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Table 2 Mean Latencies and Error Rates for Lexical Decisions for High - and Low-frequency

in
by Jeffrey S. Bowers
"... In PAGE 10: ... Items were presented in a different random order to each participant. Results The results of the two perceptual identification experiments are presented in Table 1, and the results of the two lexical decision experiments are presented in Table2 . In... ..."

Table 1: The resulting actuator locations Ar, and the ndMACi-values for the nine low-frequency modes.

in Noise Robust Actuator Placement on Flexible Structures
by Magnus Andersson, Magnus Andersson
"... In PAGE 5: ... The subscripts x; y; z denotes the direction of the applied force. The actuator locations in Table1 are henceforth de- ned as in Table 2. In Table 3, the dMACi-values for the actuator locations is presented.... ..."

Table 3: The resulting actuator locations Ar, and the dMACi-values for the nine low-frequency modes.

in Noise Robust Actuator Placement on Flexible Structures
by Magnus Andersson, Magnus Andersson
"... In PAGE 5: ... The actuator locations in Table 1 are henceforth de- ned as in Table 2. In Table3 , the dMACi-values for the actuator locations is presented. Notice the small loss in the dMACi for an increasing level of noise variance.... ..."

Table 4 Statistics Summary of comparison between model predictions and observations of low-frequency, non- tidal water levels

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2003
"... In PAGE 15: ...evel variation are given in Fig. 10 for Station P2, and Fig. 11 for station P8. The model predictions match well with observations and are able to reproduce the nonlin- ear and non-periodic characteristics such as the magnitudes and phases. A summary of the comparison statistics is given in Table4 . The correlation between model predictions and observations is very high.... ..."

Table 9 shows that log likelihood reliably fell at the top of the list; its advantage is especially marked for low-frequency

in Detecting and Browsing Events in Unstructured Text
by David A. Smith

Table 1. Principal performance requirements for the EVLA Band Center

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2001
"... In PAGE 1: ....2.2 Technical Objectives..................................................................................... 2 Table1 .... In PAGE 3: ....2.2 Technical Objectives The key technical objectives resulting from the scientific objectives can be summarized as the improvements required for each of the following seven performance parameters of the VLA: Sensitivity A goal of 1 microJy rms in 12 hours observing between 2 and 40 GHz is set by consideration of the system temperature, bandwidth, and system efficiency which can be provided by implementing modern technologies. For all of these, ambitious, but realistic and achievable goals have been set and are shown in Table1 . For nearly every band, the system temperature goal is dominated by one of ground spillover, galactic emission, or atmospheric thermal emission.... In PAGE 3: ... Spectral Coverage The goal will be to make available to the astronomer the entire spectral range between 1 and 50 GHz. This can be achieved, with the sensitivity goal listed above, with the eight Cassegrain receiver systems shown in Table1 . Bandwidth Modern technologies enable efficient, cost-effective transport of up to 8 GHz of IF bandwidth in each polarization.... ..."

TABLE 3 Rules for High and Low Frequency Accident Locations

in Profiling High Frequency Accident Locations Using Association Rules
by Karolien Geurts, Geert Wets, Tom Brijs, Koen Vanhoof
"... In PAGE 8: ... Accordingly to the previous results, this kind of accident accounts for 47,86 percent of all accidents on high frequency accident locations, whereas the same accident circumstances only occur in 15,02 percent of the low frequency accident locations. lt;INSERT TABLE3 HERE gt; The middle part of table 3 gives the 10 most important rules for the high frequency accident locations based on the descending lift values. The negative interest values of these rules indicate that the accident circumstances described in these patterns have a higher occurrence on the low frequency accident locations than on the high frequency accident locations, although the differences in support values are very small.... ..."

Table 2: Low frequency impedances for different transition lengths.

in BROAD-BAND IMPEDANCE OF LHC SHIELDED BELLOWS
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 2: ...1 Beam Pipe Transition In this section we study the effect of the transition length from the race-track shape to a circle, which is made in order to have the same pressure on each of the sliding fingers. The low frequency impedances obtained from the re- sults of the simulations for different transition lengths are shown in Table2 . It is interesting to note that the trans- verse impedances in horizontal and vertical planes are not only different, but have also different signs.... ..."

Table 3 The effect of removing low frequency transitions from

in Knowledge Extraction and Recurrent Neural Networks: An Analysis of an Elman Network trained on a Natural Language Learning Task
by Ingo Schellhammer, Joachim Diederich, Michael Towsey, Claudia Brugman 1998
Cited by 2

Table 2.4: Low frequency clock measurements.

in 2 Contents
by Philip Leong, List Of Figures 2004
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