• Documents
  • Authors
  • Tables
  • Log in
  • Sign up
  • MetaCart
  • DMCA
  • Donate

CiteSeerX logo

Tools

Sorted by:
Try your query at:
Semantic Scholar Scholar Academic
Google Bing DBLP
Results 1 - 10 of 7,035
Next 10 →

Table 11: Demodulator Peculiar Algorithms

in ABSTRACT Programmable Single Board Spread Spectrum Digital Modem
by E. Rossini, C. Campa, G. Chiassarini, D. Gianfelici, M. Marsella

Table 1. Client software implementation peculiarities.

in CONTRIBUTION TO THE DEFINITION OF BEST PRACTICES FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION OF REMOTE EXPERIMENTATION SOLUTIONS
by unknown authors

Table 3. Relationships between profit changes and Rules based on volume increasing on A

in A Profit-based Business Model for Evaluating Rule
by Yaohua Chen, Yan Zhao, Yiyu Yao
"... In PAGE 9: ... We consider two types of rules with high absolute supports used in this type of volume-based strategies. The relationships between profit change and the two types of rules are generally summarized in Table3 . Table 3 shows that the peculiarity rules can increase the profit more significantly than the association rules.... ..."

Table 2. Number of languages having none, one or more phonological peculiarities

in Universals, Their Violation and the Notion of Phonologically Peculiar Languages
by Vladimir Pericliev 2004
"... In PAGE 14: ... The more the pe- culiarities of a language (or the more universals it violates), the more phonologically peculiar it is. Table2 shows the number of languages having none, one, two or more phonological peculiarities. Table 2.... In PAGE 14: ...143 212 33 41 50 61 It is seen in Table2 that 391 out of the 451 or 87% of the languages investigated do not manifest any of the 33 peculiarities listed in the preceding section. 43 languages manifest only a single peculi- arity and can therefore be said to be only mildly phonologically peculiar (relative to the peculiarity type studied).... ..."

Table 2. Current Cluster-based Peculiar Velocity Surveys

in Proceedings:EvolutionofLargeScaleStructure{Garching,August1998 CLUSTERSASTRACERSOFLARGE{SCALE STRUCTURE MarcPostman,SpaceTelescopeScienceInstitute Baltimore,Maryland21218U.S.A.
by Abstract. Byvirtueoftheirhighgalaxyspacedensitiesandtheirlarge
"... In PAGE 9: ... 7 The Large-scale Velocity Field A complementary approach (and perhaps a more promising one given current cluster catalogs) to studying very large{scale structure using clus- ters is through the mapping of the large{scale velocity eld. Currently, at least 7 independent cluster-based peculiar velocity surveys, all reaching scales of 100h?1 Mpc or larger, are either complete or in progress (see Table2 ). Inferences about the under- lying mass distribution from pecu- liar velocity surveys are less suscep- tible to incompleteness e ects and radial density gradients than those from redshift surveys.... ..."

Table 2. Some peculiar radiographic features of tuberculosis among patients with AIDS

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 12: ...7* 328 @ Compliance structure-see text; * Treatment efficiency with 100% SR = (328/660) x 100 = 49.7%; ** For value of cases, decimal points omitted Table2 . Compliance and sputum conversion among 660 cases put on SCC Compliance Structure @ Sputum Negative Level Rate (%) Number** Rate (%) Number** 1 20.... In PAGE 23: ...05). Response to tetracosactrin : The response of patients to tetracosactrin on admission and at 4 weeks after the start of treatment is given in Table2 . On admission, 7 of 16 R-7, 14 of 22 R-2 and 7 of 19 NR-7 patients had a positive response to tetracosactrin, the total number of patients with a positive response being 28 (49%) of 57 patients.... In PAGE 38: ... The dimension of the problem of tuberculosis might, therefore, increase with the coming in of AIDS. Table2 shows the peculiar radiographic features of tuberculosis among patients with AIDS reported in literature and our own experience of tuberculosis patients co-infected with HIV. Our series had a strikingly higher incidence of poor tolerance to anti-tuberculosis chemotherapy (4 out of 6) compared to experience of other authors.... ..."

Table 5 - Proportion of indexed URLs peculiar to each directory

in A comparative study of six French-language Web directories
by Houssem Assadi, Thomas Beauvisage 2002
Cited by 1

Table 3. Seventeen strongly phonologically peculiar languages No. of

in Universals, Their Violation and the Notion of Phonologically Peculiar Languages
by Vladimir Pericliev 2004

Table 4. Relationships between profit changes and Rules based on volume increasing on B

in A Profit-based Business Model for Evaluating Rule
by Yaohua Chen, Yan Zhao, Yiyu Yao
"... In PAGE 10: ... That means stronger the association is between two itemsets, the more profit is decreased when applying a volume-based strategy on itemset B. Therefore, with a volume-based strategy, the relationships between profit changes and two types of rules are summarized in Table4 . Table 4 shows that by applying a volume-based strategy on itemset B, the association rules decrease the profit more significantly than the peculiarity rules.... ..."

Table 1. Types of phonological peculiarities pertaining to the con- tent of segment inventories Type

in Vladimir Pericliev 85 Universals, their Violation and the Notion of Phonologically Peculiar Languages
by Vladimir Pericliev 2004
"... In PAGE 4: ... Put differently, conditional phonological peculiarities are those that violate a conditional universal (=implicational univer- sal), while unconditional phonological peculiarities are those that violate a non-conditional universal (=unrestricted universal). Table1 summarizes the resulting four logically possible types of phonological peculiarities (the variables A and B in the table stand for any individual segment or a sequence of segments). Based on Table 1, we elaborate on the four types of phonological peculiarities in more detail.... In PAGE 4: ... Table 1 summarizes the resulting four logically possible types of phonological peculiarities (the variables A and B in the table stand for any individual segment or a sequence of segments). Based on Table1 , we elaborate on the four types of phonological peculiarities in more detail. As for the first type of peculiarity, Type I: Illegitimate condi- tional presence of segment, a language possesses this type of peculi- arity if there is a firmly established norm (universal) prescribing that no language should have two specific segments A and B in its seg- ment inventory, but this language in fact has both segment A and segment B.... ..."
Next 10 →
Results 1 - 10 of 7,035
Powered by: Apache Solr
  • About CiteSeerX
  • Submit and Index Documents
  • Privacy Policy
  • Help
  • Data
  • Source
  • Contact Us

Developed at and hosted by The College of Information Sciences and Technology

© 2007-2019 The Pennsylvania State University