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Table 1 Number of patterns Geographical area

in Also: submitted to International Journal of Remote Sensing A SYSTEM FOR MONITORING NO 2 EMISSIONS FROM BIOMASS BURNING BY USING GOME AND ATSR-2 DATA
by L. Bruzzone, S. Casadio, R. Cossu, F. Sini, C. Zehner, L. Bruzzone, S. Casadio, R. Cossu, F. Sini, C. Zehner 2002
"... In PAGE 15: ... Data acquired between November 1996 and June 1998 were used for the training phase; data acquired between July 1998 and May 1999 were used for the test of the proposed methods. A detailed description of the training and test sets is given in Table1 . In addition, in Table 2, the minimum and maximum NO2 concentration values derived from the GOME measurements for each one of the considered areas are reported.... In PAGE 24: ... Table1 . Description of the training and test sets for the five considered geographical areas.... ..."

Tables Table 1 : Time pattern of Geographical Concentration Index (Mean) year

in unknown title
by unknown authors

Tables Table 1 : Time pattern of Geographical Concentration Index*

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2003

Table 4.4: Pattern of Real Household Per Capita Expenditures by Geographic Regions

in v,Z Ps q--is-
by Policy Research Working, Saji Thomas

Table 4.5: Rural/Urban Pattern of Real Household Per Capita Expenditures by Geographic Region

in v,Z Ps q--is-
by Policy Research Working, Saji Thomas

Table 2 Authority and Leadership-Patterns Across Cases

in Authority and Leadership Patterns in Public Sector Knowledge Networks
by Ophelia Eglene, Sharon S. Dawes, Carrie A. Schneider
"... In PAGE 9: ... (Additional information on the data analysis is provided in the appendix.) Authority and Leadership Patterns Across Cases Table2 summarizes and compares the leadership and authority patterns for our four cases. The short narratives below provide the basis of the assessment for each case.... ..."

Table 1: Some geographic activities and possible associated methods

in CHAPTER NUMBER Geographic Activity Models
by Sabine Timpf
"... In PAGE 2: ...We propose to research geographic activities and corresponding methods in geographic information processing ( Table1 ). We will discuss questions such as: What are the tasks that we need to solve a specific problem within an activity? What are the methods that we use to accomplish a task? Which are the operations that we need within a GIS for a specific method.... In PAGE 3: ... The operations are listed in table 1. Search Interpolation Spatial Search Thematic Search Reclassifi- cation Locational Analysis Buffer Corridor Overlay Thiessen/ Voronoi Terrain Analysis Slope/Aspect Watershed Drainage/ Network Viewshed Distribution/ Neighborhood Cost/ Diffusion/ Spread Proximity Nearest Neighbor Spatial Analysis Multivariate Statistics Patterns/ Dispersion Centrality/ Connectedness Shape Measurements Measurement Table1 : Universal GIS operations (Albrecht 1997) Those operations are derived from the user perspective although heavily influenced by the available operations in GISystems. Those operations are not the tasks we are looking for.... ..."

Table 6 Regional Pattern of the Child Masculinity Proportion,

in The Decline in Fertility and the Life Cycle Transition in the Antebellum United States 1
by Roger L. Ransom, Richard Sutch
"... In PAGE 12: ... 484) , and in Franklin County it was 23.3 years (Temkin - Greener and Swedlund 1978: Table6 , p. 34) .... In PAGE 12: ...9 to 23.3 years over a comparable period (1978: Table6 , p. 34) .... In PAGE 22: ...ource is Colin Forster, G.S.L. Tucker, and Helen Bridge, Economic Opportunity and White American Fertility Ratios, 1800-1860 (Yale University Press, 1972): Table6 , pp. 40 - 41.... In PAGE 30: ... The differences are not large, about one or two percent, but they are persistent and systematic (Hammel, Johansson, and Ginsberg 1983) . Table6 presents data on the fraction of males, technically called the quot;masculinity proportion, quot; among children under ten for the rural area of each state in 1840. The states are ranked by this proportion and the Table is designed to illustrate the geographical pattern by assigning each state to a region.... ..."

Table 1. cont.

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2004
"... In PAGE 2: ... METHODS Bacterial strains, isolation procedure, media and maintenance. The BALO isolates grown in the laboratory and their habitats are listed in Table1 . BALOs were isolated from the environment on double-layer agar as described previously (Jurkevitch et al.... In PAGE 3: ...Table1 . BALO strains used in this study and their ARDRA group Strain(s) Host Origin Reference/source ARDRA group* HEA Escherichia coli ML35 Soil, Rehovot, Israel This study B ESA, ESB, ESC Pseudomonas syringae Soil, spring bank, Eyn-hanaziv, IsraelD This study U EPA Pseudomonas corrugata PC Soil, spring bank, Eyn-hanaziv, IsraelD This study L EPB, EPC2, EPC4 Pseudomonas corrugata PC Soil, spring bank, Eyn-hanaziv, IsraelD This study U EPC3 Pseudomonas corrugata PC Soil, spring bank, Eyn-hanaziv, IsraelD This study K ETA, ETB Agrobacterium tumefaciens Soil, spring bank, Eyn-hanaziv, IsraelD This study C ETC Agrobacterium tumefaciens Soil, spring bank, Eyn-hanaziv, IsraelD This study Pd EEA Escherichia coli ML35 Soil, spring bank, Eyn-hanaziv, IsraelD This study P ECB, ECC Erwinia carotovora subsp.... In PAGE 5: ... Included in this were data for 71 isolates grown in the laboratory, sequence data from another 29 isolates (mostly published) found in the GenBank database, and 20 sequences from environmental clones, which were identified by data-mining. ARDRA Seventy-one BALO isolates ( Table1 ), originating from soil, root extracts, fresh water, sewage and animal faecal samples, spanning geographical regions from the tropics to almost arctic areas, and isolated using various Gram-negative bac- teria as prey, were used to construct a phylogenetic screen using ARDRA. Restriction profiles, most of which are pres- ented in Fig.... In PAGE 5: ... 1(a), were obtained using HaeIII, HinfI and RsaI. Combination of these profiles yielded 17 different ARDRA groups ( Table1 and Table 2). An in-silico analysis of another 18 sequences of BALOs isolated revealed four 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 M bp 500 200 bp M 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 I II III 200 500 bp M 123 4 567 K L P R N T O M S Q D C J B I G F H A E U 0.... In PAGE 6: ...evel (Heyndrickx et al., 1996; Vandamme et al., 1996) but, to date, BALOs have only been assigned to two genera and three species. Fourteen strains isolated from Eyn-hanaziv soil in one isolation event ( Table1 ) belonged to five different ARDRA groups and were affiliated to Bdellovibrio, Bacteriovorax starrii, Bacteriovorax stolpii and to the unclassified U group, indicating that the same habitat supports a great diversity of BALOs. 16S rRNA gene sequence and phylogenetic analyses The 16S rRNA genes of representative strains from different ARDRA groups were sequenced.... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 2: Explaining car use patterns in Austria (Linear Regression Model)

in © Copyright is held by the authors.
by R. Borgoni, U. C. Ewert, A. Prskawetz 2002
"... In PAGE 12: ... 4. Results In Table 1 and Table2 we summarise the results for car ownership and car use patterns in Austria.... In PAGE 14: ...4 To explain car use patterns in Austria we apply the linear random effect model as outlined in the previous section, equation (2) (cf. Table2 ). Figure 3 gives an overview of the nested model sequence we performed.... In PAGE 17: ... Figure 4 is an effort to clearly represent the geographical pattern of car use. Figure 4 plots the estimated regional effects (plus/minus their standard deviation) versus their rank for model M4, Table2 . Regional patterns of car use are less dispersed when compared with the regional pattern of car ownership.... In PAGE 25: ... The same plot (as Figure B1) for such transformed data is reported in Figure B2. We actually ran two linear regressions with the original and the transformed response, including in the predictor all the variables listed in Table2 of section 4. The analysis of residuals for those models (not reported here) suggested again that log transformation makes the linear model more suitable for the considered data.... ..."
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