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

CiteSeerX logo

Tools

Sorted by:
Try your query at:
Semantic Scholar Scholar Academic
Google Bing DBLP
Results 1 - 10 of 5,230
Next 10 →

Table A.1 4th Framework Programme

in unknown title
by unknown authors

Table 7.1: RTD priorities and the Framework Programmes

in 1 CENTRE FOR THE STUDY OF ECONOMIC & SOCIAL CHANGE IN EUROPE SCHOOL OF SLAVONIC & EAST EUROPEAN STUDIES “Industrial Policy and European Integration: lessons from experience in Western Europe over
by Margaret Sharp, Margaret Sharp
"... In PAGE 54: ...9 138,302 100 7,829 5.7 Source: European Commission: Second European Report on S amp;T Indicators 1997, Table7 f.2, p338.... In PAGE 56: ...4 4.9 Sources: European Commission (1996): First Report on Economic and Social Cohesion, Table 36; and (1997) Second European Report on S amp;T Indicators, Table7 f.4.... ..."

TABLE IV EU ONGOING WIRELESS TELEMEDICINE PROJECTS UNDER THE 5TH FRAMEWORK PROGRAMME (1998-2002)

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2002
Cited by 10

Table 3. A framework for MHIS

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 55: ... gt; Vital registration systems for births, deaths and migratory movements. Using the four subsystems and the five essential stages of MHIS, Table3 presents a framework that may be used for mapping indicators. This task requires the identification of a set of indicators that measure current policy and planning objectives.... In PAGE 61: ... This places limits on the scope of the data that can sensibly be requested. (Glover, 2000) Once again, the framework set out in Table3 provides a useful template for examining the current system. To use this framework, the task team will need to identify which of the four subsystems are found in the current mental health information systems in the country or region (routine service reporting, special programme reporting, administrative systems and vital registration systems).... ..."

Table 3. A framework for MHIS

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 55: ... gt; Vital registration systems for births, deaths and migratory movements. Using the four subsystems and the five essential stages of MHIS, Table3 presents a framework that may be used for mapping indicators. This task requires the identification of a set of indicators that measure current policy and planning objectives.... In PAGE 61: ... This places limits on the scope of the data that can sensibly be requested. (Glover, 2000) Once again, the framework set out in Table3 provides a useful template for examining the current system. To use this framework, the task team will need to identify which of the four subsystems are found in the current mental health information systems in the country or region (routine service reporting, special programme reporting, administrative systems and vital registration systems).... ..."

Table 3: Agent Frameworks / Toolkits

in Software Agents in Communications Network Management: An Overview
by Alex L.G. Hayzelden, John Bigham 1998
"... In PAGE 11: ... As we will review in part 3 of this paper there has been a lot of development and general excitement in the area of mobile agent technology, much of which has evolved from the platform independence of the Java language. See Table3 for references to mobile agent toolkits. Java is a Object Oriented (OO) language that provides facilities and libraries to allow programmers to develop platform independent distributed agents (see Watson, 1997 for Java code examples) through the use of Java Remote Method Invocation (RMI), object serialisation and in-built network communications support.... In PAGE 13: ... It defines a special construct called an Agent Name Server, which stores all the names and addresses of current agents in the system. Table3 provides a break down of some of these toolkits. Part 2 Communications Systems - Integration of Paradigms Following the brief encounter with some of the concerns, benefits and high level concepts that the software agent approach is constructed upon, we now turn our attention to the more specific problems that occur in the communications domain.... ..."
Cited by 2

Table 3: CIFOR Research Programmes and Projects (MTP 2006-2008)

in TABLE OF CONTENTS
by Getachew Engida, Rashid Hassan, John A. Parrotta, John M. Strawhorn, Katherine Warner 2006
"... In PAGE 42: ...The overall goal of this Programme is to enhance sustainable use and conservation of forests and forested landscapes through the generation and dissemination of best practices for the management of forest ecosystems for the benefit of the rural poor. Programme activities are structured within three main themes and five sub-themes ( Table3 ). Overall, the Panel considers the ENV Programme to be well-organized, with clear, significant, objectives that are closely tied to CGIAR priorities.... In PAGE 43: ....1.2 Forests and Governance Programme The overall goal of the GOV Programme is to promote good forest governance for the sustainable use and equitable sharing of benefits from forests and forested landscapes. The initial GOV Programme included five pre-existing Projects,27 elements of which are now included within the two Projects in the current GOV Programme ( Table3 ). The goal of the Governance of Multi-stakeholder Forested Landscapes Project (P4) is to strengthen multi- stakeholder processes, policy frameworks, institutions and capacities for socially just sharing of benefits, and sustainable management of forested landscapes.... ..."

Table 9. Sixth table

in Entropy Decoding on TriMedia/CPU64
by Mihai Sima Evert-Jan, Mihai Sima, Evert-jan Pol, Jos T. J. Van Eijndhoven, Sorin Cotofana, Stamatis Vassiliadis

Table 1 Activities and counterparts of the Dutch Governance: Programme in Guatemala (1997-2003)

in iob policy and operations evaluation department Evaluation of the Dutch
by Human Rights Programme, Kees Biekart (team Leader, Beate Thoresen, Fredy Ochaeta 2004
"... In PAGE 14: ... The political role of the Netherlands in Guatemala was to be assessed by looking at the role of fora such as the Dialogue Group and the European Union meetings, and in particular to the contribution of the Netherlands to these fora. The main task of the evaluation study was to analyse a package of 18 programmes with different partner organisations (see Table1 ), which were implemented between early 1997 and the end of 2003. Only bilateral projects were included within the framework of the Governance and Human Rights programme of the Royal Dutch Embassy in Guatemala.... In PAGE 27: ... The evaluation process therefore coincided with a natural end of most of the governance programmes that had been started up after 1997. This package of approximately 18 programmes, all briefly introduced above and outlined in Table1 , is the focus of the assessment in the following pages. 4.... ..."

Table 10.1: Summary of Matrix framework. The three main themes, visualiz- ation (V), animation (A), and simulation (S) are examined from five separate points of views: User (U), Visualizer (V), Programmer (P), Developer (D), and Application (A).

in Visual Algorithm Simulation
by Ari Korhonen 2003
Cited by 7
Next 10 →
Results 1 - 10 of 5,230
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

© 2007-2016 The Pennsylvania State University