: ...3 Effects of internal mechanisms As internal factors we consider the percentage of objects served by the edge servers and the number of edge servers used to deliver content to the same client. Table3 shows the number of embedded objects in each home page (column 2), and the absolute number and percentage of embedded objects served from CDN edge servers (columns 3 and 4, respec- tively). The last column reports the number of edge servers used to deliver the respective embedded objects.... In PAGE 6: ... The last column reports the number of edge servers used to deliver the respective embedded objects. The most interesting result in Table3 is that the large ma- jority of CDNs use only one edge server. The use of multiple edge servers for the content providers CP1 and CP10 is re- lated to the logical subdivisions of the site content delivery.... ..."

Table 5. Australian participation in international space-based observing programs

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2001
"... In PAGE 47: ... And the CSIRO, the Australian Institute of Marine Science and the Bureau of Meteorology are all involved in ongoing validation studies for satellite instruments. Table5 lists some of the international space-based observing systems in which Australian agencies are directly involved and Table 6 summarises the main Australian satellite reception and processing ground stations that are related to climate observation. Table 5.... ..."

Table 2. Summary of the peak-area counts and their ratios for ascomycin and CsA extracted from whole blood and water after addition of CsA at the indicated concentrations.

in Concentration
by Cyclosporin A Over An Extended, Brian G. Keevil, David P. Tierney, Donald P. Cooper, Michael R. Morris
"... In PAGE 7: ...study shown in Table2 indicate that, on average, the area of the internal standard was H110116% higher in the whole- blood samples than in the aqueous samples. Furthermore, there is no apparent difference in the CsA:ascomycin peak-area ratio between the whole blood and the aqueous samples.... ..."

Table 2. Internal Capabilities of Different Agent Types

in unknown title
by unknown authors
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