Four-class labels
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decision making
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the process of choosing between alternatives, which may include doing nothing.
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the thought processes involved in evaluating and choosing from among a set of alternatives; it usually involves some kind of risk.
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2 | 1 |
decision making
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the action or process of deciding something or of resolving a question
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the skill of making a determination, as to a question, problem, or doubt, by making a judgment
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1 | 0 |
decision making
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is usually triggered by a problem but is often handled in a way that does not focus on eliminating the underlying problem.
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process of selecting a course of action that will solve a problem.
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1 | 0 |
decision making
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the process of choosing between alternatives, which may include doing nothing.
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choice = between two or more alternatives, know outcome decision = critical element of uncertainty over certain outcome not good at making them
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0 | 0 |
decision making
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process whereby appropriate alternatives are weighed and one is ultimately selected
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may or may not involve a problem, but it always involves selecting one of several alternatives, each of which may be appropriate under certain circumstances. subset of problem solving
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1 | 0 |
decision making
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the process of considering and selecting alternatives
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complex, cognitive process often defined as choosing a particular course of action. selecting a logical choice from available actions
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2 | 1 |
decision making
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an attempt to select the best alternative when faced with several options
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-complex, cognitive process often defined as choosing a particular course of action -thought process of selecting a logical choice from the available options
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2 | 1 |
decision making
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choosing one alternative from the various alternative solutionsthat can be pursued
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application of knowledge in choosing among alternatives for a particular problem, issue or concern with the aim of deriving a most satisfying outcome
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0 | 0 |
decision making
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using clinical reasoning to assess, plan, set priorities, predict, evaluate, and determine the best approach to use in a particular context
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must reflect the fair treatment of customers
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3 | 1 |
decision making
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process of selecting a logical choice from the available options
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the process of selecting one choice from a number of alternatives
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2 | 1 |
decision making
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a complex cognitive process often defined as choosing a particular course of action
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-is a complex, cognitive process, the nurse chooses a particular course of action -usually triggered by a problem
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1 | 0 |
decision making
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-is a complex, cognitive process, the nurse chooses a particular course of action -usually triggered by a problem
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complex, cognitive process of choosing a particular course of action; the thought process of selecting a logical choice from available options. it involves choosing between courses of action.
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1 | 0 |
decision making
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using clinical reasoning to assess, plan, set priorities, predict, evaluate, and determine the best approach to use in a particular context
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goal oriented decisions are made on the assessment of expected rewards
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1 | 0 |
decision making
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the process of identifying issues and making choices from alternative courses of action
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6 phase model - definition, solution generation, ideas, action planning, evaluation planning, evaluation of the outcome.
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2 | 1 |
decision making
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the process of developing and deciding among alternative ways of resolving a proble. or choosing among alternative opportunities
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the act of choosing one alternative from a set of alternatives
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1 | 0 |
decision making
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using &"what if&" cards to challenge students to examine what they would do in various situations.
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in a study, the average person made ~200 decisions to make decisions we combine external information with knowledge from previous experience
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3 | 1 |
decision making
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choose a solution or answer from among different options;often considered a step in the problem-solving.
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part of problem-solving, which is defined as the process of identifying and choosing alternatives based on the values and preferences of the decision-maker.
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1 | 0 |
decision making
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whenever an input enters the machine, it uses information gathered from the training examples to determine what course of action it should take.
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-establish team rules -gather data -analyze data -formulize recommendation -make decision or go back to previous steps
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3 | 1 |
decision making
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the process of choosing among alternative courses of action.
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the act of choosing one alternative from a set of alternatives
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1 | 0 |
decision making
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process of making choices among alternatives
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in groups, this usually involves the group choosing a single option from a finite list of choices.
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3 | 1 |
decision making
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- complex, cognitive process of choosing a particular course of action - the thought process of selecting a logical choice form available options
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complex, cognitive process often defined as choosing a particular course of action. selecting a logical choice from available actions
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2 | 1 |
decision making
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cognitive strategies used to make a decision depending on the type and number of options
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-complex, cognitive process often defined as choosing a particular course of action -thought process of selecting a logical choice from the available options
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1 | 0 |
decision making
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based on components designed to provide the user with the context, input, processes, and products with which to make decisions
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core of info processing; alternatives are evaluated and appropriate response is selected
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0 | 0 |
decision making
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deciding the proper policy option. lack of agreement based on political issues. group thinking
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an attempt to select the best alternative when faced with several options
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0 | 0 |
decision making
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using &"what if&" cards to challenge students to examine what they would do in various situations.
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must reflect the fair treatment of customers
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0 | 0 |
data storage
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it is not possible to capture and stores data only once in the flat-file environment
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data from recurring operations, such as accounting, is stored in an operational database. data from other sources and the operational database may be loaded into a data warehouse.
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0 | 0 |
data storage
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efficient information system that captures and stores data only once and makes this single source available to all users who need it
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chart of accounts - coding schemas that are well thought out to anticipate management s needs are most efficient and effective ( purpose contains sufficient detail
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2 | 1 |
data storage
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use of recording media to retain data using computers or other devices.
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storing data in a storage medium.
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0 | 0 |
data storage
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includes: - storing - retrieving - deleting accountants need to understand how data are organized and stored in ais and how they can be accessed
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data from recurring operations, such as accounting, is stored in an operational database. data from other sources and the operational database may be loaded into a data warehouse.
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1 | 0 |
data storage
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includes: - storing - retrieving - deleting accountants need to understand how data are organized and stored in ais and how they can be accessed
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receives the read/write commands and data from the server and performs necessary operation to store the data on the physical disks
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1 | 0 |
data storage
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updating one or more databases with new transactions, generally realtional db, after update can be further processed
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the process of updating one or more databases with new transactions. databases are broken down into general and subsidiary ledgers.
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1 | 0 |
data storage
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designed to support analysis and decision making - data warehouse - data mart - data cube
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includes: - storing - retrieving - deleting accountants need to understand how data are organized and stored in ais and how they can be accessed
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0 | 0 |
data storage
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designed to support analysis and decision making - data warehouse - data mart - data cube
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data from recurring operations, such as accounting, is stored in an operational database. data from other sources and the operational database may be loaded into a data warehouse.
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0 | 0 |
data storage
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translates the program's logical/request/structural view of data into physically what the os wants to see
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data from recurring operations, such as accounting, is stored in an operational database. data from other sources and the operational database may be loaded into a data warehouse.
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1 | 0 |
data storage
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translates the program's logical/request/structural view of data into physically what the os wants to see
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receives the read/write commands and data from the server and performs necessary operation to store the data on the physical disks
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2 | 1 |
data storage
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storing data generated by programs
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application programs require data to be stored and retrieved,
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2 | 1 |
data storage
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archival of data
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includes preservation and archiving of data
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0 | 0 |
data storage
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it is not possible to capture and stores data only once in the flat-file environment
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translates the program's logical/request/structural view of data into physically what the os wants to see
|
0 | 0 |
data storage
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designed to support analysis and decision making - data warehouse - data mart - data cube
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receives the read/write commands and data from the server and performs necessary operation to store the data on the physical disks
|
1 | 0 |
data storage
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it is not possible to capture and stores data only once in the flat-file environment
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designed to support analysis and decision making - data warehouse - data mart - data cube
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0 | 0 |
data storage
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involves updating one or more databases with new transactions. after being updated, this data can be further processed and manipulated by other systems or modules.
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the process of updating one or more databases with new transactions. databases are broken down into general and subsidiary ledgers.
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0 | 0 |
data storage
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data from recurring operations, such as accounting, is stored in an operational database. data from other sources and the operational database may be loaded into a data warehouse.
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receives the read/write commands and data from the server and performs necessary operation to store the data on the physical disks
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0 | 0 |
data storage
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includes preservation and archiving of data; mandatory and part of legislation; data no longer actively used is archived
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healthcare facilities have a &"records retention schedule&" - a plan for the management of all records, paper or electronic. must comply with state and federal laws
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1 | 0 |
data storage
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translates the program's logical/request/structural view of data into physically what the os wants to see
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includes: - storing - retrieving - deleting accountants need to understand how data are organized and stored in ais and how they can be accessed
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2 | 1 |
data storage
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most applications programs require data to be stored and retrieved whether it is a small file such a memo produced by a word processor or large database
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storing data generated by programs
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1 | 0 |
data storage
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it is not possible to capture and stores data only once in the flat-file environment
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includes: - storing - retrieving - deleting accountants need to understand how data are organized and stored in ais and how they can be accessed
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0 | 0 |
data storage
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where data can be stored and retrieved from
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storing data generated by programs
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2 | 1 |
data storage
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storing data in a storage medium.
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- type of computer hardware operation - storing digital data in a form which balances considerations of cost, reliability, and access speed
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0 | 0 |
data storage
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it is not possible to capture and stores data only once in the flat-file environment
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receives the read/write commands and data from the server and performs necessary operation to store the data on the physical disks
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0 | 0 |
data storage
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chart of accounts - coding schemas that are well thought out to anticipate management s needs are most efficient and effective ( purpose contains sufficient detail
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creates excessive storage costs of paper documents and/or magnetic forms
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0 | 0 |
interface design
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• the user interface has two main components: • presentation language—the computer-to-human part • action language—human-to-computer part
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as in traditional hci: design of interface elements to facilitate user interaction with functionality
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1 | 0 |
interface design
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concerned on how the user interacts with a website interface
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-design of user experience -designing graphical user interface (gui)
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1 | 0 |
interface design
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• the user interface has two main components: • presentation language—the computer-to-human part • action language—human-to-computer part
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is concerned with specifiying the detail of the interface to an object or to a group of objects
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1 | 0 |
interface design
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as in traditional hci: design of interface elements to facilitate user interaction with functionality
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the process of creating an enjoyable, easy-to-use interface which includes interaction, information, functionality, and presentation design elements.
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0 | 0 |
interface design
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• the user interface has two main components: • presentation language—the computer-to-human part • action language—human-to-computer part
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the process of creating an enjoyable, easy-to-use interface which includes interaction, information, functionality, and presentation design elements.
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0 | 0 |
interface design
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• the user interface has two main components: • presentation language—the computer-to-human part • action language—human-to-computer part
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-clear navigation aids -no dead-end pages -direct access -simplicity and consistency -design integrity and stability -feedback and dialog -bandwidth and interaction
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1 | 0 |
interface design
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as in traditional hci: design of interface elements to facilitate user interaction with functionality
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-clear navigation aids -no dead-end pages -direct access -simplicity and consistency -design integrity and stability -feedback and dialog -bandwidth and interaction
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0 | 0 |
interface design
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is concerned with specifiying the detail of the interface to an object or to a group of objects
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the process of creating an enjoyable, easy-to-use interface which includes interaction, information, functionality, and presentation design elements.
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0 | 0 |
interface design
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as in traditional hci: design of interface elements to facilitate user interaction with functionality
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is concerned with specifiying the detail of the interface to an object or to a group of objects
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2 | 1 |
interface design
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the process of creating an enjoyable, easy-to-use interface which includes interaction, information, functionality, and presentation design elements.
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-clear navigation aids -no dead-end pages -direct access -simplicity and consistency -design integrity and stability -feedback and dialog -bandwidth and interaction
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1 | 0 |
discriminant analysis
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method used to find a linear combination of variables that characterise the dependent variable into one or more classes, dependent/criterion variable is categorical
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statistical methods that use one or more predictor variable(s) to discriminate between categories (dependent variable is categorical). simple/easy to interpret. trained model fast, low memory usage.
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0 | 0 |
discriminant analysis
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process used for categorizing participants along a qualitative y variable using several quantitative predictor (x) variables; calculates selection criteria or &"cutoff&" scores
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used when the measure of the criterion variable is categorical and the predictor measures produce continuous scores
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1 | 0 |
discriminant analysis
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statistical methods that use one or more predictor variable(s) to discriminate between categories (dependent variable is categorical).
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method used to find a linear combination of variables that characterise the dependent variable into one or more classes, dependent/criterion variable is categorical
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0 | 0 |
data cube
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an aggregation of data along various indexes. used to get summary data for specific indexes
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the multidimensional data structure used to store and manipulate data in a multidimensional dbms.
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0 | 0 |
data cube
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an aggregation of data along various indexes. used to get summary data for specific indexes
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grow to n dimensions, becoming hyper cubes. held in memory in a cube cache to speed access.
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2 | 1 |
data cube
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a multidimensional array of values, (ex. pivottable) (they store summary measures from combinations of fields rather than individual records and fields.)
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the multidimensional data structure used to store and manipulate data in a multidimensional dbms.
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2 | 1 |
data cube
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an aggregation of data along various indexes. used to get summary data for specific indexes
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a multidimensional array of values, (ex. pivottable) (they store summary measures from combinations of fields rather than individual records and fields.)
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3 | 1 |
data cube
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multi-dimensional (measures) data structures -data mart or not
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organization of data as a &"multidimensional matrix&", implementation of a data mart
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0 | 0 |
data cube
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- conceptual implementation of storage of data in terms of x-, y-, and z-axes - axes are dimensions of data - a predefined subset of data in database
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represents data in multiple dimensions
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2 | 1 |
data cube
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storing data in a multidimensional matrix
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- conceptual implementation of storage of data in terms of x-, y-, and z-axes - axes are dimensions of data - a predefined subset of data in database
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3 | 1 |
data cube
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a shape for visualizing a data warehouse as a multidimensional db
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the perceived shape by a user of a multidimensional database in a data warehouse.
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0 | 0 |
data cube
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a collection of data that contains numeric facts called measures, which are categorized by dimensions, such as time and geography.
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two, three or more dimensions object, where each dimension represents a database attribute and the data in the cube cells represent measures of interest
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0 | 0 |
physical memory
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the amount of memory that can be addressed by the processor.
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the actual number of memory bytes that are physically installed in a computer system; can be smaller than addressable memory but never larger.
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1 | 0 |
physical memory
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the actual number of memory bytes that are physically installed in a computer system; can be smaller than addressable memory but never larger.
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the amount of ram actually sitting on memory modules in your computer
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1 | 0 |
physical memory
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the amount of memory that can be addressed by the processor.
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limits the size of a process
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0 | 0 |
physical memory
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the actual number of memory bytes that are physically installed in a computer system; can be smaller than addressable memory but never larger.
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limits the size of a process
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2 | 1 |
physical memory
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- memory seen by the memory unit - loaded into the memory - address register of memory
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memory seen by the mmu.
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0 | 0 |
physical memory
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limits the size of a process
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the amount of ram actually sitting on memory modules in your computer
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3 | 1 |
energy conservation
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keeping heat or cooled areas to a minimum, using materials produced w/ low amounts of energy, using recycled materials or recyclable materials.
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-keeping the heated or cooled area to a minimum, keeping heat flow to a minimum, using materials with low embodied energy, using recyclable materials
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2 | 1 |
energy conservation
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reducing/eliminating unnecessary wasting of energy
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involves reducing or eliminating the unnecessary waste of energy. quickest, cheapest, cleanest way to provide more energy, reduce pollution and slow global warming.
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3 | 1 |
energy conservation
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reducing or eliminating unnecessary energy waste
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involves reducing or eliminating the unnecessary waste of energy
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1 | 0 |
energy conservation
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reducing/eliminating unnecessary wasting of energy
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- the reduction or elimination of the waste of energy - 84% of all commercial energy is wasted due to 2nd law of thermodynamics
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3 | 1 |
energy conservation
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use less energy by reducing energy use and waste
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using less energy ex. reducing energy use and waste (carpooling, reducing the number of automobile trips)
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2 | 1 |
energy conservation
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using less energy for example by reducing energy and waste. ex carpooling
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using less energy, in terms of reducing the amount of energy use and waste, differs from increasing efficinecy
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1 | 0 |
energy conservation
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finding ways to use less energy or to use energy more efficiently.
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using less (turning of lights)
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0 | 0 |
energy conservation
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saving energy by using energy wisely and not wasting it
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not using energy to help conserve it instead of using energy that is better for the earth (practicing energy efficiency)
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1 | 0 |
configuration management
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system building,component versions,version management,system versions,release management, system releases ,change management
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the process of managing changes in an evolving software product
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2 | 1 |
configuration management
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during the development process, you have to keep track of the many different versions of each software component in a configuration management system
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hardware and software; must provide good documentation common tasks - add, modify, delete - update software on clients
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0 | 0 |
configuration management
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process by which all artefacts and the relationship between them are stored, retriever, uniquely identified, and modified. artefacts: source code, tests, requirements, db scripts, environmental setup.
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have a strategy for storing baselines and controlling changes for: -requirements -source code -db scripts -environment setup -tests
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2 | 1 |
configuration management
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a process for controlling changes in system requirements during software development
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during the development process, you have to keep track of the many different versions of each software component in a configuration management system
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1 | 0 |
configuration management
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the process of maintaining and managing the various versions of various artifacts of a software project.
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used to control the versions of software and formally track control changes to the software configuration
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1 | 0 |
configuration management
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the process of maintaining and managing the various versions of various artifacts of a software project.
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system building,component versions,version management,system versions,release management, system releases ,change management
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2 | 1 |
configuration management
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managing a changing software, version tracking etc
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system building,component versions,version management,system versions,release management, system releases ,change management
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2 | 1 |
configuration management
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is the processes to control , coordinate, and track: code, requirements, documentation, problems, change request, designs, tools/ compilers/ libraries/ patches, changes made to them, and who makes the changes.
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hardware and software; must provide good documentation common tasks - add, modify, delete - update software on clients
|
2 | 1 |
configuration management
|
managing a changing software, version tracking etc
|
the process of maintaining and managing the various versions of various artifacts of a software project.
|
2 | 1 |
configuration management
|
during the development process, you have to keep track of the many different versions of each software component in a configuration management system
|
is the processes to control , coordinate, and track: code, requirements, documentation, problems, change request, designs, tools/ compilers/ libraries/ patches, changes made to them, and who makes the changes.
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3 | 1 |
configuration management
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managing a changing software, version tracking etc
|
the process of managing changes in an evolving software product
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1 | 0 |
configuration management
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the quality plan should specify configuration management tools and procedures, including those change-control procedures meant to be applied through out the project
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during the development process, you have to keep track of the many different versions of each software component in a configuration management system
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0 | 0 |
configuration management
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a process for controlling changes in system requirements during software development
|
hardware and software; must provide good documentation common tasks - add, modify, delete - update software on clients
|
0 | 0 |
configuration management
|
the quality plan should specify configuration management tools and procedures, including those change-control procedures meant to be applied through out the project
|
is the processes to control , coordinate, and track: code, requirements, documentation, problems, change request, designs, tools/ compilers/ libraries/ patches, changes made to them, and who makes the changes.
|
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