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Table 1. Correspondence between Linguistic and Conceptual Patterns

in Object Oriented Modeling Focused on a Linguistic Approach
by N. Juristo, A. M. Moreno
"... In PAGE 3: ...Table1 , where (1) names of classes are equivalent to the nucleus of the noun structure of noun groups or complements, and (2) names of relations are equivalent to the verb in third person singular; and (3) subordinate1, .... ..."

Table 1. Correspondence between Linguistic and Conceptual Patterns

in Object Oriented Modeling Focused On A Linguistic Approach
by N. Juristo, A. M. Moreno
"... In PAGE 3: ...3 The result of the formalization is the correspondence shown in Table1 , where (1) names of classes are equivalent to the nucleus of the noun structure of noun groups or complements, and (2) names of relations are equivalent to the verb in third person singular; and (3) subordinate1, .... ..."

Table 2: List of Instrumental Indicators that Substantiated the Pattern Matching Findings

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 4: ... The researchers adopted short working definitions for each implementation approach and instrumental indicators as a strategy to clarify the exact parameters used in the analysis of empirical evidence. Table2 summarises the instrumental indicators collected in the case studies. Some of the heuristic implementation approaches were quite straightforward to identify in the practice of the case studies.... ..."

Table 1: Linguistic markers

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2004
"... In PAGE 2: ... The most common heuristics that may guide the addressee recognition process is the search for linguistic markers in the utterance. Table1 contains linguistic markers that can be used as cues for addressee detection. For instance, you is the personal pronoun that refers to the meeting participants excluding the speaker of the utterance.... ..."
Cited by 3

Tables grow exponentially in size with the number and/or complexity of the patterns, but real patterns are always small, so the performance of the process will not be a major issue.

in Optimising Parallel Pattern-matching
by Source-Level Program Transformation

Table 1: Simulation Survey Issues and Responses Issue Response

in Proceedings of the 2001 Winter Simulation Conference
by B. A. Peters, J. S. Smith, D. J. Medeiros, M. W. Rohrer
"... In PAGE 2: ... This survey was performed at the major an- nual gathering of the simulation community at the Winter Simulation Conference in Phoenix, Arizona in December 1999. Some of the findings are detailed in Table1 . The au- thors analyzed the results of the simulation survey and identified the problems and difficulties intrinsic to the data collection process.... In PAGE 2: ... The survey has also highlighted that simulation is not considered to be part of the business process and with only one exception there was no interface established between the tools and the business systems. The results contained in Table1 indicate that an automated data collection system would prove to be an invaluable tool for simulation users. Table 1: Simulation Survey Issues and Responses Issue Response... ..."

Table 1: Performance of the BLUI localizer for vari- ous resolutions (% of correctly identified regions).

in BLUI: Low-cost Localized Blowable User Interfaces
by Shwetak N. Patel, Gregory D. Abowd
"... In PAGE 4: ...We report the overall number of correctly classified re- gions at varying resolutions for a laptop and desktop (see Table1 ). The regions were of the same size and uniformly distributed in a grid pattern across the screen.... ..."

Table 2 reports the performance of the argument identifier on the test set using the direct predictions of the trained binary classifier. The recall and precision of the full parsing system are around 2 to 3 percents higher than the shallow parsing system on the gold standard data. As a result, the F1 score is 2.5% higher. The performance on automatic parse data is unsurprisingly lower, but the difference between full parsing and shallow parsing is relatively the same. In terms of filter- ing efficiency, around 25% of the examples are predicted as positive. In other words, both argument identifiers filter out around 75% of the argument candidates after pruning.

in The necessity of syntactic parsing for semantic role labeling
by Vasin Punyakanok, Dan Roth, Wen-tau Yih 2005
"... In PAGE 4: ... Table2 : The performance of argument identification after... ..."
Cited by 24

Table 1. Correspondence between Linguistic Patterns and Conceptual Patterns

in Justification Of The Equivalence Between Linguistic And Conceptual Patterns For The Object Model
by A. M. Moreno, R.P. van de Riet
"... In PAGE 4: ... This semantics represents the relation between the component and its parts. Table1 shows a graphic representation of these structures. The verb structures of each linguistic pattern may be any conjugation of the verb forms that are part of each structure or of equivalent verb forms.... In PAGE 14: ... There will be an equivalent representation for every pair of arguments of the predicate P_Verb. This representation corresponds, as discussed in section 4, to stc3, where the binary association modelling pattern c3 is the pattern proposed to represent l2 structures, as specified in section 2 ( Table1 ). In this section, Table 1 shows the notation for binary associations with several Nominal Syntagmata and several Complements; therefore, it would be equivalent to several representations such as the one shown in Figure 7.... In PAGE 15: ... syntagma verb Complement R7L An area manager is responsible for several areas (several replaces five) l1,2 Nom. syntagma verb Complement The conceptual model has been built by combining the conceptual patterns of C that are associated with each linguistic pattern l, as specified in section 2 ( Table1 ). The set of requirements RiC that are equivalent to RiL is shown in Figure 9.... In PAGE 17: ... After that, we have in mind to develop a tool supporting the method. Part of this tool will contain the assignations between linguistic and static conceptual patterns, that is Table1 , as well as, the assignations related to dynamic modelling (Moreno, 97a). ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We would like to thank Natalia Juristo, supervisor of A.... ..."

Table 7. Listing Ef fects on Performance: Firms with or without S tate Ownership

in Is Public Listing a Way out for State-Owned Enterprises? The Case of China
by Xiaozu Wang, Lixin Colin Xu, Tian Zhu 2001
"... In PAGE 20: ... 10 Among firms with direct state ownership, the s tate on average owns about 40% of the total shares. Table7 presents the regression results. (Insert Table 7 here) The differences in performance between firms with an d without direct state ownership appear to be quite small.... In PAGE 20: ... Table 7 presents the regression results. (Insert Table7 here) The differences in performance between firms with an d without direct state ownership appear to be quite small. The coefficients associated with various post - listing years for both sets of firms are almost identical for the ROA regressions (see columns 3 and 4).... In PAGE 22: ... In other words, ceteris paribus , performance of listed firms is not affected by the extent of state ownership. These results are in line with the findings reported in Table7 tha t firms without state ownership and those with state ownership all experience a similar pattern of performance deterioration. Ownership concentration has only marginal direct impacts on performance: the direct effects of both A5 and Herfindahl_top5 are st atistically insignificant.... ..."
Cited by 1
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