LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES Clause Samples
LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES a) Each volume shall contain a list of all tables and figures within that volume.
b) The List of Tables and Figures will not count against the page limitations for their respective volumes.
LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES. Table 4.1: Human-machine interaction touchpoints… 124-126 Figure 2.1: Operation of an anti-personnel mine 32 Figure 2.2: Manually-operated weapon system… 34 Figure 2.3: Lethal autonomous weapon system… 35 Figure 2.4: Deep neural network and its hidden layers… 63 Figure 2.5: A RNN’s take on breakfast… 64 Figure 2.6: Adversarial images… 80 Figure 2.7: Adversarial objects… 80 Figure 2.8: A simplified two-dimensional manifold… 82 Figure 5.1: Targeting categories… 147 Figure 5.2: The engagement continuum… 151 Figure 5.3: The NATO Joint Targeting Cycle… 152 Figure 5.4: The US Joint Targeting Cycle 152 Figures 5.5-5.8: Various targeting activities undertaken by a range of battle staffs ……………………………………………………………………………………...172 Figure 6.1: Establishing the ‘ground truth’ in a relatively complex environment… 191 Figure 7.1: The chronology of targeting 264 Figure 8.1: Alternative deployment scenarios and the ‘threshold of lawfulness’… 282 A2/AD Anti-access/area-denial AI Artificial intelligence AMW Air and Missile Warfare (Manual) AP I Additional Protocol I ATR Automatic Target Recognition CCM Convention on Cluster Munitions CCW Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons CDEM Collateral Damage Estimation Methodology CIHL Customary International Humanitarian Law Study CNN Convolutional neural network CODE Collaborative Operations in Denied Environments DARPA Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency DMA Definite military advantage DNN Deep neural network DoD Department of Defense (US) ECD Estimated collateral damage ECMA Effective contribution to military action EO/IR Electro-optical/infrared F2T2EA Find, Fix, Track, Target, Engage, Assess GC Geneva Convention(s) GGE Group of Governmental Experts (meeting) GPS Global Positioning System HVT High-value target ICRC International Committee of the Red Cross IHL International humanitarian law ISR Intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance JFC Joint Force Commander JTCB Joint Targeting Coordination Board LAWS Lethal autonomous weapon system(s) LOAC Law of armed conflict (Manual) MAA Military advantage anticipated MHC Meaningful human control MN-H Military necessity-humanity (balance) MoD Ministry of Defence (UK) NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organisation NGO Non-governmental organisation OODA Observe, Orient, Decide, Act PGM Precision-guided munition PID Positive identification PNT Position, Navigation, Timing RNN Recurrent neural network ▇▇▇ Rules of engagement T&E Testing and evaluation TLC Tactical-level combat TRACE Target...
LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES. Tables Figures
LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES. Figure 1: The CompBioMed Logo (‘standard’ version) 12 Figure 2: The CompBioMed Logo ('header’ version) 12 Figure 3: CompBioMed Slide Tempate 13 Figure 4: The CompBioMed Twitter Account 15 V1.0 01/12/2016 ▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇ First Draft V1.1 15/12/2016 ▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇ Second Draft V1.2 21/12/2016 ▇▇▇▇▇▇ Kiri Final Draft ▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇ CBK Sci Con Author ▇▇▇▇▇ ▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ UCL Editor ▇▇▇▇▇▇ ▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ UPF Editor ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ BSC Editor ▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇ BSC Editor ▇▇▇ Centre of Excellence WP Work Package KPI Key Performance Indicator HPC High Performance Computing SME Small and Medium Enterprise R&D Research and Development COST European Cooperation in Science and Technology MoU Memorandum of Understanding Computational methods, based on human biology, are now reaching maturity in the biomedical domain, rendering predictive models of health and disease increasingly relevant to clinical practice by providing a personalized aspect to treatment. Computer based modelling and simulation is well established in the physical sciences and engineering, where the use of high performance computing (HPC) is now routine. CompBioMed is a user-driven Centre of Excellence (▇▇▇) in Computational Biomedicine, designed to nurture and promote the uptake and exploitation of high performance computing within the biomedical modelling community. Our user communities come from academia, industry and clinical practice. The CompBioMed Centre of Excellence in Biomedical Computing is distributed in nature, relying on collaboration within the project, and also with external stakeholders. To this end, CompBioMed will develop and coordinate dissemination activities that enable us to engage external stakeholders in academia, healthcare and industry with the activities of the project. The success of CompBioMed relies on its messages, developments, activities, and results being disseminated into the biomedical community, as well as growing and interacting with its user communities. This deliverable, D3.2: Dissemination Action Plan, acts as a detailed and comprehensive report on the dissemination actions that will be carried out by the project. This deliverable is linked to CompBioMed’s Task 3.1: Production of a Dissemination Action Plan, and the release of it is also Milestone 2 in the project. This action plan is a ‘living document’ that will be updated throughout the project, as required.
LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES. INTRODUCTION 1 II. THE ERA-ENVHEALTH STRATEGY AND TOOLS FOR DISSEMINATION 1
LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES. Table 1: Key Words Utilized for Systematic Review from 2001 to 2017 Table 2: Questions and Answers from Emergency Department Physician Table 3: Questions and Answers from Private-Practice Dentist in Atlanta #1 Table 4: Questions and Answers from Private-Practice Dentist in Atlanta #2 Table 5: Questions and Answers from Electronic Health Record Software Technology Employee Table 6: Research Questions and Synthesis of Expert Opinions of the Project Figure 1: Nationwide Dental-Related Emergency Department Visits: 2000 to 2012 Figure 2: Dental Insurance Coverage Status: 1996 Figure 3: Dental Insurance Coverage Status: 2010 Figure 4: Data Mapping Via Patient Identifier ACA Affordable Care Act ADA® American Dental Association® ADA® SCDI American Dental Association® Standards Committee on Dental- Informatics ANSI American National Standards Institute ARRA American Recovery and Reinvestment Act CDA® Clinical Document Architecture® CDT Current Dental Terminology CHCS Composite Health Care System CMS Centers for Medicare and Medicaid COHRI Consortium for Oral Health-Related Informatics DICOM® Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine® DDS Dental Diagnostic System (EZCodes) DoD Department of Defense ED Emergency Department EDR Electronic Dental Record EHR Electronic Health Record EP Eligible Professional FHIR® Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resource® FQHC Federally Qualified Health Center HIPAA Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 HIT Health Information Technology HITECH Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act HITSP Health Information Technology Standards Panel HL7® Health Level 7® HL7® V3® HL7 Version 3® HTTPS Hypertext Transfer Protocol ICD International Classification of Diseases IHS Indian Health Service IRB Institutional Review Board IT Information Technology JSON JavaScript Object Notation LOINC® Logical Observation Identifiers Names and Codes® MU Meaningful Use OAuth Open Authorization REST Representational State Transfer ROI Return on Investment RPMS Resource and Patient Management System SDO Standards Development Organization SME Subject Matter Expert SNODENT Systemized Nomenclature of Dentistry SNOMED Systemized Nomenclature of Medicine SNOMED-CT Systemized Nomenclature of Medicine Clinical Terms UCSF University of California San Francisco UTHealth University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston VHA Veteran’s Health Administration VistA Veteran’s Administration and Technology Architecture XML Ext...
LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES. Figure 1: New software architecture of the ▇▇▇▇▇▇ system. Figure 2: Monitoring information. Figure 3: Data recording web interface. Figure 4: DC/DC output configuration. Figure 5: New version of shell design. Front-side view. Figure 6: New version of shell design. Back-side view. Figure 7: Communications architecture. Figure 8: Onboard ▇▇▇▇▇▇ Robot Power Architecture. Figure 9: Low-Level Communication Architecture
LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES. Figure 1 Type of organisations involved in E&H research programming since 2006 9 Figure 2 Yearly budget of E&H programmes 14 Figure 3 Number of projects funded from 2006 to date 14 Figure 4 Number of E&H programmes focused on selected themes related to human 15 Figure 5 health aspects Number of E&H programmes focused on selected agents 16 Figure 6 Number of E&H programmes focused on selected human health effects 17 Figure 7 Number of E&H programmes which used selected research methods 18 Figure 8 Number of E&H programmes focusing on selected social aspects of the environment, health and population 19 Table 1 Yearly budget of the E&H programmes and number of projects funded from 13 Table 2 2006 to date The research programme managing organisations involved in E&H Annex 2 Table 3 programmes since 2006 Overview of the general information and general objectives of the E&H Annex 3 programmes Environment and Health (E&H) research is a broad and complex area that requires the cooperation of a wide community of experts and authorities. The European Commission, as well as the World Health Organisation, have expressed the need for better coordination and use of research results to support policy development on Environment and Health. This “Draft overview of programmes“ provides a first description of the E&H research landscape and gives a survey of national programmes owned or managed by the ERA-ENVHEALTH consortium partners. Necessary information was collected through a questionnaire survey focused on describing the programme manager organisations, providing overall information on the E&H programmes (objectives, budget and source of funding, topics) and information on the number of projects funded by the E&H programmes. The information was collected from 14 organisations which provided information on 18 E&H programmes. The survey confirmed that the E&H progra mes dealt with a very wide range of objectives, agents, topics and other E&H issues and that there is a need to bring together scientists from many disciplines including environmental, medical, biomedical and socio-economic sciences, public health research, economists and legal experts to find solutions to environmental issues related to health and human well-being problems. The information collected in this overview will serve as an input into the E&H research database which will be a platform for mutual information and experience sharing within the E&H partners. Environment, health, researc , programme, proj...
LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES. Table 1 Table 2 Table 3 Table 4 NCI CTCAE category and grade for respiratory AEs 38 Bivariate analysis of respiratory AE vs no respiratory AE groups… 40 Bivariate analysis of early versus late respiratory AEs… 41 Multivariable logistic regression analysis (respiratory AE vs no respiratory AE) 42 Table 5 Multivariable survival analysis with ▇▇▇ PH model for recurrent events (respiratory AE vs no respiratory AE) 43 Figure 1 CONSORT diagram demonstrating subject eligibility 37 Figure 2 Time-to-event distribution from initial presentation 39 Figure 3 Survival analysis: time to fluid overload state… 44 Figure 4 Total days in fluid overload state… 45 Figure 5 Infection subtypes… 46 Figure 6 Survival analysis: time to infection state… 47
LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES. Fig. 1. The product-relationship matrix p. 5 (▇▇▇▇▇▇▇, 2009)
Fig. 2. Supply chain costing p. 12 (▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ & ▇▇▇▇▇▇, 1996)
Fig. 3. Activity-based costing model for supply chain management p. 14 (▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ et al, 2011)
Fig. 4. Supply chain complexity p. 16 (▇▇▇▇▇▇ & ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇, 2001) Fig. 5. Dyadic EVA analysis p. 17 (▇▇▇▇▇▇ & ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇, 2005)