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Table 11. Possible tables from the probabilistic sampling space of Table 3, but which are more extreme (higher negative correlation) than Table 3. i = 3 RED BLUE total FEMALE 3 16 19

in 2004 World Cultures 14(2):179-193 CROSS TABULATIONS / White A Student’s Guide to Statistics for Analysis of Cross
by Douglas R. White
"... In PAGE 9: ...and to the last table in Table11 (next page), which shows only those tables indexed to i = 0,3, that represent a more extreme distribution than that in Table 3. Given this indexing system for the sampling space from which the actual distribution may be drawn with fixed independent probabilities of the variables tabulated, the probability of each specific distribution Di for i = 0 to m can be computed exactly by a permutational formula called the Fisher Exact test.... In PAGE 10: ...Starting with the observed table, Table 3, and continuing through the tables with more extreme departure from randomness but the same marginal totals (those in Table11 ), P values for five distinctive tables are computed, indexed on the {red, female} cell frequency i = 0 to m: Prc = 19!17!11!25! / 36!4!15!7!10! = 0.12547 [Table 3] = 19!17!11!25! / 36!3!16!8!9! = 0.... ..."

Table 10: Second pattern: Risky behaviour Age at sexual debut (SD) Average: 16-19 years.

in A Cross-Cultural Study in Eight Countries World Health Organization
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 64: ...The following narrative (extracted from semi-structured in-depth interviews in the Russian Federation) illustrates the manner in which the behaviour in Table10 manifested in the recorded empirical data: A 27-year-old female nurse was interviewed. She had never been married and had no children.... ..."

Table 4 Ordered Probit Estimates of Middle Schooling Ages 16-19, Turkey, 1994

in unknown title
by unknown authors 1998

Table I Selected Electronic Proceedings in Computer Science

in The Roles of Video in the Design, Development, and Use of Interactive Electronic Conference Proceedings
by Samuel A. Rebelsky, Fillia Makedon, James Ford, Charles Owen, Peter A. Gloor, Coopers Lybrand, P. Takis Metaxas

Table 3.3.3 Annual benefits amp; costs of in-ports proposal (2006 amp; 2008) BENEFITS

in unknown title
by unknown authors

Table 3: fitimated MinimumWage Effects (Currentand Lagged)on EnrollmentRates, 16-19Year-Olds

in REPLY TO EVANS AND TURNER
by Davidneumarkand Williamwascher, Neumarkis Professorof 1996
"... In PAGE 21: ... Table 2 Results Minimum Wage Variable May minimum, May average (Row 5) Octoberminimum, May average May minimum, Octoberaverage Octoberminimum, Octoberaverage (Row 9) B. Table3 Resultq Minimum Wage - May minimum, May average (Row 3) Octoberminimum, May average May minimum, Octoberaverage Octoberminimum, Octoberaverage (Row 5) c. Table 4 Resultq Minimum Wage Variable May minimum, May average(Row 6) Octoberminimum, May average May minimum, Octoberaverage Octoberminimum, Octoberaverage (Row 9) Enrolled, Not Emt)loYe~ .... ..."

Table 1: Unoptimized/Optimized Execution times in msec (Speedups are shown in parenthesis) [7] M. V. Hermenegildo. An Abstract Machine Based Execution Model for Computer Architecture Design and E cient Implementation of Logic Programs in Parallel. PhD thesis, U. of Texas at Austin, August 1986. [8] K. Muthukumar and M. Hermenegildo. Combined Determination of Sharing and Freeness of Program Variables Through Abstract Interpretation. In 1991 International Conference on Logic Programming. MIT Press, June 1991. [9] Swedish Institute of Computer Science. Industrial Sicstus Prolog Internals Manual, 1989.

in ACE: A High-Performance Parallel Prolog System
by Enrico Pontelli, Manuel Hermenegildo, Gopal Gupta 1995
"... In PAGE 11: ... The results for the following benchmarks are initially reported: Matrix Multiplication, Quicksort, Takeuchi, Tower of Hanoi, Boyer (a reduced version of the Boyer-Moore theorem prover), Compiler (the Aquar- ius Prolog compiler from UC Berkeley that is approxi- mately 2,200 lines of Prolog code), Poccur (A list pro- cessing program), BT cluster (A clustering program from British Telecom, UK), Annotator (the annotator part of the amp;-Prolog parallelizing compiler that is about 1,000 lines) and, Simulator (a simulator for simulating parallel Prolog execution that is about 1,100 lines). Table1 indicates, for each benchmark, the execu- tion time (in ms.) and the speed-up obtained.... In PAGE 11: ... The speed-up gures are with respect to the optimized execution. Table1 illustrates the speedups obtained for the var- ious benchmarks. The gures clearly indicate that the current implementation, even though not completely op- timized, is quite e ective.... In PAGE 11: ... These optimizations yield, depending on the program, an improvement of 5% to 25% over the unoptimized version. Some improve- ment data is shown in Table1 (each entry in Table 1 shows the time in milliseconds before the optimization and after the optimization; the number in parenthesis gives the speed-up obtained; for compiler and simulator benchmarks the unoptimized gure is not shown). As is obvious, improvements due to optimization can be sub- stantial; in some cases superlinear speedup is obtained.... ..."
Cited by 42

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

in A Unified Framework for Hybrid Access Cache Design and Its Applications
by Kevin B. Theobald, Herbert H. J. Humy, Guang R. Gao 1993
Cited by 1

Table 24: Inequality Projections 2003 and 2008.

in The Wage Labor Market and Inequality in Vietnam in the 1990s John Luke Gallup
by Jgallup Maine Rr, John Luke Gallup
"... In PAGE 19: ...roduct (GDP) per person grew 5.5% per year from 1988 to 1998. In other words, this is a projection of what would happen to income inequality if Vietnamese economic growth continued as it has in the recent past. The inequality projections are shown in Table24 . The first column shows the actual figures for 1998, and the second and third columns show the projects for 2003 and 2008, respectively.... In PAGE 21: ...20 If the divergence of agricultural and non-agricultural incomes is slower than predicted in Table24 , but income distribution within the agriculture and non-agriculture remain unchanged, then income distribution will worsen more slowly than predicted in Table 24. The rising inequality that looks likely for Vietnam is a consequence of the declining role agriculture as the economy develops, and the unusually equal distribution of incomes among Vietnamese farm households.... ..."

Table 2. International Undergraduate Computational Science Programs

in Computational science education
by Charles D. Swanson, Charles D. Swanson, Charles D. Swanson
"... In PAGE 7: ... International Undergraduate Programs Undergraduate computational science programs have also been developed outside of the United States. Table2 lists several representative programs at international universities. Table 2.... ..."
Cited by 2
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