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CIL: Intermediate language and tools for analysis and transformation of C programs
- In International Conference on Compiler Construction
, 2002
"... Abstract. This paper describes the CIntermediate Language: a highlevel representation along with a set of tools that permit easy analysis and source-to-source transformation of C programs. Compared to C, CIL has fewer constructs. It breaks down certain complicated constructs of C into simpler ones, ..."
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Cited by 533 (11 self)
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, and thus it works at a lower level than abstract-syntax trees. But CIL is also more high-level than typical intermediate languages (e.g., three-address code) designed for compilation. As a result, what we have is a representation that makes it easy to analyze and manipulate C programs, and emit them in a
Normalization for cDNA microarray data: a robust composite method addressing single and multiple slide systematic variation
, 2002
"... There are many sources of systematic variation in cDNA microarray experiments which affect the measured gene expression levels (e.g. differences in labeling efficiency between the two fluorescent dyes). The term normalization refers to the process of removing such variation. A constant adjustment is ..."
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Cited by 718 (9 self)
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There are many sources of systematic variation in cDNA microarray experiments which affect the measured gene expression levels (e.g. differences in labeling efficiency between the two fluorescent dyes). The term normalization refers to the process of removing such variation. A constant adjustment
Measuring individual differences in implicit cognition: The implicit association test
- 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 ..."
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Cited by 1008 (63 self)
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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
Understanding packet delivery performance in dense wireless sensor networks
, 2003
"... Wireless sensor networks promise fine-grain monitoring in a wide variety of environments. Many of these environments (e.g., indoor environments or habitats) can be harsh for wireless communication. From a networking perspective, the most basic aspect of wireless communication is the packet delivery ..."
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Cited by 661 (15 self)
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Wireless sensor networks promise fine-grain monitoring in a wide variety of environments. Many of these environments (e.g., indoor environments or habitats) can be harsh for wireless communication. From a networking perspective, the most basic aspect of wireless communication is the packet delivery
Real-Time Systems
, 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 ..."
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Cited by 602 (11 self)
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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
An Algorithm for Tracking Multiple Targets
- IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control
, 1979
"... Abstract—An algorithm for tracking multiple targets In a cluttered algorithms. Clustering is the process of dividing the entire environment Is developed. The algorithm Is capable of Initiating tracks, set of targets and measurements into independent groups accounting for false or m[~clngreports, and ..."
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Cited by 596 (0 self)
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[~clngreports, and groom sets of dSPeU&IIt ~or clusters ~ Instead of solvin one lar e roblem a reports~As each measurement Is received, probabilities are ~*uI~ted for ~ g g ~‘ thehypotheses that the measurement ~ f ~ ~ IUM)Wfl ~ number of smaller problems are solved in parallel. Fiin a target file, or from a new
The Concept of a Linguistic Variable and its Application to Approximate Reasoning
- Journal of Information Science
, 1975
"... By a linguistic variable we mean a variable whose values are words or sentences in a natural or artificial language. I:or example, Age is a linguistic variable if its values are linguistic rather than numerical, i.e., young, not young, very young, quite young, old, not very oldand not very young, et ..."
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Cited by 1430 (9 self)
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, etc., rather than 20, 21, 22, 23, In more specific terms, a linguistic variable is characterized by a quintuple (&?, T(z), U, G,M) in which &? is the name of the variable; T(s) is the term-set of2, that is, the collection of its linguistic values; U is a universe of discourse; G is a syntactic
The Berkeley FrameNet Project
- 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 ..."
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Cited by 643 (3 self)
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#semantic and syntactic# of several thousand words and phrases, each accompanied by #c# a representative collection of annotated corpus attestations, which jointly exemplify the observed linkings between #frame elements" and their syntactic realizations #e.g. grammatical function, phrase type
Features of similarity.
- 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 ..."
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Cited by 1455 (2 self)
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. 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
The irreducibility of the space of curves of given genus
- Publ. Math. IHES
, 1969
"... Fix an algebraically closed field k. Let Mg be the moduli space of curves of genus g over k. The main result of this note is that Mg is irreducible for every k. Of course, whether or not M s is irreducible depends only on the characteristic of k. When the characteristic s o, we can assume that k ~- ..."
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Cited by 506 (2 self)
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from char. o to char. p provided that p> 2g q-i. Unfortunately, attempts to extend this method to all p seem to get stuck on difficult questions of wild ramification. Nowadays, the Teichmtiller theory gives a thoroughly analytic but very profound insight into this irreducibility when k----C. Our
Results 1 - 10
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75,429