scholarly journals The global Beta test for hidden periodicities in signals and its extensions to multivariate systems

2020 ◽  
Vol 195 ◽  
pp. 105550
Author(s):  
Leonardo B. Felix ◽  
Moisés C. Gonçalves ◽  
Tiago Zanotelli ◽  
Antonio M.F.L. Miranda de Sá ◽  
David M. Simpson
Author(s):  
Yuniansyah Yuniansyah ◽  
Andri Saputra
Keyword(s):  

Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengembangkan multimedia pembelajaran pengenalan huruf hijaiyah. Pengenalan huruf Hijaiyah pada anak-anak usia dini sangatlah penting, karena mengenal huruf hijaiyah adalah dasar untuk mepelajari cara membaca Al-Qur’an dengan baik dan benar. dengan multimedia pembelajaran diharapkan dapat meningkatkan minat belajar pada anak-anak. Metode yang digunakan pada pengembangan multimedia pembelajaran pengenalan huruf hijaiyah adalah metode 4-D (Define, Design, Develop, Disseminate). Pendifinisan masalah menggunakan survey lapangan dan mempelajari buku iqro, proses desain menggunakan Adobe Fotoshop CS6. Pada proses pengembangan dilakukan penggabungan materi berupa teks, gambar,  audio, dan animasi dengan menggunakan adobe flash cs 6 dan dilanjutkan uji coba menggunakan metode Alpha dan Beta test. Hasil penelitian ini adalah DVD multimedia pembelajaran pengenalan huruf hijaiyah yang siap digunakan. Berdasarkan hasil evaluasi pada saat penyebaran multimedia pembelajaran pengenalan huruf hijaiyah dapat disimpulkan bahwa multimedia ini sangat membantu guru-guru taman pendidikan Al-Qur’an dan anak didiknya serta anak-anak yang ingin mengenal huruf hijaiyah. .


2014 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. 50-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Javorskyj ◽  
D. Dehay ◽  
I. Kravets

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junqi Yang ◽  
Zhenfei Zhan ◽  
Kai Zheng ◽  
Jie Hu

1999 ◽  
Vol 121 (10) ◽  
pp. 70-72
Author(s):  
Hutchinson Harry

This article presents study that shows beta testing shapes software to the users’ hands so the product will fit the marketplace. MoldWizard is intended to reduce the time necessary to design complex mold tooling, such as this mold used to manufacture the plastic housings for high-quality nail guns. Depending on the complexity of a mold and its eventual use, the design process can require as many as 50 different steps, including tasks such as importing and cleaning up the CAD model of the part, adjusting its size for shrinkage, separating the core and cavity, generating mold bases, and adding sliders, inserts, and other standard components. Minco Tool & Mold uses Unigraphics to design molds like the one shown in the article for an automobile hubcap. Minco participated in the MoldWizard beta test program. A news group at the website let the test users communicate directly with each other. When beta testers had questions about how to use the program, they posted them in the news group and other testers would respond.


Author(s):  
Marek Kretowski ◽  
Marek Grzes

Decision trees are, besides decision rules, one of the most popular forms of knowledge representation in Knowledge Discovery in Databases process (Fayyad, Piatetsky-Shapiro, Smyth & Uthurusamy, 1996) and implementations of the classical decision tree induction algorithms are included in the majority of data mining systems. A hierarchical structure of a tree-based classifier, where appropriate tests from consecutive nodes are subsequently applied, closely resembles a human way of decision making. This makes decision trees natural and easy to understand even for an inexperienced analyst. The popularity of the decision tree approach can also be explained by their ease of application, fast classification and what may be the most important, their effectiveness. Two main types of decision trees can be distinguished by the type of tests in non-terminal nodes: univariate and multivariate decision trees. In the first group, a single attribute is used in each test. For a continuousvalued feature usually an inequality test with binary outcomes is applied and for a nominal attribute mutually exclusive groups of attribute values are associated with outcomes. As a good representative of univariate inducers, the well-known C4.5 system developed by Quinlan (1993) should be mentioned. In univariate trees a split is equivalent to partitioning the feature space with an axis-parallel hyper-plane. If decision boundaries of a particular dataset are not axis-parallel, using such tests may lead to an overcomplicated classifier. This situation is known as the “staircase effect”. The problem can be mitigated by applying more sophisticated multivariate tests, where more than one feature can be taken into account. The most common form of such tests is an oblique split, which is based on a linear combination of features (hyper-plane). The decision tree which applies only oblique tests is often called oblique or linear, whereas heterogeneous trees with univariate, linear and other multivariate (e.g., instance-based) tests can be called mixed decision trees (Llora & Wilson, 2004). It should be emphasized that computational complexity of the multivariate induction is generally significantly higher than the univariate induction. CART (Breiman, Friedman, Olshen & Stone, 1984) and OC1 (Murthy, Kasif & Salzberg, 1994) are well known examples of multivariate systems.


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