• Documents
  • Authors
  • Tables
  • Log in
  • Sign up
  • MetaCart
  • DMCA
  • Donate

CiteSeerX logo

Tools

Sorted by:
Try your query at:
Semantic Scholar Scholar Academic
Google Bing DBLP
Results 1 - 10 of 1,515
Next 10 →

Table 2: Conflict among the predicted symptoms and disease states

in The use of Evidence Conflict to extend Diagnostic Models
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 5: ... As expected, the evidence conflict measure is positive when instantiating symptoms predicted by BAD and BAD has been left out of the model, but negative when BAD is included. Table2 summarizes this. ... ..."

Table 2: Hypothetical predictive apos;symptom-disease apos; rules and their information

in i e n t i s t s d i s p o s a l p r
by Padhraic Smyth, Rodney M. Goodman

Table 3. Expressions representing diseases, symptoms, conditions, etc.

in Finding Cue Expressions for Knowledge Extraction from Scientific Text: Early Results
by Masashi Shimbo, Sayaka Tamamori, Yuji Matsumoto
"... In PAGE 10: ... To summarize, we had to inspect the top 150 extracted verbal expressions to collect 20 expressions of interest (Table 2). On the other hand, for noun phrases containing the test names (Table 1) we needed to inspect more than 700 patterns to collect 20 meaningful patterns, and for diseases, symptoms, and conditions we had to examine over 1000 expressions ( Table3 ). The latter two cases impose an enormous load to the human inspector.... ..."

Table 4. Frequency information presented to subjects in experiments 1, 3, and 4. The cells are the frequencies of the various Information Types. Symptom Disease

in Do Subjects Understand Base Rates?
by Gernot D. Kleiter, Marianne Krebs, Michael E. Doherty, Hugh Garavan, All Chadwick, Gregory Brake 1997
"... In PAGE 19: ...Table4... In PAGE 25: ...erved as subjects for extra credit. About two thirds of the subjects were female. Materials and procedure The task was as in Experiment 1, but the instructions, originally written for faculty and graduate students, were simpli ed. The frequencies shown in Table4 were used, as were the multiple forms of the booklet described in Experiment 1. The experiment was conducted in two groups outside of class times.... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 4: Frequency information presented to subjects in experiments 1, 3, and 4. The cells are the frequencies of the various Information Types. Symptom Disease

in Do Subjects Discard Relevant Data? A Critical Test of Base Rate Neglect
by Gernot D. Kleiter, Marianne Krebs, Michael E. Doherty, Hugh Garavan, Randall Chadwick, Gregory Brake
"... In PAGE 12: ...The frequencies were selected so that the missing information was crucial to the judgment to be made. Note that the frequencies in Table4 yield E( ) = :25, E( 1) = :60, and E( 2) = :22.... In PAGE 19: ...19 Materials and procedure The task was as in Experiment 1, but the instructions, originally written for faculty and graduate students, were simpli ed. The frequencies shown in Table4 were used, as were the multiple forms of the booklet described in Experiment 1. The experiment was conducted in two groups outside of class times.... ..."

Table 1: Diseases of Malnutrition Some Consequences of Micronutrient Deficiency Micronutrient (disease) Symptoms/Consequences

in The MacDonald's Equilibrium -- Advertising, Empty Calories, and the Endogenous Determination Of . . .
by Trenton G. Smith 2002
"... In PAGE 3: ...0. References ............................................................................................................. 49 Tables Table1 : Diseases of Malnutrition .... In PAGE 5: ...3 Human Nutritional Requirements There is no question that diet has consequences for health and quality of life. Deficiency in any one of a long list of essential micronutrients (see Table1 ) can quickly cause illness or death, and there is growing evidence that the proportion of macronutrients such as dietary fiber can be important determinants of health outcomes. For example, a 10-year prospective study of 75,000 women showed that those with the highest intakes of dietary fiber (in the form of 2.... In PAGE 5: ...e., nutrients without which humans cannot sustain life) are known to include not just the obvious calories, protein, vitamins, and minerals (see Table1 ), but also, for example, omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, and the amino acids leucine, isoleucine, valine, lysine, tryptophan, threonine, methionine, phenylalanine, and histidine (Groff and Gropper 2000 p.... In PAGE 22: ... One striking example is found in the ancient American practice of alkali processing of corn: Katz et al (1974) have argued convincingly that this process has been adopted in areas in which the local population would otherwise be subject to outbreaks of pellagra. Pellagra (described in Table1 , above) is caused by a dietary deficiency of niacin; corn is very low in niacin, but treatment (boiling the corn with calcium oxide) greatly increases the amount of biologically available niacin. The origins of the practice are unknown, and traditional practitioners are reportedly unaware of the nutritional benefits: they claim to process the corn into masa simply because it improves the taste.... ..."
Cited by 2

Table 1: This table gives performance gures for our Q2P system on the patient-disease queries. The PS and DS columns refer to the size (in tuples) of the patient-symptom and disease-symptom relations respectively. All timing gures are in seconds.

in Providing Better Support for a Class of Decision Support Queries
by Sudhir G. Rao, Antonio Badia, Dirk Van Gucht 1996
"... In PAGE 8: ... We compared the results obtained on these experiments for the com- mercial relational database systems with those of our Q2P system. Table1 gives all the performance gures for Q2P (all timing gures include the time required for building the run-time structures and transforming them appropriately). To demonstrate the generality of the system, in Table 2 we show results for the all and not all queries run on a ternary relation.... ..."
Cited by 23

Table 1: This table gives performance gures for our Q2P system on the patient-disease queries. The PS and DS columns refer to the size (in tuples) of the patient-symptom and disease-symptom relations respectively. All timing gures are in seconds.

in Providing Better Support for Quantified Queries
by Sudhir Rao, Antonio Badia, Dirk Van Gucht
"... In PAGE 8: ... We compared the results obtained on these experiments for the com- mercial relational database systems with those of our Q2P system. Table1 gives all the performance gures for Q2P (all timing gures include the time required for building the run-time structures and transforming them appropriately). To demonstrate the generality of the system, in Table 2 we show results for the all and not all queries run on a ternary relation.... ..."

Table 1: This table gives performance gures for our Q2P system on the patient-disease queries. The PS and DS columns refer to the size (in tuples) of the patient-symptom and disease-symptom relations respectively. All timing gures are in seconds.

in Providing Better Support for Quantified Queries
by Sudhir Rao, Antonio Badia, Dirk Van Gucht
"... In PAGE 8: ... We compared the results obtained on these experiments for the com- mercial relational database systems with those of our Q2P system. Table1 gives all the performance gures for Q2P (all timing gures include the time required for building the run-time structures and transforming them appropriately). To demonstrate the generality of the system, in Table 2 we show results for the all and not all queries run on a ternary relation.... ..."

Table 5. Prevalence of Reported Signs or Symptoms of Heart Attack by Coronary Heart Disease Risk Factor Status*

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 3: ... Persons with diabetes were more likely to report chest pain as the most important heart attack symptom than persons without this condition. The prevalence of reported expectations of specific symptoms is listed in Table 3, Table 4, and Table 5 for the overall population and in subgroups defined by demographic characteristics (Table 3), socioeconomic characteristics (Table 4), and coronary heart disease risk factor status and previous experience with heart disease ( Table5 ). Some form of chest pain or discomfort was re- ported by 89.... ..."
Next 10 →
Results 1 - 10 of 1,515
Powered by: Apache Solr
  • About CiteSeerX
  • Submit and Index Documents
  • Privacy Policy
  • Help
  • Data
  • Source
  • Contact Us

Developed at and hosted by The College of Information Sciences and Technology

© 2007-2019 The Pennsylvania State University