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Table 2: E-Learning Budget 2006 - 2010
2005
"... In PAGE 40: ... The number of full- and part-time students enrolled in the Faculty was divided by the FTE instructional design to arrive at the students per FTE ID ratio (see Figure 6). Table2 shows the ratios from which the graphs have been derived. Table 2: Faculty FTE Ratios students/ FTE tech faculty/ FTE tech students/ FTE ID faculty/ FTE ID AFHE 436 25 3484 200 Arts 2710 140 5420 280 Augustana 4000 27 0 0 Business 1153 36 2306 71 Education 4049 117 2025 59 Extension 812 3 1625 7 Law 268 16 536 31 Nursing 653 24 1306 47 Rehabilitation Medicine 561 31 0 0 Saint-Jean 585 24 0 0 Science 600 27 1029 47 Note: Several Faculties were unable to compile information about their internal e- learning support in time for this report (i.... In PAGE 40: ... Table 2 shows the ratios from which the graphs have been derived. Table2 : Faculty FTE Ratios students/ FTE tech faculty/ FTE tech students/ FTE ID faculty/ FTE ID AFHE 436 25 3484 200 Arts 2710 140 5420 280 Augustana 4000 27 0 0 Business 1153 36 2306 71 Education 4049 117 2025 59 Extension 812 3 1625 7 Law 268 16 536 31 Nursing 653 24 1306 47 Rehabilitation Medicine 561 31 0 0 Saint-Jean 585 24 0 0 Science 600 27 1029 47 Note: Several Faculties were unable to compile information about their internal e- learning support in time for this report (i.e.... In PAGE 68: ... If an agreement requires the disclosure of all IP related to course materials that is to be freely shared or licensed, this could require a significant and ongoing ( gt;$100K) investment on an ongoing basis. Summary and Conclusion Table2 summarizes the responsible units, the timing, and the costs of the various strategies identified for the 17 recommendations. It is clear that the recommendations require a mixture of immediate action and long-range planning.... ..."
Table 4 shows the 10 international conferences in our research area that either belong to the Congresos Notables UPC list and their associated EIC. In addition, the table also shows the number of publications in these conferences generated by researchers in this project. The papers published in international conferences in the 2005-06 period are listed below:
"... In PAGE 10: ...74 ICPP: International Conference on Parallel Processing 3 0.61 PLDI: ACM Conference on Programming Language Design and Implementation 2 Na ICCD: IEEE International Conference of Computer Design 1 Na Table4 : Contributions to the most relevant international conferences in our research area. ... ..."
Table 7: Replacement Percentage by Vehicle Age (10+ Program) Age 1999 2005 2010
1996
"... In PAGE 20: ... Vehicles of age 10-14 years would make up the largest percentage because: (1) these vehicles in most cases would be less valuable than older vintages; and (2) there would be a greater supply of these vehicles relative to older ones. Table 6: Retirement Percentage by Vehicle Age (10+ Program) Age 1999 2005 2010 10-14 58 45 45 15-19 23 31 28 20-24 15 12 13 25 4 12 14 Table7 presents the percentage by age of replacement vehicles. 68 percent of replacement vehicles would be less than 10 years old in 1999; by 2010 this percentage is projected to fall to 55.... ..."
Table 10: Retirement Percentage by Vehicle Age (20+ Program) Age 1999 2005 2010
1996
"... In PAGE 22: ... As the table shows, the rate of increase for emission reductions would decline from 1999-2006, as the average retired vehicle becomes less and less polluting. At the same time, the difference in emissions per mile between retired and replacement vehicles (most of the retired vehicles are 20-24 years old, see Table10 ) would be dropping, to the extent that a significant increase in the number of retirements would be necessary to reach 22 tons per day reduction in 2007. 13 For example, in 1999, average annual VMT for fifteen-year and twenty-five-year old cars is projected to be 7,896 and 5,069, respectively.... In PAGE 23: ... The percentage of scrapped vehicles would be roughly the same as in the 10+ program, around 85 percent. Retirement and Replacement by Vehicle Age Table10 shows the retirement percentage by vehicle age. Most of the scrapped vehicles would come from the 20-24 age range due to the greater number of these vehicles... ..."
Table 14: Data for Multitasking Traces on 8K Caches [8] Andr e Seznec, \A case for two-way skewed-associative caches, quot; in Proceedings of the 20th Annual International Symposium on Computer Architecture, San Diego, California, pp. 169{178, ACM SIGARCH and IEEE Computer Society, May 17{19, 1993. Computer Architecture News, 21(2), May 1993. [9] Alan Jay Smith, \Cache Memories, quot; ACM Computing Surveys, 14(3):473{530, September 37
1993
Cited by 1
Table 4. Homogamy among Black Residents of Baltimore, Maryland in 1860 Observed / Expected Frequencies by Complexion Combinations
2004
Table 15: Present Value of Loss in Consumer Surplus by Income Group 1999-2010 (1995$)
1996
"... In PAGE 27: ...referred option. Either way, the AVRP would lead to a welfare loss for such motorists. Such a loss can be measured by the change in consumer surplus between a base case and one which includes an AVRP. 16 Table15 gives the loss in total consumer surplus and 15 The loss from a higher price is due to the increased opportunity holding cost, since all of the dollar amount paid could conceivably be recovered in the next period (if it is not the last year of the program). 16 The concept of consumer surplus as well as the methodology for estimating consumer surplus from a choice model such as CALCARS is presented in the California Energy Commission Staff Report 1993-... In PAGE 31: ... Therefore, the 20+ program has an additional advantage in that it would affects non-targeted used vehicle prices to a lesser extent than the 10+ program. This means that the welfare advantage for the 10+ case shown in Table15 may not exist without the unlimited supply assumption. III.... ..."
Table 5: Test pattern generation IDDQ statistics (standard cell) VLSI. In Proceedings of International Test Conference, pages 938{947. IEEE, 1990. [SM90] Thomas Storey and Wojciech Maly. CMOS bridging fault detection. In Proceedings of International Test Conference, pages 842{ 851. IEEE, 1990.
1991
"... In PAGE 6: ... Possible solutions are to em- ploy IDDQ testing [Ack83], apply more accurate circuit simulation of faults, detect the bridge as a delay fault, or redesign the cells so that a discrepancy is guaran- teed for at least one input combination for each cell. In Table5 we show the results of our system generating IDDQ test patterns for same set of bridging faults that produced the results in Table 4. We also plan on integrating the testing for breaks on the interconnection lines, and the testing for defects within the cells to Carafe and Nemesis.... ..."
Cited by 41
Table 6. Conservation Reserve Program acreage assumptions 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Table 5: Projected Federal Balance Sheets in 2010
"... In PAGE 10: ... As projected, this condition will be satisfied by 2012.9 Insert FIGURE 6 about here Finally, Table5 presents a government balance sheet for 2010 that illustrates the allocation of uncommitted funds.10 Uncommitted funds appear on the consolidated balance sheet whenever either the Fed, the Treasury, or both accumulate surplus funds.... In PAGE 10: ...10 Uncommitted funds appear on the consolidated balance sheet whenever either the Fed, the Treasury, or both accumulate surplus funds. In addition, Table5 highlights that the remaining public debt consists entirely of irredeemable old securities that are likely illiquid. Insert TABLE 5 about here 4.... In PAGE 19: ... The balance sheet implications of the Broaddus- Goodfriend proposal are illustrated in Table 6a. Compared to Table5 , which extrapolates current policy, the key difference is that all uncommitted funds are shifted to the Treasury. As Broaddus and Goodfriend note, this would ensure maximum political accountability.... In PAGE 20: ...A look at the consolidated balance sheet reveals that there is third alternative, which is to delegate investment choices to social security. Table 6b shows the resulting government balance sheets for 2010, in a format comparable to Table5 and Table 6a. The novelty is the investment of trust funds outside the Treasury.... In PAGE 23: ...Figure 8 and Table 8 describe an example of such a policy, taking for granted that social security manages the funds and documenting that net debt remains unchanged (as compared to Figure 4 and Table5 ). The projection assumes that starting in 2002, social security surpluses are invested in non-Treasury assets until the portfolio share of Treasuries has fallen to 5% (their portfolio share in private pension funds).... In PAGE 24: ... The consolidated government balance sheet reveals that there is one class of policies that has these features: Social security reform. Inspecting the consolidated balance sheet in Table5 , one finds that if the other items and the monetary base are taken as given, social security reform is in fact the only way to avoid uncommitted funds without changing consolidated net debt.22 To reduce uncommitted funds and provide liquidity, the direction of such reforms must be to reduce social security obligations, either in exchange for higher Treasury debt or for reduced uncommitted funds.... In PAGE 24: ... Net debt remains unchanged because the decline social security obligations matches the rise in public indebtedness. (See Figure 4 and Table5... In PAGE 34: ... 22 In general, a balance sheet with n items allows n(n-1)/2 distinct pairwise changes that leave the consolidated balance unchanged. For the five-item consolidated balance sheet in Table5 , this implies 10 distinct debt management operations. Of these, a debt-cum-uncommitted funds change was discussed above, four of the 10 would involve changes in the monetary base and three others would involve changes in other items.... In PAGE 44: ...6% Note: Uncommitted Funds = 0 Net Worth 20 .1% Note : Compared to the balance sheets in Table5 , $780 bill. in uncommitted funds are shifted from the Federal Reserve to the Treasury, in exchange for Treasury debt held by the Fed.... In PAGE 45: ...6% Note: Uncommitted Funds = 0 Net Worth 20 .1% Notes : Compared to the balance sheets in Table5 , all $910 bill. of uncommitted funds are shifted to social security and invested in non-Treasury assets.... In PAGE 47: ...6% Note: Uncommitted Funds = 0 Net Worth 20 .1% Notes : Compared to Table5 , social security invests $2070 bill. outside the Treasury, thereby keeping public debt high enough to avoid uncommitted funds at the Treasury and at the Fed.... In PAGE 48: ...6% Note: Uncommitted Funds = 0 Net Worth 20 .1% Notes : Compared to Table5 , the obligations and the cumulative surpluses of social security are reduced by $1200 bill., which are placed in private accounts.... In PAGE 49: ...6% Note: Uncommitted Funds = 0 Net Worth 20 .1% Notes : Compared to Table5 , social security obligations are reduced by $1870 bill. (10% of obligations) in exchange for recognition bonds, keeping public debt high enough to avoid uncommitted funds and to provide a... ..."
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