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Table Fruit

in unknown title
by unknown authors

Table 4. Limits, mean and median of quartiles of total fat intake (g and %energy), and fruit and vegetables intake (g)

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 3: ... Therefore, the former was used to compare the upper limit of the low consumers and the lower limit of the high consumers. Data are presented in Table4 , together with mean and median intakes within these two groups. When the data were expressed in this way, the difference between high and low consumers was small for percent S85 Italian patterns of food and nutrient intakes Table 3.... ..."

Table 3. Sample of Variant Pronunciation Rules measures as a way of ltering out the errorful parts of a recognizer hypothesis. Using our con dence measure to aid the unsupervised adaptation algorithm improves the recog- nizer by 1.4% absolute compared to using adaptation with no con dence measure. We feel that further improvements in the con dence measure is one of the most fruitful areas of research for improving our recognition rates in the near future.

in Recognition Of Conversational Telephone Speech Using The Janus Speech Engine
by Torsten Zeppenfeld, Michael Finke, Klaus Ries, Martin Westphal, Alex Waibel

Table 2. Fruit system indicators

in An Integrated Tool for Water Policy in Agriculture
by Bazzani-National Research Council

Table 1 Numbers and Categories of Respondents Interviewed During the Fieldwork

in Intranets For Knowledge Management: Applications Affording User Participation
by D. Stenmark, Rikard Lindgren
"... In PAGE 4: ... In collaboration and dialogue, we have been able to pair deep contextual understanding with analytic distance in a fruitful way. This research is primarily based on 33 semi-structured interviews (see Table1 ). It has been argued that interviewing alone is not a sufficient foundation for IT design (Fagrell, 2000), and therefore we have collected data also via informal observations, archival records, moderated discussions and workshops, and focus groups sessions.... ..."

Table 9: t tests on Prices Fruits Internet Price

in An Analysis Of The E-Grocery Industry In Singapore
by Tan Kok Leng, Tan Kok Leng
"... In PAGE 10: ... viii List of Tables Page Table 1: Retailers Selected in This Study 52 Table 2: Fruits Selected in This Study 53 Table 3: F Test 56 Table 4: Demographics Profile of Respondents 59 Table 5: Reasons for Not Buying Fruits Online 61 Table 6: Fruit Consumption and Buying Habits 62 Table 7: Likelihood of Buying Fruits Online in the Next Three to Twelve Months 63 Table 8: Likelihood of Buying Fruits Online Given Certain Criteria 63 Table9 : t tests on Prices 64 Table 10: Proportion of Times the Minimum Internet Price is less than 65 the Minimum Conventional Price Table 11: Important Factors to Consider when Choosing an Online Fruit Seller 68 Table 12: Convenience, Time Saving, Extra Information and Extra Services 69 Table 13: Price Factor 69 Table 14: Descriptive Data on Price Changes 70 Table 15: Proportion of Times Price Dispersion is Lower on the Internet 72 Table 16: Useful Services 74 Table 17: Summary of Findings for all Hypotheses 76 ... In PAGE 76: ...The results of the t tests are displayed in Table9 . Our results suggest that the prices charged for fruits are higher instead of lower on the Internet than in conventional stores: by $0.... ..."

Table 4: Actions in the Fruit Carts Domain.

in Annotating Continuous Understanding in a Multimodal Dialogue Corpus. Decalog 2007
by Carlos Gómez Gallo, Gregory Aist, James Allen, William De Beaumont, Sergio Coria, Whitney Gegg-harrison, Joana Paulo Pardal, Mary Swift
"... In PAGE 5: ... For example a Grab action re- quires the actor to point to an object, select it, and yet not move it. Table4 shows some of the actions in the Fruit Carts domain along with their semantic... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 11--Fruit and vegetable production by province Province

in EPTD Discussion Paper No. 120 MTID Discussion Paper No. 73 Are Horticultural Exports a Replicable Success Story? Evidence from Kenya and Côte d’Ivoire
by Nicholas Minot, Margaret Ngigi 2004
"... In PAGE 42: ... In addition, because fruit and vegetable production is labor intensive, it is better suited to farms with an abundant labor and small plots. Table11 examines the same indicators for three regions: the East, Central, and Coast provinces, the Rift Valley province, and the Western province. The East/Central/Coast provinces are characterized by the highest value of fruit and vegetable production per farm, two to three times as large as in the other two provinces.... ..."

Table 1: Example of a Fruit Carts Dialogue

in Annotating Continuous Understanding in a Multimodal Dialogue Corpus. Decalog 2007
by Carlos Gómez Gallo, Gregory Aist, James Allen, Will De Beaumont, Sergio Coria, Whitney Gegg-harrison, Joana Paulo Pardal, Mary Swift
Cited by 1

TABLE I A FRUIT RETRIEVAL EXAMPLE IN CCBR

in Comparing similarity calculation methods in conversational cbr
by Mingyang Gu, Xin Tong, Agnar Aamodt
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