Results 261 to 270 of about 83,627 (316)

Many Entropies, Many Disorders

Open Systems & Information Dynamics, 2003
To overcome the deficits of entropy as a measure for disorder when the number of states available to a system can change, Landsberg defined “disorder” as the entropy normalized to the maximum entropy. In the simplest cases, the maximum entropy is that of the equiprobable distribution, corresponding to a completely random system.
Matt Davison 0001, J. S. Shiner
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Supporting many-to-many communication

Proceedings of the 2013 workshop on Programming based on actors, agents, and decentralized control, 2013
In a variety of contexts -- from social media to wireless sensor networks -- we see increasingly complex patterns of communication, often characterized by having multiple senders for messages. This paper argues that existing communication mechanisms do not adequately support many-to-many communication, and proposes multicall -- a richer form of ...
Hongxing Geng, Nadeem Jamali
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Many-to-Many Communication in Radio Networks

Algorithmica, 2007
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Bogdan S. Chlebus   +2 more
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Many problems of the many

Synthese, 2020
David Lewis (Papers in metaphysics and epistemology: volume 2. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp 164–182, 1993) offers two solutions to the problem of the many, one of which relies on supervaluationism and the other on the notion of “almost-identity” for the most part.
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Many-To-Many Distribution

1996
Of all the chapters in this monograph, this is perhaps the one which is least related to the existing literature. Sections 6.2, 6.4.2 and 6.5.1 — considering respectively distribution with 0, 1, and 2 transshipments — are based on Daganzo (1987c).
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Many Worlds, Many Minds, and (Many) Relations

2023
Abstract Accounts of quantum theory that bring to the fore the relationship between the system and the observer, or measuring device, include Everett’s ‘Many Worlds’ interpretation and Rovelli’s ‘Relational Quantum Mechanics’, both of which are considered in Chapter 9.
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QoS-guaranteed one-to-many and many-to-many multicast routing

Computer Communications, 2003
Quality-of-service (QoS) multicast routing with more than one metric has always been technically challenging, since many of them are NP-hard. Most existing QoS multicast routing algorithms are heuristic. Furthermore, many of them considered only the unicast shortest paths, either based on propagation delay or the number of hops.
W. Melody Moh, Bang Nguyen
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