... discussed in this section since the user only experiences these kinds of qualities indirectly. Quality in use is the combined effect of the qualityattributes contained in all the selected quality ... on influences process quality effect of software product software productcontext of use depends on depends on influences influences quality in use external quality internal quality ... the qualityin use. External quality is implied by internal quality and internal qualityin turn is implied among other things by process quality. Therefore process and internal quality will...
... training data and the ngram-based modelwas retrained on the remaining subset.Figure 2: Empirical differences in sociolinguistic featuresfor Gender on the Switchboard corpus6 Incorporating ... sociolinguistic and psycholinguistic pointof view of language understanding, but also froman engineering perspective, given the goal of pre-dicting latent author/speaker attributesin variouspractical ... speakers usedfor training and 100 speakers used for testing, re-sulting in a total of 4062 conversation sides fortraining and 808 conversation sides for testing.4 Modeling Gender via Ngram...
... concept, and it is the software industry counterpart to reverseengineering in industries that manufacture machinery, including computers. In hardwareindustries, reverse engineering is a common practice, ... cloning ofprograms, could have the unintended, negative consequences of inhibiting independentinnovation— a common occurrence, according to Bricklin, insoftware development— orof discouraging ... often an inseparable part of the interfacedefinition, Reinstein said, "The simplest, most disentangling position I can take is let usjust not protect interfaces. Let us invest in the expression...
... was firmly dominated by Intel. Interestingly, it wasn’t just Intel’s abilityto produce faster chips that led to dominance. Instead, much of Intel’s increased profitcame from pushing AMD out of ... they innovate, resetting a product line will play muchless of a role in extracting profit from that innovation than for firms in an oligopoly.I next find that, in oligopoly, returns from innovation ... gen-eration lower quality chip by fixing the size, and they produce lower quality chips at lowermarginal cost (by shrinking the size). This double process was in part responsible for givingIntel the...
... a used onlineduring EACL at www.give-challenge.org. In Section 2, we give an introduction to the GIVEevaluation methodology by describing the experi-ence of a user participating in the evaluation, ... scientificgoals. Then we explain the software architecture behind the scenes and sketch the API that concreteNLG systems must implement in Section 3. In Section 4, we present some preliminary evaluationresults, ... pro-gramming time on the 3D graphics (based on thefree jMonkeyEngine library) and the networkingcode. We could have reduced the effort requiredfor these programming tasks by building upon anexisting...
... resulting in women owning more assets, having a more active role in family decisions, and increasing investment in family welfare. 20Towardsinclusivefinancialdevelopmentfor achieving theMDGs in AsiaandthePacific ... contribution of inclusive financial development to the MDGs…… 13 Towardsinclusivefinancialdevelopmentfor achieving theMDGs in AsiaandthePacific 5.8 Financial innovation The growing use of ... to both an increase in economic growth and a decrease in income inequality. Such an outcome is most likely if financial development is inclusive. Financial development that is not inclusive...
... and massconsumption, in their widest meaning, in architecture? What is therole of architecturein satisfying the needs of consumers? What in general is the role of value in architecture? What ... everywhere: in politics, in architec-ture, in theory, in ideology, and even in science.75 Baudrillard de-scribes how in the new transmodernity of exaggeration, everything,even the most insignificant, ... questions:Learning from Baudrillard in architecture The questions I will address in this study are:a) Regarding the general characteristics of architecturein con-sumer society: What is the nature of architecture...
... European Guidelines for Quality Assurance in Cervical Cancer Screening emphasized the principles of organised, population-based screening and was in- strumental in initiating pilot projects in Europe. ... lesions, including specific instructions for colposcopists and treatment. The final Chapter 7 includes recommended key performance indicators dealing with invi-tation, participation, screening, ... in order, among other things, to contribute to dissemination of the current guidelines, to study how the guidelines are used in defining and implementing best practice in each member state, to...
... ofextrapolating in vitro findings to in vivo evaluation of plant resources.The chapters in this book are written by experts interested in exploring andmaking better use of plant biodiversity for improving ... extracts.Using ruminal fluids collected from animals being fed bioactive forages has alsobeen proposed as a means of mimicking in vivo conditions. However, due to thedifficulties of maintaining, defining ... anti-nutritional factors,including plant secondary metabolites. Research has shown that there are significantdifferences in tannin content from leaves growing in shade and in direct sunshine in Sesbania (unpublished...
... reduction in seed production,indicating synergistic effects when both kinases arelacking [9]. Additional interesting results were obtainedby some gene-expression studies. The lack of LTR in the ... ferre-doxin ⁄ thioredoxin system (Fig. 3). The interplaybetween the kinases and their substrates integratesthese varying redox signals and initiates appropriatemolecular acclimation responses in ... determinants includethe geographical latitude of the ecosystem, the appear-ance of clouds and the leaf movement by wind. Biotic in uences depend mainly on the individual position ofa plant within...
... Photo taken September 29, 2008 This meant that the plants were doing little in the beginning to clean the inflow. In the beginning it was not known if the plants would survive such a harsh environment. ... in clarity averaging 8.4 ntu and was low as 0.34 ntu. The MWS reduced the turbidity at an average of 62%. Positive outcomes indicate the system is working very well in reducing copper, zinc, ... the alkaline side ranging from 6.07 to 8.56 with an average of 7.64. In six of the nine tests, pH was reduced an average of 0.1 to 0.2 and where readings were on the acidic side at the inlet,...
... manuscript. Financial support for this study was provided by the Rotterdamse Vereniging Blindenbelangen, Stichting Wees een Zegen, Stichting Blindenhulp and Stichting Blinden-Penning.References1. ... ownfunctioning and appearance. Indeed, in our group wefound an overall significant negative effect of age regard-ing psycho-social well-being, possibly even concealing theremarkable increase ... ratings ofitems that pertained to that dimension, after the score ofeach dimension was transformed linearly to a 0–100point scale, with 100 indicating the best HRQoL and 0 theworst. Both instruments...