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Table III. The basic simulation workload ACM Transactions on Embedded Computing Systems, Vol. V, No. N, June 2004.
2004
Cited by 7
Table 1. Fitness function parameter settings used to evolve the controller studied in these experiments. Parameter Game case
2002
"... In PAGE 6: ...he Performance and Intelligence of Systems: Proceedings of the 2002 PerMIS Workshop, NIST Special Publication 990, Aug. 13-15, 2002, pp. 43-50. metric F(p) of equation (3) used in this training evolution are given in Table1 below. Table 1.... ..."
Cited by 8
Table 4. Ab Initio Single Point (13,15)cis-all-trans Energy Difference (in kcal/mol) Using Geometries Optimized at the RHF/6-31G* Level
1997
Table 4: Flesch-Kincaid grade for readability Points Description 1 Below 5 is considered to readable by a person before commencing 5th grade. 2 Between 5 and 10 is considered to readable by a person in grade 5 to 10. 3 Between 10 and 12 is considered to readable by a person in high school. 2 Between 13 and 15 is considered to readable by a college student. 0 Above 15 is considered to readable by a person who has graduated from college.
2006
"... In PAGE 9: ... This scale compares syllables and sentence lengths of text fields on the Help pages, History pages and Privacy Statement pages on the government website. The Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level used for question number 28 is illustrated in Table4 which may be determined online (Lei, 2005). This scale estimates the number of years of formal schooling that needs to have been undertaken by the average person to understand the text fields on the Help pages, History pages and Privacy Statement pages on the government website.... ..."
Table 2. Characteristic Coordination Number C Subcore Sandstone block 7.5% 13% 15% 22%
"... In PAGE 9: ...ections for 7.5% and 22.1% porosity Fontainebleau are presented in Doyen, 1988:Figure 4 and Redrich et al., 1993: Table2 . The distributions are qualitatively very similar to those shown in Figure 9.... In PAGE 10: ... Our results show that, for Fontainebleau sand- stone, the coordination number C of the nodal pores is exponentially distributed as 10?C= C over the co- ordination number range [3; 9]. The values of C and standard deviations, C, determined from a least- squares t of the distribution obtained from each sam- ple were given in Table2 and are summarized graphi- cally in Figure 13 (top left) as a function of measured porosity for each subcore. We see a linear increase of the form C( ) 0:073(6) in the value of the characteristic coordination number C with porosity over the range investigated.... ..."
Table 4. Characteristic Throat Area A Subcore Sandstone block 7.5% 13% 15% 22%
"... In PAGE 9: ... The distributions are well character- ized as exponential 10?A= A down to the resolution of our images. Values for A determined from least squares t over the range 0 to 104 microns2 for each sample and for the 4 subcore averages are given in Table4 . The exponential least square ts for the 4 subcore average distributions, and the respective av- erage throat area, hAi, are also presented in Figure 9.... In PAGE 11: ... The measured distribution of throat areas is ex- ponentially distributed 10?A= A. The values of A and standard deviations A determined from a least- squares t of the distribution up to 104 microns2 ob- tained from each sample over this range were given in Table4 and are summarized graphically in Figure 13 (bottom left) as a function of measured porosity for each subcore. There is indication of an increase in the characteristic area A with porosity (which would im- ply a greater range of throat areas at larger porosity), but measurements from the core extracted from the 15% porosity sandstone block seem high.... ..."
Table 5. Most cited Journals in ER papers up to 1999. Journal Title # Cites ACM Transactions on Database Systems 886 Communications of the ACM 278
"... In PAGE 4: ... Source names in Table 4 follow the journal abbreviations used by the Web of Science. See Table5 for a list of the most popular ones. Table 4 is predominated by journal papers, except the two ER papers by Scheuermann and Santos.... In PAGE 4: ... Table 4 is predominated by journal papers, except the two ER papers by Scheuermann and Santos. Table5 lists most frequently cited journals in ER papers between 1979 and 1999. Table 1.... ..."
Table 13. Relationship of paragraphs in DocA2 to the concerns of five stakeholders
"... In PAGE 40: ... All participants, except one with whom we lost contact because of a job change to another company, reviewed the outcome some weeks later and made minor changes. The results are given in Table 12, Table13 , Table 14 and Table 15.... ..."
Table 1 shows some basic statistics of the data that has been gathered since mid April, 2005 until the rst week of July, 2006 (except for the album reviews that started in mid June, 2005). These numbers show that the system has to deal with a daily fresh incoming data.
2006
"... In PAGE 5: ... RSS Source # Seed feeds # Items crawled per week # Items stored New releases 44 980 58,850 Concerts 14 470 28,112 Podcasts 830 575 34,535 MP3 blogs 86 2486 (avg. of 19 audios per item) 149,161 Reviews 8 458 23,374 Table1 . Information gathered from RSS feeds is stored into a historic relational database.... ..."
Cited by 3
Table: Bridging the Gap between the Digital and the Tangi- ble. In Journal of Planning in Education and Research, Vol- ume 21, pp.195-202. 4. Bier, E., et al., Toolglass and Magic Lenses: The Seethrough Interface. In proceedings of ACM SIGGRAPH 1993, Anaheim, CA., Aug. 1993, pp. 73-80 5. Cotting, D.; Naef, M.; Gross, M.; Fuchs, H., quot;Embedding Imperceptible Patterns into Projected Images for Simultane- ous Acquisition and Display. quot; Third IEEE and ACM Interna- tional Symposium on Mixed and Augmented Reality, 02-05 Nov. 2004 Page(s):100 109.
2005
Cited by 7
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