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Table 9. Desirable qualities of RE techniques (McPhee and Eberlein 2002).

in ABSTRACT
by Uolevi Nikula, Uolevi Nikula, Bare A Ready, Use Method, Requirements Engineering
"... In PAGE 6: ...able 8. Reasons for choosing RE techniques (McPhee and Eberlein 2002)................ 20 Table9 .... In PAGE 27: ...able 7. Top 10 RE techniques (McPhee and Eberlein 2002). Rank Familiarity Usefulness (TTM) Usefulness (Non-TTM) 1 Scenarios/Use Cases Requirements Prioritization Requirements Change Management 2 Semi-Formal Modeling Requirements Change Management Semi-Formal Modeling 3 Informal Modeling Scenarios/Use Cases Requirements Reviews 4 Requirements Change Management Semi-Formal Modeling Scenarios/Use Cases 5 Evolutionary Prototyping Requirements Testing Requirements Checklists 6 Interviews Evolutionary Prototyping Requirements Testing 7 Requirements Prioritization Requirements Reuse Requirements Tracing 8 Requirements Reviews Interviews Viewpoint-Oriented Techniques 9 Throw-away Prototyping Requirements Reviews Interviews 10 Requirements Checklists Requirements Checklists Designer as Apprentice The reasons for choosing RE techniques and their desirable qualities were also studied in the survey. These are shown in Table 8 and Table9 . Facilitation of good communication is the second most important item in both the lists so importance of good communication is evident.... ..."

Table 1.1. Timing results on evaluating various combinations of strategies in CSAID, CGAID and CSAGAID with P = 3 to nd solutions that deviate by 1% and 10% from the best-known solution of a discretized version of G2. All CPU times in seconds were averaged over 10 runs and were collected on a Pentinum III 500-MHz computer with Solaris 7. apos;? apos; means that no solution with desired quality can be found.

in Constrained Genetic Algorithms and their Applications in Nonlinear Constrained Optimization
by Benjamin W. Wah, Yi-Xin Chen

Table 3. Social desirability, social presence and involvement

in ASC 2007. THE CHALLENGES OF A CHANGING WORLD Edited by M. Trotman et al Compilation © 2007 Association for Survey Computing Video Web Survey- Results of an experimental comparison with a text-based Web survey
by Marek Fuchs, Frederik Funke
"... In PAGE 11: ...3. Social desirability, social presence and involvement In order to evaluate the quality of the data obtained we have measured social desirability bias using a four item scale taken from the German General Social Survey ( Table3 , top section). Only for one of the four items we observe a significant difference according to which the video mode seemed to yield more socially desirable answers.... ..."

Table 5. Exploring the tradeoff between higher recall of desired results (Yes instances found), and false positives and negatives within a 2 category decision tree model with quality uncertainty.

in Quantifying the Expected Utility of Information in Multi-Agent Scheduling Tasks
by Avi Rosenfeld, Sarit Kraus, Charlie Ortiz
"... In PAGE 12: ... We found that as we increased these weights, we obtained progressively higher recall from the desired Yes category, but at an expense in overall reduc- tion of model accuracy. We present the results of this approach from the quality experiment in a two category classification model in Table5 . For example, a 5 to 1 bias towards the Yes category found 566 of the 607 instances (or 0.... ..."

Table 10. Acid additions required to reach the desired pH for preservation of 60-mL Long Term Resource Monitoring Program water quality samples.

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2004
"... In PAGE 66: ... Test strips are not inserted into sample containers, but a few drops of preserved sample are dropped onto the test strip to determine pH. Experience over the years has shown the approximate additions of acid ( Table10 ) that create the proper pH in 60-mL samples from the Upper Mississippi and Illinois Rivers. c.... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 5: Desirable aspects of colposcopy experience

in screening
by Sheina Orbell, Martin Hagger, Val Brown, John Tidy, Jessop Wing, Tree Root Walk, Sheffield S Sf
"... In PAGE 20: ... Content analysis by two independent coders (Kappa = .98) identified 3 categories of positive comment, shown in Table5 . Women undergoing both procedures were most likely to make positive comments regarding the quality of procedural explanation offered by clinic staff and the sympathetic way in which they were treated whilst at the clinic.... ..."

Table 1: This table summarizes the details of the simulation experiments we carried out for two test sequences (Silent Voice and Foreman). In each of the listed experiments we measured the resulting PSNR as a function of the packet loss probability. The corresponding graphs are presented in Figs. 5. available redundancy between the layers in order to accomplish the desired graceful degradation when channel quality decreases.

in Scalable Internet Video Streaming With Unequal Error Protection
by K. Stuhlmüller, M. Link, B. Girod, U. Horn 1999
"... In PAGE 5: ... We allow 15 % redundancy for error protection. Table1 gives an overview about the bitrates and the error protection parameters we used in our experiments. Fig.... ..."
Cited by 10

Table 7: Merge functions for Quality Criteria

in Quality-driven Integration of Heterogeneous Information Systems
by Felix Naumann, Humboldt-universitat Zu Berlin, Ulf Leser, Johann Christoph Freytag 1999
"... In PAGE 16: ...Q(l ./ r) = IQ(l) ./ IQ(r) := (sl5 ./ sr5; : : : ; sl12 ./ sr12) (1) The ./-operator (or \merge function quot;) is resolved according to Table7 . Figure 4 shows the plan tree for P3 = QCA6 .... In PAGE 16: ...he plan tree for P3 = QCA6 ./ QCA2 ./ QCA7 with its aggregated IQ vectors. Since all merge functions in Table7 are both commutative and associative, a change of the join execution order within a plan has no e ect on its IQ score. This is desirable, since the quality perceived by the user is that of the query result and not the quality of how this result is obtained (the plan).... ..."
Cited by 71

Table 25. Special concerns/desires of customers/consumers by percentages, based on responses of Purveyors, Retailers and Restaurateurs.

in For The: National Cattlemen’s Beef Association Funded By The:
by Funded The, National Beef, Quality Audit
"... In PAGE 33: ... The consist of product used by the respondents and the reasons for Returned Product are presented in Tables 22 through 24. Respondents were also asked to identify (from a given list) the leading special concerns/desires of their customers/consumers ( Table25 ). Greatest Quality Challenges, identified by Purveyors, Retailers and Restaurateurs were: (1) insufficient marbling, (2) lack of uniformity in cuts, (3) excess fat cover, (4) cut weights too heavy, and (5) too large ribeyes (Table 26).... ..."

Table 1: Mesh size and quality for four-element airfoil meshes. Finally, Figures 12 and 13 show, respectively, the angle distribution and relative edge lengths for the four-element airfoil meshes. As noted previously, the angle quality degrades with mesh coarsening. Like- wise, the edge lengths for the coarser meshes do not match the desired edge lengths as closely as for the ner meshes.

in An Unstructured Mesh Improvement Toolkit with Application to Mesh Improvement, Generation and (De-)Refinement
by Carl F. Ollivier-Gooch 1998
"... In PAGE 9: ... shows closeups of the coarse meshes at the trailing edge of the main element. A summary of size and angle quality information for these meshes is given in Table1 . The mesh quality remains good for the rst two coarse meshes, but degrades very badly for the third coarse mesh; this is an area which requires more work.... ..."
Cited by 2
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