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Table 1 summarizes the tracking errors for the trajectories discussed in this work. The best condition refers to the situation in which the first winners for each state of the trajectories are used to retrieve them.
"... In PAGE 6: ...11] P.I. Corke. A robotics toolbox for MATLAB . IEEE Robotics and Automation Magazine, 3(1):24-32, 1996. Table1 . Summary of tracking errors I-G1: 5.... ..."
Table 1. Sensor performance in teleoperation situations
"... In PAGE 3: ...Table1 lists situations commonly encountered in indoor vehicle teleoperation. Although no individual sensor works in all situations, the collection of sensors provides complete coverage.... ..."
Table 2. Situations for reading
"... In PAGE 25: ... Situation includes refer- ence to the people and (in the case of reading at work) objects that are connected with the reading. For the purpose of the assessment of 15-year-old students in OECD/PISA, situation can be under- stood as a categorisation of tasks based on their intended use, on the relations to others implicit or explicit in the task, and on the general contents (see Table2 ). Thus, reading a textbook would be an example of an educational situation because its primary use is to acquire information as part of an edu- cational task (use), it is associated with assignments from teachers or other instructors (others), and its content is typically oriented to instruction and learning (content).... ..."
Table 3 should be read such that the mentioned components are faulty, whereas all the others are operating (e.g., the most probable con guration of the components given system failure is that the power supply inlet and the two watchdogs are faulty whereas all other components work properly; the probability for this situation is 6:6%).
2003
"... In PAGE 18: ... This means that one can concentrate on any particular part of the system and to analyze the criticality of that particular subsystem. Table3 reports the top 9 con gurations of the components having the highest posterior probabilities. Table 3 should be read such that the mentioned components are faulty, whereas all the others are operating (e.... In PAGE 18: ... Table3 : Most Probable Posterior Con gurations 6.4 Coverage factor in BN model (probabilistic AND) An important modelling improvement in redundant systems is to consider coverage factors.... ..."
Table 1. Analysis of the different situations that may occur during the system performance. The decision to be taken is also expressed, as the resulting final working mode that will be sent to the automaton.
Table 1. MI situations and transformations
"... In PAGE 4: ... Our ongoing work is to de ne a mapping between a given MI situation and one (or several) pertinent transformations. Table1 lists a rst attempt of such a mapping. This is clearly an incomplete and debatable table that needs completion, re nement and discussion.... ..."
Table 2. Sensor performance in teleoperation situations.
2001
"... In PAGE 4: ... The ladar provides precise range measurement with very high angular resolution and is a good complement to the stereo vision and sonar (both of which are less ac- curate but have broader field-of-view). Table2 lists sit- uations encountered in vehicle teleoperation. Though none of the sensors works in all situations, the group as a whole provides complete coverage.... ..."
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(Table 1). Empirical studies of professional practice, by ourselves and others (Lave 1991; Sachs 1995; Sumner 1995), show that while the focus is primarily on getting the job done, learning is inextricably intertwined with working. In order to do their job, professionals must continually learn to apply existing knowledge to routine or innovative situations and to construct new knowledge in response to changing workplace situations. Thus, learning is fundamentally embedded in ongoing work activities and these work activities, in turn, give rise to the problems driving the learning that must take place.
1998
Table 1: Data of descriptive aspects of the field notes 4.3 Data collection Data collection methods consist of audio recording of individual interviews, observation of working field situation and journal notations made by the researchers during and after interviews. Each interview lasted 35 minutes. Interview questions were designed to explore:
"... In PAGE 4: ... An activity was conducted in which facility workers and salesmen were asked to determine styles of domain knowledge. The descriptive aspects of the field notes from the observations of activities are listed in Table1 (Lee and Shih, 2001). 4.... ..."
Table 1: Possession of a shared page; A and B on same PE.Table 1 shows in which working set, if any, the shared page is in when the referencing processes are in di er- ent states. The situation where the processes execute on di er- ent PEs is illustrated in table 2.
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