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Table 1: average ranked list position of required word in The Herald collection

in combined distance and keystroke modelling. Personal and Ubiquitous Computing.
by Mark D. Dunlop, Michelle Montgomery Masters

Table 4: Ranking list of city marketing stakeholders Source: own illustration

in European Academy Bolzano-Bozen
by Harald Pechlaner, Anita Zehrer, Ra Tancevski

Table 1: average ranked list position of required word in The Herald collection

in
by Mark D. Dunlop, Michelle Montgomery Masters

Table 1: Accuracy of parents found, as determined by rank in list of nearest neighbours.

in
by unknown authors

Table 2: Rank-Frequency Lists (selected ranks)

in JADT 2000: 5 es Journées Internationales d’Analyse Statistique des Données Textuelles The Relevance of Frequency Lists for Error Correction and Robust Lemmatization
by René Schneider, Ingrid Renz

Table 1. Ranked object list example

in Exploiting Indifference for Customization of Partial Order Skylines
by Wolf-Tilo Balke, Ulrich Güntzer, Wolf Siberski 2006
"... In PAGE 2: ... Both preferences induce a sorting on the database objects. Table1 shows the correspond- ing ranked lists for some sample objects oi. In the totally ordered case each such sorting is unique (except for ties, which can be sorted in arbitrary order).... ..."
Cited by 3

Table4. Precision at different ranks in the result list.

in Information retrieval support for ontology construction and use
by Willem Robert Van Hage, Maarten De Rijke, Maarten Marx 2004
"... In PAGE 6: ...Table4 contains the resulting precision scores, at different ranks; the precision drops sharply as we move down the result list. Table4.... ..."
Cited by 2

Table 4. Precision at different ranks in the result list.

in Information retrieval support for ontology construction and use
by Willem Robert Van Hage, Maarten De Rijke, Maarten Marx 2004
"... In PAGE 5: ... Table 3 contains a sample of results produced, together with human assessments. Table4 contains the resulting precision scores, at different ranks; the precision drops sharply as we move down the result list. Table 4.... ..."
Cited by 2

Table 1. Precision at different ranks in the result lists.

in Information retrieval support for ontology construction and use
by Willem Robert Van Hage, Maarten De Rijke, Maarten Marx 2004
"... In PAGE 4: ... For our gold standard , a noun was considered relevant if the majority of assessors deemed it relevant. With this gold standard, we computed precision @ n scores (what fraction of the top n results is relevant?), for increasing values of n; see Table1 , where the second row concerns the result list ordered by raw frequency, and the third the result list ordered by relative frequency. Surprisingly, even the raw frequency result list, is of very high qual- ity, with now non-relevant high-frequency nouns in the top.... ..."
Cited by 2

Table1. Precision at different ranks in the result lists.

in Information retrieval support for ontology construction and use
by Willem Robert Van Hage, Maarten De Rijke, Maarten Marx 2004
"... In PAGE 4: ... For our gold standard , a noun was considered relevant if the majority of assessors deemed it relevant. With this gold standard, we computed precision @ n scores (what fraction of the top n results is relevant?), for increasing values of n; see Table1 , where the second row concerns the result list ordered by raw frequency, and the third the result list ordered by relative frequency. Surprisingly, even the raw frequency result list, is of very high quality, with now non-relevant high-frequency nouns in the top.... ..."
Cited by 2
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