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Table 4. The most and the least problematic types of benefits as assesses by enterprise managers

in Restructuring of Enterprise Social Assets in Russia - Trends, . . .
by Freinkman, Central Asia
"... In PAGE 17: ... The attitude towards different kinds of social activities is the same. As one can see from Table4 , provision of social benefits associated with holding social assets are considered by enterprise managers as the most difficult ones. Social functions associated with provision of non-wage benefits including those in kind but which do not require holding substantial social assets (e.... In PAGE 17: ...enefits including those in kind but which do not require holding substantial social assets (e.g. food shops with subsidized prices, transportation subsidies, direct distribution of commodities produced by enterprise itself or received through barter at subsidized prices) constitute a much less burden than the former. For example, Table4 shows that in general it is much easier for enterprises to compensate their workers for resort recreation in cash than to hold recreation facilities themselves. In addition, there are different attitudes towards two different groups of social assets.... ..."

Table 3: Six of the 12 functions over three variables that are problematic even using depth-2 lookahead. The other six problematic functions are the inverses of these.

in Skewing: An Efficient Alternative to Lookahead for Decision Tree Induction
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 2: ... Furthermore, there are many functions that require a higher lookahead. For example, suppose we have examples constructed from variables a0a46a1a47a22a25a22a24a22a31a0a2a1a30a26a31a26 and the target is one of the functions in Table3 involving a0 a1 , a0 a3 , and a0 a5 . Even with depth-2 lookahead, TDIDT is highly likely to choose incor- rect variables.... In PAGE 6: ... Many such functions exist, and for all such func- tions, even given a complete data set, no variable has gain. Examples of such functions are exclusive-or and exclusive- nor, and all those in Table3 . Figures 6-9 show the results for these experiments.... ..."

Table 1: Usability of present day eye-gaze techniques. The information has been gathered from numerous places (Scott amp; Findlay, 1993; Baluja amp; Pomerleau, 1994; Wooding, 1995, among others).

in Eye Controlled Media: Present and Future State
by Arne John Glenstrup, Theo Engell-nielsen 1995
"... In PAGE 46: ... Errors in the program should be corrected. Table1 0: Important problems with the EyeCatcher... In PAGE 57: ...Advantages Disadvantages Keyboard Enables free composition of in- put, precise spelling and precise magnitude input (one can spec- ify (42,17) instead of pointing at the approximate spot) Input rate is low and constrained to character-based descriptions Mouse Enables semi-precise positioning and input of position or shape- based descriptions, and includes a take/drop function (mouse button) Input is constrained to pointing and clicking on menus (non-free compositon) Eye-gaze Input rate is high and shows the point of interest The eyes are continuously oper- ated, do not have a take/drop function and input is constrained to pointing and menu-selection (non-free composition) Speech Enables free composition of input and does not require syntactic knowledge of keyboards Input is ambiguous (homonyms cannot be distinguished) and can disturb the surroundings Table1 1: Communication advantages and disadvantages of the di erent modes of communication from human to computer We believe that the ideal eye-gaze application should use several dimen- sions of the eye-tracking data. As described in section 3 on page 12, the nal eye-movements are caused by many di erent cognitive processes, so di erent aspects of the user apos;s cognitive state are exposed by di erent fea- tures of the gaze pattern.... In PAGE 65: ...Voluntary Time context Change in pupil size ? Short Altered blinking rate ? Short Head orientation + Short Sudden head movements ? Short Gestures + Short Change in heartbeat volume ? Short Uneasiness / nervous movements + Short Voice characteristica + Short Eye contact avoidance + Short Alterations in pulse rate ? Long Breathing rate ? Long Body temperature ? Long Sweat rate ? Long Table1 2: A ection measures within a short time interval and those which demand long time interpretation sampling intervals (cf. gure 12 on the next page).... ..."
Cited by 14

Table 4: The Most and the Least Problematic Types of Benen0cts as Assessed byEnterprise

in Restructuring of Enterprise Social Assets in Russia: Trends, Problems, Possible Solutions
by Lev M. Freinkman, Lev M. Freinkman, Irina Starodubrovskaya, Irina Starodubrovskaya
"... In PAGE 17: ... But the attitude towards din0berent kinds of social activ- ities is the same. As one can see from Table4 , social functions associated with holding social assets are considered byenterprise managers as the most din0ecult ones. Social func- tions associated with provision of non-wage benen0cts including those in kind but which... In PAGE 18: ...transportation subsidies, direct distribution of commodities produced by the enterprise itself or received through barter at subsidized pricesn29 constitute a much less burden than the former ones. For example, Table4 shows that in general it is much more easy for en- terprises to compensate their workers for resort recreation in cash than to hold recreation facilities themselves. In addition, there is a din0berent attitude towards two din0berent groups of social assets.... ..."

Table 10. Problematic components.

in Code Decay Analysis of Legacy Software through Successive Releases
by Magnus C. Ohlsson, Anneliese Von Mayrhauser, Brian McGuire, Claes Wohlin 1999
Cited by 6

Table 3. Non-functional requirements

in The WISE Approach to Architect Wireless Services
by Patricia Lago, Mari Matinlassi
"... In PAGE 6: ...Non-functional requirements for our problem are described in Table3 . Each non- functional requirement is associated with a quality attribute refined with requirement definition and scope.... ..."

Table 3: Non-functional security requirements

in
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 16: ... In this paper, we will refer only to those non- functional requirements, which deal with security. These requirements are described on Table3 , where every security focused require- ment is first associated with its aim and then briefly described. 8.... ..."

Table 2. Non-trivial infrastructure requirements.

in A Specification for an Object-Oriented Distributed Banking System
by Sy St Em, A Specification For An Object-oriented
"... In PAGE 19: ... Once the interfaces have been identified, the detailed form of the interface opera- tions can be derived from the data contents of the objects given in the informational specifica- tion. Finally, Table2 contains a list of non-trivial requirements that the selected middleware Computational object Functionality Account repository Maintenance of accounts and account agreements for a branch. Account type Maintenance of an account agreement template.... ..."

Table 1: Non-functional requirements and their measures

in A Taxonomy of Verification and Validation of Software Requirement and Specifications 1
by Juan F. Sequeda

Table 3: Non-Drug Costs Associated with Providing Anti-Retroviral Therapy (US$)

in Cost And Financing Aspects Of Providing Anti-Retroviral Therapy: A Background Paper
by Katherine Floyd And, A Background Paper, Katherine Floyd, Charles Gilks
"... In PAGE 5: ...3 Other Costs which may be important, especially in Developing Countries There are also some additional costs which may be involved in providing ARV therapy, especially in developing countries, and it is worth highlighting these. Many of the costs quoted in Table3 above are based on US cost data, where the costs of shipping equipment and supplies will be relatively low because they can be domestically produced. In developing countries where these items will probably have to be imported from countries a considerable distance away, costs are likely to be higher.... In PAGE 6: ... The range in costs for the final three components reflects the range shown in the Table 3 cost data. The range in outpatient costs uses the highest figure for the USA shown in Table3 as an upper estimate, but US$1 is used as a lower estimate since the day in hospital cost for Malawi suggests that in very poor countries this may be a realistic figure. Counselling costs and HIV test costs are ignored since these are one-off costs and are minor in comparison with other cost components.... ..."
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