Results 1 to 10 of about 244,829 (169)

Redundant publication

open access: yesJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 1994
openaire   +2 more sources
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Redundancy and Robustness, or When Is Redundancy Redundant?

Journal of Structural Engineering, 2011
The redundancy of a structure refers to the extent of degradation the structure can suffer without losing some specified elements of its functionality. However, because future structural degradation is unknown during design and analysis, it is evident that structural redundancy is related to robustness against uncertainty.
Yoshihiro Kanno, Yakov Ben-Haim
openaire   +1 more source

Redundancies

Nursing Standard, 1991
Nine Staff at the Terrence Higgins Trust are being made redundant because of a £400,000 deficit. A spokesperson said direct services, but obviously when staff the Trust had not been paid by local authorities for the services it provides.
openaire   +4 more sources

Redundancy, redundancy, redundancy

Proceedings of the international conference on Multimedia information retrieval, 2010
Although redundancy reduction is the key for visual coding in the mammalian visual system [1,2], at a higher level, the visual understanding step, a central component of intelligence, achieves high robustness by exploiting redundancies in the images, in order to resolve uncertainty, ambiguity, or contradiction [3,4].
Xiang Sean Zhou   +9 more
openaire   +1 more source

Prediction of redundant and less redundant letters

Journal of Communication Disorders, 1973
Abstract Twelve aphasic and 12 non-aphasic individuals predicted the missing sequential letters of a paragraph four times, predicting redundant spaces two times and less redundant spaces two times. While non-aphasic individuals made higher mean scores on all tasks than the aphasics, the ratio of success was not the same with the two tasks.
J W, Black   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Inefficient Redundancy

Multivariate Behavioral Research, 1977
Two articles on canonical correlation are criticized as erroneous, Wood (1972) and Nicewander & Wood (1974). In both instances, the errors would have been avoided had the authors been required to offer both the mathematical basis of their contributions and illustrative worked examples.
P, Cohen, J, Cohen
openaire   +2 more sources

Propagation Redundancy in Redundant Modelling

2003
Combining mutually redundant models with channelling constraints increases constraint propagation. However, the extra computation efforts of the additional variables and constraints may outweigh the gain of reduction in search space. In fact, many of the constraints in redundant modelling are not only logically redundant but also propagation redundant ...
Chiu Wo Choi   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Redundant approaches to redundancy

The Cambridge Law Journal, 2000
THE apparently straightforward definition of redundancy contained in section 139 of the Employment Rights Act 1996 has generated a disproportionate and confused body of case law. In essence, redundancy pay is payable in three situations: the business disappears (s. 139(1)(a)(i)); the workplace disappears (s. 139(1)(a)(ii)); the job disappears (s. 139(1)
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Redundancy in CSPs

2008
In this paper, we propose a new technique to compute irredundant sub-sets of constraint networks. Since, checking redundancy is Co-NP Complete problem, we use different polynomial local consistency entailments for reducing the computational complexity. The obtained constraint network is irredundant modulo a given local consistency.
Chmeiss, Assef   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Slurs and Redundancy

Philosophia, 2022
According to nearly all theorists writing on the subject, a certain derogatory content is regularly and systematically communicated by slurs. So united, the theorists disagree sharply on the elements of this content, on its provenance, and on its mechanism.
openaire   +3 more sources

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