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Table 1 - Core classification.

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2002
"... In PAGE 1: ... According to a recent ITRS report [1], by 2012 90% of the integrated circuits area will be implemented using cores. Table1 shows the main features of cores in general, according to a well-established classification found in the literature [2][3]. Table 1 - Core classification.... ..."
Cited by 3

Table 1. Core attributes

in FSF: A Real-Time Scheduling Architecture Framework
by M. Aldea, G. Bernat, I. Broster, A. Burns, R. Dobrin, J. M. Drake, G. Fohler, P. Gai, M. González Harbour, G. Guidi, J. J. Gutiérrez 2006
"... In PAGE 8: ... Similar to the core FSF module, the con- tracts on the network allow the application to specify its minimum utilization (bandwidth) requirements, so that the implementation can make guarantees or reserva- tions for that minimum utilization. We use the same contract that is used for processing nodes, and thus the core attributes for distribution are the same as for the core FSF, described in Table1 , with the addition of the network id attribute (see Table 5), that identifies the contract as a network contract for the specified net- work. The default value for the network id is null, which means that the contract applies to the processing node where the contact is negotiated.... ..."
Cited by 3

Table 2: Core Configurations

in Need for Topology Aware Program Scheduling on CMP Systems
by Lingling Jin
"... In PAGE 4: ...We analyze the instruction trace of the benchmarks considered. Using the parameters of the CPU core configuration listed in Table2 we can calculate the total energy dis- sipated by multiplying per instruction power with total instruction count. The average power consumption of the CPU is derived by dividing total energy with total CPU running time.... ..."

Table 2. Definition of concepts

in A Roadmap to Ontology Specification Languages
by Oscar Corcho, Asunción Gómez-Pérez 2000
"... In PAGE 11: ... 12th International Conference on Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management Concepts. Table2 summarizes the most important features to be analyzed when describing concepts in an ontology. It is divided in 4 sections: metaclasses, partitions, definition of attributes and definitions of properties of attributes (facets).... ..."
Cited by 30

Table 1: UMLS concept and its concept instances Concept Name Concept Instances

in Table Of Contents List of Tables....................................................................................................................iii
by unknown authors 2006
"... In PAGE 5: ...List of Tables Table1 : UMLS concept and its concept instances .... In PAGE 24: ... Table1 shows the example concept Multiple Myeloma taken from the Metathesaurus, and displays several of the concept instances (i.e.... ..."

Table 2. Definition of concepts

in A Roadmap to Ontology Specification Languages
by Oscar Corcho, Asunción Gómez-pérez 2000
"... In PAGE 11: ...Table2 summarizes the most important features to be analyzed when describing concepts in an ontology. It is divided in 4 sections: metaclasses, partitions, definition of attributes and definitions of properties of attributes (facets).... ..."
Cited by 30

Table III. Core Semantics

in Temporal Statement Modifiers
by Michael H. Böhlen, Christian S. Jensen, Richard T. Snodgrass 2000
Cited by 17

Table 1: Concepts in Ontology.

in Model-directed web transactions under constrained modalities
by Zan Sun, Jalal Mahmud, Saikat Mukherjee 2006
"... In PAGE 3: ... (Section 4 describes the classiflcation technique.) Table1 shows concept names in our shallow ontology. Associated with each concept is an operation as shown in the table.... In PAGE 6: ... 5.2 Concept Extraction We built a statistical concept model for each of the con- cepts in Table1 . Recall that the flve concepts in the upper half of the table are generic for all the three domains whereas those in the lower half are domain-speciflc.... ..."
Cited by 4

Table I. Radiometric Concepts

in Calculating the reflectance map
by Berthold K. P. Horn, Robert W. Sjoberg 1979
Cited by 77

Table 2. Descent Concepts

in What Pilots Learn About Autoflight While Flying On The Line
by Barbara Holder Edwin, Edwin Hutchins 2001
"... In PAGE 4: ... Our objective was to identify the concepts that pilots needed to know to understand managed descent mode functioning and to develop a computer based training (CBT) module that presented those concepts clearly so pilots could construct a coherent understanding of the relations and dependencies between concepts. The entire set of concepts is too large to present here, however in Table2 we present several descent concepts a pilot must know to understand how the... ..."
Cited by 1
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