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Link-level Measurements from an 802.11b Mesh Network

by Daniel Aguayo, John Bicket, Sanjit Biswas, Glenn Judd, Robert Morris - In SIGCOMM , 2004
"... This paper anal yzes the causes of packetl oss in a 38-node urban mul ti-hop 802.11b network. The patterns and causes oflv# are important in the design of routing and errorcorrection proto colv as wel as in networkplqq"(v The paper makes the fol l owing observations. The distribution of inter-n ..."
Abstract - Cited by 567 (11 self) - Add to MetaCart
This paper anal yzes the causes of packetl oss in a 38-node urban mul ti-hop 802.11b network. The patterns and causes oflv# are important in the design of routing and errorcorrection proto colv as wel as in networkplqq"(v The paper makes the fol l owing observations. The distribution of inter

Real-Time Systems

by Fan Liu, Ajit Narayanan, Quan Bai , 2000
"... Collision avoidance is an important topic in multi-robot systems. Existing multi-robot pathfinding approaches ignore sideswipe collisions among robots (i.e., only consider the collision which two agents try to occupy the same node during the same time-step) [1, 3, 4], and allow diagonal move between ..."
Abstract - Cited by 602 (11 self) - Add to MetaCart
between two adjacent nodes (e.g., Figure 1(b)). However, in many real world applications, sideswipe collisions may also block robots ’ movements or cause deadlocks. For example, as shown in Figure 1, if the size of two robots is as big as the grid size they occupied, collisions will happen not only

Measuring individual differences in implicit cognition: The implicit association test

by Anthony G. Greenwald, Debbie E. McGhee, et al. - J PERSONALITY SOCIAL PSYCHOL 74:1464–1480 , 1998
"... An implicit association test (IAT) measures differential association of 2 target concepts with an attribute. The 2 concepts appear in a 2-choice task (e.g., flower vs. insect names), and the attribute in a 2nd task (e.g., pleasant vs. unpleasant words for an evaluation attribute). When instructions ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1008 (63 self) - Add to MetaCart
experiments, the IAT was sensitive to (a) near-universal evaluative differences (e.g., flower vs. insect), (b) expected individual differences in evaluative associations (Japanese + pleasant vs. Korean + pleasant for Japanese vs. Korean subjects), and (c) consciously disavowed evaluative differences (Black

Multimarket Oligopoly: Strategic Substitutes and complements

by Jeremy I. Bulow, John D. Geanakoplos, Paul D. Kiemperer - JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECONOMY
"... A firm’s actions in one market can change competitors’ strategies in a second market by affecting its own marginal costs in that other mar-ket. Whether the action provides costs or benefits in the second market depends on (a) whether it increases or decreases marginal costs in the second market and ..."
Abstract - Cited by 619 (10 self) - Add to MetaCart
and (b) whether competitors’ products are strategic substitutes or strategic complements. The latter distinction is determined by whether more “aggressive” play (e.g., lower price or higher quantity) by one firm in a market lowers or raises compet-ing firms’ marginal profitabilities in that market. Many

Self-discrepancy: A theory relating self and affect

by E. Tory Higgins - PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW , 1987
"... This article presents a theory of how different types of discrepancies between self-state representations are related to different kinds of emotional vulnerabilities. One domain of the self (actual; ideal; ought) and one standpoint on the self (own; significant other) constitute each type of self-st ..."
Abstract - Cited by 599 (7 self) - Add to MetaCart
and experimental evidence supports the predictions of the model. Differences between serf-discrepancy theory and (a) other theories of in-compatible self-beliefs and (b) actual self negativity (e.g., low self-esteem) are discussed. The notion that people who hold conflicting or incompatible beliefs are likely

Features of similarity.

by Amos Tversky - Psychological Review , 1977
"... Similarity plays a fundamental role in theories of knowledge and behavior. It serves as an organizing principle by which individuals classify objects, form concepts, and make generalizations. Indeed, the concept of similarity is ubiquitous in psychological theory. It underlies the accounts of stimu ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1455 (2 self) - Add to MetaCart
. These models represent objects as points in some coordinate space such that the observed dissimilarities between objects correspond to the metric distances between the respective points. Practically all analyses of proximity data have been metric in nature, although some (e.g., hierarchical clustering) yield

Grounding in communication

by G. A. Hunt - In , 1991
"... We give a general analysis of a class of pairs of positive self-adjoint operators A and B for which A + XB has a limit (in strong resolvent sense) as h-10 which is an operator A, # A! Recently, Klauder [4] has discussed the following example: Let A be the operator-(d2/A2) + x2 on L2(R, dx) and let ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1122 (20 self) - Add to MetaCart
B = 1 x 1-s. The eigenvectors and eigenvalues of A are, of course, well known to be the Hermite functions, H,(x), n = 0, l,... and E, = 2n + 1. Klauder then considers the eigenvectors of A + XB (A> 0) by manipulations with the ordinary differential equation (we consider the domain questions

The Omega Test: a fast and practical integer programming algorithm for dependence analysis

by William Pugh - Communications of the ACM , 1992
"... The Omega testi s ani nteger programmi ng algori thm that can determi ne whether a dependence exi sts between two array references, and i so, under what condi7: ns. Conventi nalwi[A m holds thati nteger programmiB techni:36 are far too expensi e to be used for dependence analysi6 except as a method ..."
Abstract - Cited by 522 (15 self) - Add to MetaCart
The Omega testi s ani nteger programmi ng algori thm that can determi ne whether a dependence exi sts between two array references, and i so, under what condi7: ns. Conventi nalwi[A m holds thati nteger programmiB techni:36 are far too expensi e to be used for dependence analysi6 except as a method

Eye movements in reading and information processing: 20 years of research

by Keith Rayner - Psychological Bulletin , 1998
"... Recent studies of eye movements in reading and other information processing tasks, such as music reading, typing, visual search, and scene perception, are reviewed. The major emphasis of the review is on reading as a specific example of cognitive processing. Basic topics discussed with respect to re ..."
Abstract - Cited by 917 (28 self) - Add to MetaCart
to reading are (a) the characteristics of eye movements, (b) the perceptual span, (c) integration of information across saccades, (d) eye movement control, and (e) individual differences (including dyslexia). Similar topics are discussed with respect to the other tasks examined. The basic theme of the review

The Berkeley FrameNet Project

by Collin F. Baker , Charles J. Fillmore, John B. Lowe - IN PROCEEDINGS OF THE COLING-ACL , 1998
"... FrameNet is a three-year NSF-supported project in corpus-based computational lexicography, now in its second year #NSF IRI-9618838, #Tools for Lexicon Building"#. The project's key features are #a# a commitment to corpus evidence for semantic and syntactic generalizations, and #b# the repr ..."
Abstract - Cited by 643 (3 self) - Add to MetaCart
FrameNet is a three-year NSF-supported project in corpus-based computational lexicography, now in its second year #NSF IRI-9618838, #Tools for Lexicon Building"#. The project's key features are #a# a commitment to corpus evidence for semantic and syntactic generalizations, and #b
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