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Table 1 National and international requirements for interventional cardiologists before and after independence
Table 5-1 (Page 2 of 2). AS/400 Recovery Steps When Using BRMS/400 and the 3494 Automated Tape Library Dataserver BRMS/400
"... In PAGE 95: ... The recovery when using BRMS/400 and tape automation is as follows in Table5 -1 on page 5-9. Tape automation requires a minimum level of system function to be recovered before an automatic cartridge mounting can occur.... ..."
Table 2 Comparison between control and intervention period in terms of total joint replacement operations requiring blood transfusions, with crude and adjusted odds ratios for transfusions
"... In PAGE 4: ...4%) donating 107 units during the intervention period. Table2 presents results from logistic regression models: differences between periods became more Table 1 Comparison of characteristics of included patients and operations, according to time period. Values are means for continuous data and percentages for binary data.... ..."
Table 1. Intervention conditions for student errors
1996
"... In PAGE 15: ... It is this cognitive sense of quot;interest quot; that we have in mind when we talk of the interest-focused approach to tutoring. Table1 gives some examples of how a tutor might intervene in a learning-by-doing context, and how that intervention complements the failure-driven learning cycle. If the student forms an incorrect expectation, the most efficient course of failure-driven learning requires that the error be noticed when that expectation is not borne out by subsequent events.... ..."
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Table 2. Number of steps with interventions: (LI Only) steps with only low-level interventions; and (HI) steps with at least one high-level intervention. Each recipe had 13 steps in total.
2003
"... In PAGE 7: ... Instead, we present general findings followed by the analysis as four individual case studies. General Findings The overall intervention counts, shown in Table2 , do not show a clear trend. P1 and P4 required more HIs for the text recipe, P3 required the same number of HIs for each condition, and P2 required more HIs when he used VERA.... ..."
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Table 2. Number of steps with interventions: (LI Only) steps with only low-level interventions; and (HI) steps with at least one high-level intervention. Each recipe
2003
"... In PAGE 7: ... Instead, we present general findings folowed by the analysis as four individual case studies. General Findings The overal intervention counts, shown in Table2 , do not show a clear trend. P1 and P4 required more HIs for the text recipe, P3 required the same number of HIs for each condition, and P2 required more HIs when he used VERA.... ..."
Cited by 3
Table 4: Number of crashed les. At 100dpi Sakhr required human intervention on most of the 198 les that are listed as crashed below. A message popped up asking the user to manually zone the image. Thus we listed them as crashed since we assume that the OCR system is to work in a completely automatic mode. Res Opa Sakhr
Table 6: Performance side-effects of speculative execution. Foot- print is the maximum amount of memory that is physically mapped on behalf of the application at any time. Reclaims is the number of page reclaims, and Faults is the number of page faults, generated by the ap- plication. A pagereclaim occursif a referencedpage is still in memory but is not physically mapped, and therefore requires operating system intervention but does not require a disk access. On our evaluation plat- form, at least onethird of the memory-residentpagesare not physically mapped,as determinedby an LRU policy. Sigs is the numberof signals generated by the application. For our applications, these signals were either segmentation violations or floating point exceptions.
1999
"... In PAGE 10: ... For example, since the speculating thread uses shadow code and performs copy-on-write, the speculating applications have larger memory footprints, consume memory more rapidly, and experience more page faults than the orig- inal applications. Table6 shows that the memory foot- prints increase by 544 KB to 4.1 MB, the number of page reclaimes increases by 95 to 633, and the number of page faults increases by 12 to 40.... In PAGE 10: ... In addition, the speculating applications may generate extraneous signals because speculative execution may use erroneous data in its calculations. Table6 shows that the speculating appli- cations generate up to 39 extraneous signals. However,... ..."
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Table 6: Performance side-effects of speculative execution. Foot- print is the maximum amount of memory that is physically mapped on behalf of the application at any time. Reclaims is the number of page reclaims, and Faults is the number of page faults, generated by the ap- plication. A pagereclaim occursif a referencedpage is still in memory but is not physically mapped, and therefore requires operating system intervention but does not require a disk access. On our evaluation plat- form, at least onethird of the memory-residentpagesare not physically mapped,as determinedby an LRU policy. Sigs is the numberof signals generated by the application. For our applications, these signals were either segmentation violations or floating point exceptions.
1999
"... In PAGE 10: ... For example, since the speculating thread uses shadow code and performs copy-on-write, the speculating applications have larger memory footprints, consume memory more rapidly, and experience more page faults than the orig- inal applications. Table6 shows that the memory foot- prints increase by 544 KB to 4.1 MB, the number of page reclaimes increases by 95 to 633, and the number of page faults increases by 12 to 40.... In PAGE 10: ... In addition, the speculating applications may generate extraneous signals because speculative execution may use erroneous data in its calculations. Table6 shows that the speculating appli- cations generate up to 39 extraneous signals. However,... ..."
Cited by 74
Table 2. The results of the SCENARIO-3F experiments. Each column shows means over five histories of an evolving agent population with a specific relationship, imposed between fspan, extent of agent foreknowledge, and agent life span (an * indicates that one history out of five was excluded from the mean calculations because one population became extinct). The histories differ only in the pseudo-random number stream. The first row indicates the degree of foreknowledge that the population ends with, the second the number of hazards surviving at the end of the history, and the third the amount of intervention required for that history. The greater the intervention the less, intuitively, is the probability of that history occurring by chance. Thus we see foreknowledge tending to reduce life expectancy
"... In PAGE 10: ... Important parameter settings are listed in Table 1. The results, presented in Table2 , indicate that a relatively high level of intervention is needed, given the assumptions made, to construct world histories in which agents who have foreknowledge of their deaths well in advance come to predominate. The implication is that for these particular parameter settings foreknowledge is an evolutionary liability.... ..."
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