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The lexical nature of syntactic ambiguity resolution

by Maryellen C Macdonald, Neal J Pearlmutter, Mark S Seidenberg - Psychological Review , 1994
"... Ambiguity resolution is a central problem in language comprehension. Lexical and syntactic ambiguities are standardly assumed to involve different types of knowledge representations and be resolved by different mechanisms. An alternative account is provided in which both types of ambiguity derive fr ..."
Abstract - Cited by 557 (24 self) - Add to MetaCart
processing. The central processing mechmultiple levels simultaneously, including lexical, phonological, anism we invoke is the constraint satisfaction process that has morphological, syntactic, and text or discourse levels. At any been realized in interactive-activation models (e.g., Elman &

Mediators in the architecture of future information systems

by Gio Wiederhold - IEEE COMPUTER , 1992
"... The installation of high-speed networks using optical fiber and high bandwidth messsage forwarding gateways is changing the physical capabilities of information systems. These capabilities must be complemented with corresponding software systems advances to obtain a real benefit. Without smart softw ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1135 (20 self) - Add to MetaCart
software we will gain access to more data, but not improve access to the type and quality of information needed for decision making. To develop the concepts needed for future information systems we model information processing as an interaction of data and knowledge. This model provides criteria for a high-level

The effects of feedback interventions on performance: A historical review, a meta-analysis, and a preliminary feedback intervention theory

by Avraham N. Kluger, Angelo Denisi - Psychological Bulletin , 1996
"... Since the beginning of the century, feedback interventions (FIs) produced negative—but largely ignored—effects on performance. A meta-analysis (607 effect sizes; 23,663 observations) suggests that FIs improved performance on average (d =.41) but that over '/3 of the FIs decreased perfor-mance. ..."
Abstract - Cited by 463 (1 self) - Add to MetaCart
-mance. This finding cannot be explained by sampling error, feedback sign, or existing theories. The authors proposed a preliminary FI theory (FIT) and tested it with moderator analyses. The central assumption of FIT is that FIs change the locus of attention among 3 general and hierarchically organized levels

LSCs: Breathing Life into Message Sequence Charts

by Werner Damm, David Harel , 2001
"... While message sequence charts (MSCs) are widely used in industry to document the interworking of processes or objects, they are expressively weak, being based on the modest semantic notion of a partial ordering of events as defined, e.g., in the ITU standard. A highly expressive and rigorously defin ..."
Abstract - Cited by 444 (71 self) - Add to MetaCart
While message sequence charts (MSCs) are widely used in industry to document the interworking of processes or objects, they are expressively weak, being based on the modest semantic notion of a partial ordering of events as defined, e.g., in the ITU standard. A highly expressive and rigorously

Inferring Web Communities from Link Topology

by David Gibson, Jon Kleinberg, Prabhakar Raghavan , 1998
"... The World Wide Web grows through a decentralized, almost anarchic process, and this has resulted in a large hyperlinked corpus without the kind of logical organization that can be built into more traditionally-created hypermedia. To extract meaningful structure under such circumstances, we develop a ..."
Abstract - Cited by 415 (4 self) - Add to MetaCart
of central, "authoritative" pages linked together by "hub pages"; and they exhibit a natural type of hierarchical topic generalization that can be inferred directly from the pattern of linkage. Our investigation shows that although the process by which users of the Web create pages

Human DNA methylomes at base resolution show widespread epigenomic differences.

by Ryan Lister , Mattia Pelizzola , Robert H Dowen , R David Hawkins , Gary Hon , Julian Tonti-Filippini , Joseph R Nery , Leonard Lee , Zhen Ye , Que-Minh Ngo , Lee Edsall , Jessica Antosiewicz-Bourget , Ron Stewart , Victor Ruotti , A Harvey Millar , James A Thomson , Bing Ren , Joseph R Ecker - Nature, , 2009
"... DNA cytosine methylation is a central epigenetic modification that has essential roles in cellular processes including genome regulation, development and disease. Here we present the first genome-wide, single-base-resolution maps of methylated cytosines in a mammalian genome, from both human embryo ..."
Abstract - Cited by 401 (6 self) - Add to MetaCart
DNA cytosine methylation is a central epigenetic modification that has essential roles in cellular processes including genome regulation, development and disease. Here we present the first genome-wide, single-base-resolution maps of methylated cytosines in a mammalian genome, from both human

Software Reuse

by Charles W. Krueger - ACM Computing Surveys , 1992
"... Software reuse is the process ofcreating software systems from existing software rather than building software systems from scratch. ‘l’his simple yet powerful vision was introduced in 1968. Software reuse has, however, failed to become a standard software engineering practice. In an attempt to unde ..."
Abstract - Cited by 307 (2 self) - Add to MetaCart
Software reuse is the process ofcreating software systems from existing software rather than building software systems from scratch. ‘l’his simple yet powerful vision was introduced in 1968. Software reuse has, however, failed to become a standard software engineering practice. In an attempt

Interactive Digital Photomontage

by Aseem Agarwala, Mira Dontcheva, Maneesh Agrawala, Steven Drucker, Alex Colburn, Brian Curless, David Salesin, Michael Cohen - ACM TRANS. GRAPH , 2004
"... We describe an interactive, computer-assisted framework for combining parts of a set of photographs into a single composite picture, a process we call "digital photomontage." Our framework makes use of two techniques primarily: graph-cut optimization, to choose good seams within the consti ..."
Abstract - Cited by 304 (17 self) - Add to MetaCart
the constituent images so that they can be combined as seamlessly as possible; and gradient-domain fusion, a process based on Poisson equations, to further reduce any remaining visible artifacts in the composite. Also central to the framework is a suite of interactive tools that allow the user to specify a

Instruction-Level Parallel Processing: History, Overview and Perspective

by B. Ramakrishna Rau, Joseph A. Fisher , 1992
"... Instruction-level Parallelism CILP) is a family of processor and compiler design techniques that speed up execution by causing individual machine operations to execute in parallel. Although ILP has appeared in the highest performance uniprocessors for the past 30 years, the 1980s saw it become a muc ..."
Abstract - Cited by 186 (0 self) - Add to MetaCart
Instruction-level Parallelism CILP) is a family of processor and compiler design techniques that speed up execution by causing individual machine operations to execute in parallel. Although ILP has appeared in the highest performance uniprocessors for the past 30 years, the 1980s saw it become a

Explaining Development and Change in Organizations,

by Andrew H Van De Ven , Marshall Scott Poole - Academy of Management Review, , 1995
"... This article introduces four basic theories that may serve as building blocks for explaining processes of change in organizations: life cycle, teleology, dialectics, and evolution. These four theories represent different sequences of change events that are driven by different conceptual motors and ..."
Abstract - Cited by 238 (3 self) - Add to MetaCart
been a central and enduring quest of scholars in management and many other disciplines. The processes or sequences of events that unfold in these changes-such as transitions in individuals' jobs and careers, group formation and development, and organizational innovation, growth, reorganization
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