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Intelligibility issues

But the intelligence experts disagreed. In July the American Congressional Committee on Intelligence issued its report on the Sverdlovsk incident. The outbreak of anthrax, they claimed, could not have been caused naturally. They had been told by a Soviet emigre , and had seen from classified intelligence files, that the anthrax deaths were the result of an explosion at a biological weapons factory.14... [Pg.279]

R. K. Bose, Copyright Issues in Multimedia, SRI International Business Intelligence Program D92-1692, Menlo Park, Calif., 1992, p. 12. [Pg.132]

Report of the British Intelligence Objectives Subcommittee on (1) The Manufacture of Nitration Products ofBenyene, Toluene, and Chlorobenyene at Griesheim and Eeverkusen, (2) The Manufacture of Aniline andiron Oxide Pigments at Uerdigen, PB 77729 (also issued as BIOS Report No. 1144) and BIOS Trip Report No. 2526, Sept.-Oct. 1946, pp. 25-32. [Pg.265]

Intelligent alarms. Logic is incorporated into the alarm system to determine the nature of the problem and then issue a single alarm to the process operator. Sometimes this is called an expert system. [Pg.770]

Burns, R.S. (1995) The Use of Artificial Networks for the Intelligent Optimal Control of Surface Ships, IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering, 20(1) Special Issue Advanced Control Signal Processing for Oceanic Applications, 20(1), pp. 66-72. [Pg.428]

Two eiiviromiiental issues that dramatized tlie need for intelligent and proper risk comnimiication were ... [Pg.527]

Utilization of intelligent systems in chiral chromatography starts with an original project called CHIRULE developed by Stauffer and Dessy [36], who combined similarity searching and an expert system application for CSP prediction. This issue has recently been reconsidered by Bryant and co-workers with the first development of an expert system for the choice of Pirkle-type CSPs [37]. [Pg.119]

In order to develop intelligent, computer-aided systems with systematic and sound methodologies for the automatic creation of mental models of process operations, we need to resolve the following two and interrelated issues ... [Pg.209]

We hope that the Kyoto meeting will call upon all countries to cooperate in deployment of nuclear power as the available means of responsibly meeting the world s energy needs. The issues are of a global extent seeking intelligent international cooperation. [Pg.50]

Noting that the written record should be intelligibly prepared so that others may benefit from its study (26), Crowley urged readers to examine a sample from an advanced student published in the same issue of The Equinox. He boldly asserted that the more scientific the record is, the better (26). He also cautioned that The A.A. will not take official notice of any experiments which are not thus properly recorded (25). The vision of scientific method that Crowley expressed in The Equinox would certainly have conformed to his own education in scientific research under Ramsay and Collie at London and at Cambridge. For Crowley, scientific illuminism would be characterized by meticulous and objective record keeping of laboratory experiments, a concern about possible sources of error, the broader research community s access to other scientists research results, and the sanctioning of practices by an authorizing body. [Pg.47]

Smith, G. Davidson, Combating Terrorism, London, Routledge, 1990, p. 7 as cited in G. Davidson Smith, Single Issue Terrorism, Commentary No. 74, Canadian Security Intelligence Service, Winter 1998, available at www.csis-scrs.gc.ca/eng/comment/com74 e.html... [Pg.53]

There have been attempts to apply formal methods to the representation of organic compounds [1],[2], some attempts to apply artificial intelligence to organic synthesis [3],[4], and numerous attempts to apply the use of molecular orbital calculations to the verification of the validity of compounds in the synthesis route. This effort was a moderate attempt to examine the representation issues involved in writing production rules for Diels-Alder disconnections. [Pg.231]

In 1975, the Inspeetor General issued a lengthy report on the Use of Volunteers in Chemical Agent Research. (An entire chapter is devoted to this landmark document later in this book.) In the final portion of their report, the IG team takes up the subject of Intelligence Corps Experimentation with Hallucinogenic Dmgs. That s the one that turned on the light. [Pg.218]


See other pages where Intelligibility issues is mentioned: [Pg.510]    [Pg.1596]    [Pg.510]    [Pg.1596]    [Pg.252]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.1141]    [Pg.348]    [Pg.350]    [Pg.387]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.276]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.131]    [Pg.238]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.449]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.204]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.423]    [Pg.247]    [Pg.260]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.3 , Pg.510 , Pg.523 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.3 , Pg.9 , Pg.48 , Pg.510 , Pg.523 ]




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