9 resultados para geographical classification
em Aberystwyth University Repository - Reino Unido
Resumo:
Struyf, J., Dzeroski, S. Blockeel, H. and Clare, A. (2005) Hierarchical Multi-classification with Predictive Clustering Trees in Functional Genomics. In proceedings of the EPIA 2005 CMB Workshop
Resumo:
R. Jensen and Q. Shen, 'Webpage Classification with ACO-enhanced Fuzzy-Rough Feature Selection,' Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Rough Sets and Current Trends in Computing (RSCTC 2006), LNAI 4259, pp. 147-156, 2006.
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C. Shang and Q. Shen. Aiding classification of gene expression data with feature selection: a comparative study. Computational Intelligence Research, 1(1):68-76.
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M. Galea, Q. Shen and J. Levine. Evolutionary approaches to fuzzy modelling. Knowledge Engineering Review, 19(1):27-59, 2004.
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K. Rasmani and Q. Shen. Subsethood-based fuzzy modelling and classification. Proceedings of the 2004 UK Workshop on Computational Intelligence, pages 181-188.
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Oliver, A., Freixenet, J., Marti, R., Pont, J., Perez, E., Denton, E. R. E., Zwiggelaar, R. (2008). A novel breast tissue density classification framework. IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in BioMedicine, 12 (1), 55-65
Resumo:
R. Zwiggelaar, S.M. Astley, C.J. Taylor and C.R.M. Boggis, 'Linear structures in mammographic images: detection and classification', IEEE Transaction on Medical Imaging 23 (9), 1077-1086 (2004)
Resumo:
This is a report on what can be learnt from our world dataset about viewers of The Lord of the Rings who were aged under 16. In this report, I draw both on the world set, and on the UK subset, sometimes drawing comparisons between them. The reason for using both is that, obviously, the world set is so much larger (comprising 24,739 in toto, with 2475 under 16), but the UK set (comprising 3115 in toto, and 306 under 16s) allows us to explore both some of the specificities of responses here, the qualitative meaning of some responses (given we worked in 14 languages, many are inaccessible to us for analysis), and of course their relations to the quantitative patterns that emerge.
Resumo:
Brian Huntley, Rhys E. Green, Yvonne C. Collingham, Jane K. Hill, Stephen G. Willis , Patrick J. Bartlein, Wolfgang Cramer, Ward J. M. Hagemeijer and Christopher J. Thomas (2004). The performance of models relating species geographical distributions to climate is independent of trophic level. Ecology Letters, 7(5), 417-426. Sponsorship: NERC (awards: GR9/3016, GR9/04270, GR3/12542, NER/F/S/2000/00166) / RSPB RAE2008