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Table 2 Somatic modulation in non-clinical subjects as related to whether or not they were experiencing tinnitus at the time of testing

in DOI 10.1007/s00221-003-1747-3 REVIEW
by R. A. Levine, M. Abel, H. Cheng, R. A. Levine, M. Abel, H. Cheng, R. A. Levine
"... In PAGE 3: ... Descriptions such as wind or snowstorm were also not considered tinnitus since these likely represent tensor tympani contraction as has been described for tinnitus associated with forced eye closure (Rock 1995). Overall 23 of the 29 subjects (79%) who had ongoing tinnitus in the quiet test room modulated their tinnitus with somatic testing ( Table2 ). Whether or not the subjects had been previously aware of their tinnitus, the incidence of somatic modulation was essentially no different (83% and 76% respectively).... ..."

Table 2. Somatic modulation and whether or not non-

in subjects and
by Levine Ra, Abel M, Cheng H
"... In PAGE 3: ... Descriptions such as quot;wind quot; or quot;snowstorm quot; were also not considered tinnitus since these likely represent tensor tympani contraction as has been described for tinnitus associated with forced eye closure (Rock 1995). Overall twenty-two of the twenty-eight subjects (79%) who had ongoing tinnitus in the quiet test room modulated their tinnitus with somatic testing ( Table2 ). Whether or not the subjects had been previously aware of their tinnitus, the incidence of somatic modulation was essentially no different (82% and 76% respectively).... ..."

Table IX. Breakdown of closure access and allocation Closure Access Closure Allocation

in Efficient and safe-for-space closure conversion
by Zhong Shao, Andrew W. Appel
Cited by 1

Table IX. Breakdown of Closure Access and Allocation Closure Access Closure Allocation

in Efficient and safe-for-space closure conversion
by Zhong Shao, Andrew W. Appel
Cited by 1

Table 14: Inlined Closure

in Associate Editors
by Peter Carlin, David B. Lomet, Anastassia Ailamaki, Jayant Haritsa, Nick Koudas, Dan Suciu 2007
"... In PAGE 53: ... Either way, ordering the closure list on WordId maximizes the efficiency of subsequent processing, in particular searching the closure for a particular word. Table14 shows a sample portion of the table. Table 14: Inlined Closure... ..."

Table 1 Comparison of Manual FACS Coding and Automatic Recognition. Automatic Recognition

in Automatic Recognition of Eye Blinking in Spontaneously Occurring Behavior
by Jeffrey F. Cohn, Jing Xiao, Tsuyoshi Moriyama, Zara Ambada, Takeo Kanade
"... In PAGE 11: ...In press in Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, and Computers. 11 Table1 shows recognition results for blink detection in all image data in comparison with the manual FACS coding. The algorithm achieved an overall accuracy of 98%.... In PAGE 11: ... If blink and flutter are combined into a single category (which is common practice among FACS coders), classification accuracy of eye closure and opening was 100%. Insert Table1 About Here Discussion This study is one of the first to attempt automatic action unit recognition in naturally occurring facial behavior. All other work in automated facial expression recognition has been limited to analysis of deliberate facial expressions that have been collected under controlled conditions for purposes of algorithm development and testing.... ..."

Table 1. Closure Axioms

in Higher separation axioms in generalized closure spaces
by Bärbel M. R. Stadler, Peter F. Stadler 2001
"... In PAGE 2: ...The basic axioms for closure functions are compiled in Table1 together with their neighborhood counterparts. The equivalence of closure and neighborhood versions of these conditions is well-known, see e.... In PAGE 2: ...hese conditions is well-known, see e.g. [11]. For instance, the various expressions for isotony listed in Table1 can be found in [16, Lem.10].... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 1. Closure Axioms

in Higher Separation Axioms in Generalized Closure Spaces
by Bärbel M.R. Stadler, Peter F. Stadler
"... In PAGE 2: ...The basic axioms for closure functions are compiled in Table1 together with their neighborhood counterparts. The equivalence of closure and neighborhood versions of these conditions is well-known, see e.... In PAGE 2: ...hese conditions is well-known, see e.g. [11]. For instance, the various expressions for isotony listed in Table1 can be found in [16, Lem.10].... ..."

Table 2: Compatible Closure

in \Pi-Calculus with Type Similarity
by Jason Brown, Jason Brown, Eike Ritter, Eike Ritter 1995
"... In PAGE 4: ... (Type) x:A:(B x) ?! B. A notion of reduction , where is one of ; or , induces a one step -reduction by taking the compatible closure of with respect to the rules in Table2 . Let ! denote the one step -reduction; this induces the following relations (i).... ..."
Cited by 2

Table 9: Closure Laws

in Types for Access Control
by Rocco De Nicola, Gianluigi Ferrari, Rosario Pugliese, Betti Venneri 2000
Cited by 47
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