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Table 11: Advertisement

in Location Privacy in Mobile Internetworking
by Alberto Escudero Pascual, Martin Hedenfalk, Per Heselius

Table 3. Advertisement database

in Advance Access publication on March 13, 2007 doi:10.1093/comjnl/bxm005 Context-aware Timely Information Delivery in Mobile Environments
by Amit Thawani, Srividya Gopalan, V. Sridhar, Krithi Ramamritham

Table 6 Advertising Trends Before and After Change in RPM Policy For Corning and CorDpetitoIS, 1967-80 (SI000)1

in Against the Coming Glass Works
by Against Coming, Glass Worb, Thomas R. Overstreet, Thomas R. Overstreet, Janet D. Steiger, Mary L. Azcuenaga, Deborah K. Owen, Dennis A. Y, Ronald S. Bond, John L. Peterman, Paul A. Pautler, Timotiiy A. Dey, Timotiiy P. Daniel, Gerard R. Butters, Denis A. Breen, Robert D. Brogan 1994
"... In PAGE 48: ... A simple trend model for advertising expenditures was estimated as in equation (1), which allows a direct test of whether advertising expenditures by Coming and its competitors cluInged in the post-RPM period. As shown in Table6 , the model indicates that there was a negative (but in~8 quot;ificant) trend in advertising expenditures for Coming apos; s glass and cookWare products during the period. An F-test of the joint hypothesis that the coefficients on the post- RPM terms are both zero (c = d = 0) is highly significant (F=9.... In PAGE 50: ... Thus, with the exception of the advertising for Co~ apos; s new chinaware line, Coming apos; s advertising expenditures are consistent with the principal-agent theories that predict a shift to 9Jher se11ing mechanim1~ if RPM is prohibited. Results for Anchor Hocking are also shown in Table6 and indicate a significant structmal change in advertising expenditures in the post-RPM period. The significant negative trend in advertising expenditures prior 1975 was reversed in the post -RPM period, apos; and advertising levels were higher than predicted by the pre-event model Advertising expenditures for Coming and for Ancbor Hocking are shown in Figures 2 and 3.... In PAGE 82: ...s. Census of Manufacturers, Series MAJOD and MllJ2E, aDd Industry Series for Products and Product ClDnes Table6 A, Quantity and Value of Shipments by all Producers.... ..."

Table 2: Agent Advertisement Fields

in A Discussion of Internet Research Focusing on Mobility and Next Generation Protocol Development
by Wayne Mackrell
"... In PAGE 36: ... If the MH does receive advertisement messages from a new network, and the old FA binding times out, then a network movement is indicated, and registration procedures must proceed on the new network. Agent advertisement messages contain many elds, which are shown in Table2 . Two impor- tant elds are registration lifetime and care-of addresses.... ..."

Table 4: Advertisement Filter Example

in Extending Content-based Publish/Subscribe Systems with Multicast Support
by Viktor S. Wold Eide, Frank Eliassen, Olav Lysne, Ole-christoffer Granmo 2003
"... In PAGE 10: ...overs any noti cations which are also covered by sS, i.e. s S A fj, the server must make sure it will receive these noti cations. As an example, if sS is the subscription lter in Table 3 and fA 2 is the advertisement lter given in Table4 , then the server must register interest in the multicast address speci ed by udp ipm : ==239:0:10:2 : 6666, since s S A f2. Observe that a subscription lter may cover (partially) several advertisement lters.... In PAGE 10: ...he associated multicast address. The server also checks if there are any locally interested parties. If this is the case, these are also noti ed. As an example, assume that nN is the noti cation given in Table 2, sS is the subscription lter given in Table 3, and fA 2 is the advertisement lter given in Table4 . If fA 1 does not cover nN and fA 2 covers nN and there is another server which has made the subscription sS on behalf of its client(s), then nN is sent to the multicast address speci ed for fA 2 , i.... ..."
Cited by 6

Table 2. Share of multichannel advertising in total television advertising, 2000- 2009 (%)

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2005

TABLE III REGRESSION ANALYSIS OF ADVERTISING

in Balancing
by unknown authors

Table 6 Advertising an event results

in A Distributed Event System for Use in Mobile Environments
by Peter Barron, Peter Barron, Peter Barron

TABLE 12 RANK OF POSITION ADVERTISED

in ACADEMY OF EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP JOURNAL CONTENTS STUDENT INTERNET USAGE, PERCEPTIONS, AND TRAINING NEEDS: IMPLICATIONS FOR CAMPUS LEADERS................................1
by Vajdieh M. Marxen

Table I Descriptive Statistics Block equity transactions with outside corporations by year and method of acquisition, 1980-1991. Acquisition dates are the first report of a purchase agreement published in the Wall Street Journal or press release reported by Dow Jones Newswire. Private equity placements are block equity purchases by outside corporations. Open market purchases occur in block or cumulative transactions in the secondary market. Stock purchases associated with asset sales occur in equity-for-asset transactions between firms. Acquisitions from other shareholders are block purchases from institutions or individuals. Miscellaneous transactions include spin-offs of the target (5), shares received in mergers (5), and legal judgments (1). Alliances and joint ventures are explicit agreements announced between the target and corporate block owners during the two-year period centered on the purchase announcement dates. High R amp;D industries are in the upper quartile of R amp;D + advertising expenditures divided by total net assets among all four-digit SIC industries on COMPUSTAT. Firms are considered to operate in related industries if the primary SIC codes of the target and acquirer overlap at the three-digit level. Board representation is documented for the two-year period following corporate block purchases. Board and ownership data are obtained from the proxy statements of target firms.

in Corporate Equity Ownership and Product Market Relationships
by Jeffrey W. Allen, Gordon M. Phillips, Michael Vetsuypens, We Michigan 1998
Cited by 1
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