Four-class labels
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| Binary labels
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| Entity
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| Definition1
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| Definition2
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2 | 1 |
categorical data
|
data that can be categorized according to similarities or differences in kind ex: political affiliation, taste ranking, color of an m& m
|
qualitative data, data that can be placed into categories . e.g. gender, favorite classes, favourite food, names of pets, etc.
|
0 | 0 |
categorical data
|
data that represents the attributes of a group of people, events, or objects
|
- qualitative data - data that can be sorted into distinct groups or categories - two main types of categorical data is ordinal data and nominal data
|
1 | 0 |
categorical data
|
- qualitative data - data that can be sorted into distinct groups or categories - two main types of categorical data is ordinal data and nominal data
|
qualitative data is also called....
|
2 | 1 |
categorical data
|
qualitative data that has no inherent mathematical meaning. e.g. race, gender, yes/no question response, state of residence
|
qualitative data, data that can be placed into categories . e.g. gender, favorite classes, favourite food, names of pets, etc.
|
1 | 0 |
categorical data
|
place an individual into one of several groups or categories (e.g. gender) sometimes #s go here - like phone numbers blocked by area code
|
data that is described by one or another of a set of terms (like new or used)
|
0 | 0 |
categorical data
|
used to find percentages
|
data for which each piece of data fits into exactly one of several different groups or categories. also called qualitative data.
|
0 | 0 |
categorical data
|
data representing counts or number of observations in each category
|
is a type of data consisting of categorical variables or that has been converted into a different form of data. eg of categorical variables are race, sex, gender etc
|
2 | 1 |
categorical data
|
data that consists of variables that denote groupings or labels.
|
data that classifies observations without quantitative meaning (for example, colors of cars) or where quantitative amounts are categorized (for example, &"0-10, 11-20, ...&").
|
2 | 1 |
categorical data
|
qualitative data that has no inherent mathematical meaning. e.g. race, gender, yes/no question response, state of residence
|
data that can be put into categories (like what color you prefer, your gender, or the state you were born in).
|
3 | 1 |
categorical data
|
data that is divided into different categories, such as eye color, favorite sport, or type of shoes.
|
observations that can be sorted into groups or categories (colors, subjects)
|
3 | 1 |
categorical data
|
data that can be put into categories (like what color you prefer, your gender, or the state you were born in).
|
data that can be categorized according to similarities or differences in kind ex: political affiliation, taste ranking, color of an m& m
|
2 | 1 |
categorical data
|
- qualitative data - data that can be sorted into distinct groups or categories - two main types of categorical data is ordinal data and nominal data
|
data that can be sorted or divided by type (into categories) rather than by numerical values ex: bar graph, circle graph, pictograph
|
2 | 1 |
categorical data
|
data that can be sorted or divided by type than by numerical values
|
qualitative data is also called....
|
3 | 1 |
categorical data
|
qualitative data, data that can be placed into categories . e.g. gender, favorite classes, favourite food, names of pets, etc.
|
represent differing kinds rather than amounts (gender, marital status, or breed of dog, etc.)
|
3 | 1 |
categorical data
|
data that can be sorted or divided by type than by numerical values
|
data that can be sorted or divided by type (into categories) rather than by numerical values ex: bar graph, circle graph, pictograph
|
1 | 0 |
categorical data
|
data that can be categorized according to similarities or differences in kind ex: political affiliation, taste ranking, color of an m& m
|
represent differing kinds rather than amounts (gender, marital status, or breed of dog, etc.)
|
2 | 1 |
categorical data
|
-qualitative -data is categorized into groups -the groups describe the data
|
data containing labels that can be divided into groups.
|
2 | 1 |
categorical data
|
word variables that fall into categories e.g. hair colour
|
data where the values are categories. for example, the breeds of 10 different dogs, another example is the colors of 100 different flowers.
|
3 | 1 |
categorical data
|
qualitative data which can be allocated to specific groups. may be nominal data (named), ordinal data (ordered), or dichotomous (present/absent).
|
data that can be sorted or divided by type (into categories) rather than by numerical values ex: bar graph, circle graph, pictograph
|
2 | 1 |
categorical data
|
qualitative data that has no inherent mathematical meaning. e.g. race, gender, yes/no question response, state of residence
|
data that can be categorized according to similarities or differences in kind ex: political affiliation, taste ranking, color of an m& m
|
3 | 1 |
categorical data
|
data that can be categorized or grouped.
|
data that can be grouped by specific categories.
|
3 | 1 |
categorical data
|
data that can be sorted or divided by type than by numerical values
|
qualitative data which can be allocated to specific groups. may be nominal data (named), ordinal data (ordered), or dichotomous (present/absent).
|
3 | 1 |
categorical data
|
data that can be put into categories (like what color you prefer, your gender, or the state you were born in).
|
qualitative data, data that can be placed into categories . e.g. gender, favorite classes, favourite food, names of pets, etc.
|
3 | 1 |
categorical data
|
observations that can be sorted into groups or categories such as shoe colors or favorite vegetables
|
observations that can be sorted into groups or categories (colors, subjects)
|
3 | 1 |
categorical data
|
data that is divided into different categories, such as eye color, favorite sport, or type of shoes.
|
observations that can be sorted into groups or categories such as shoe colors or favorite vegetables
|
3 | 1 |
wireless communications
|
the transmission of user data between devices without the use of wires.
|
is defined as the transmission of digital data while connected to some type of data network, without the use of wires.
|
3 | 1 |
wireless communications
|
the transmission of user data between devices without the use of wires.
|
data communication method that does not require physical connections among devices that use it.
|
2 | 1 |
wireless communications
|
uses radio frequencies (rf) or infrared (ir) waves to transmit data between devices on a lan.
|
the transmission of user data between devices without the use of wires.
|
0 | 0 |
social network analysis
|
examines patterns of communication among organization members to look at how information flows between them
|
identifies the informal structures and their embedded social relationships that are active in an organization.
|
1 | 0 |
social network analysis
|
quantitative method for studying properties of a social network sociogram
|
-quantitative method for studying -consisting of three parts
|
2 | 1 |
social network analysis
|
focuses on power relationships in a community by looking at who people turn to in times of need
|
a method for examining relationships in a community, often conducted by identifying who people turn to in times of need
|
0 | 0 |
social network analysis
|
-quantitative method for studying properties of a social network consisting of 3 parts -sociogram: a visual depiction of a social network, has nodes and arcs and ego in center
|
&"measurement of the characteristics of linkages between 'units', whether individuals, groups, or organizations that form a defined population.&" (holton, 2008)
|
1 | 0 |
social network analysis
|
a method that examines patterns of relationship among individuals, group or organizations
|
identifies the informal structures and their embedded social relationships that are active in an organization.
|
0 | 0 |
social network analysis
|
- pattern of interactions among individuals - id groups that comprise the network, individuals who link the groups, and other network members - diagnose communication patterns and communication effectiveness
|
identifies the informal structures and their embedded social relationships that are active in an organization.
|
0 | 0 |
network applications
|
those applications that require a network to communicate with one another in order to function.
|
services and facilities that users invoke are each provided by application software.
|
0 | 0 |
network applications
|
services and facilities that users invoke are each provided by application software.
|
offer a specific service with its own form of user interface but can communicate over a single shared network
|
0 | 0 |
network applications
|
user perspective: network is an extension of a shared storage software perspective: three kinds, os, network service, and applications software
|
services and facilities that users invoke are each provided by application software.
|
0 | 0 |
network applications
|
user perspective: network is an extension of a shared storage software perspective: three kinds, os, network service, and applications software
|
those applications that require a network to communicate with one another in order to function.
|
0 | 0 |
network applications
|
those applications that require a network to communicate with one another in order to function.
|
offer a specific service with its own form of user interface but can communicate over a single shared network
|
0 | 0 |
new technology
|
is expensive to develop & increases demand for its use
|
-technical issues can pose a problem. -some physicians and patients may not be tech savvy
|
3 | 1 |
bipartite graph
|
two types of nodes, links are allowed only between opposite types
|
nodes are in two disjoint sets (types), and every edge connects different types of nodes
|
2 | 1 |
desktop computers
|
designed for use at a desk or table and is composed of separate components
|
personal computers designed to stay in one location. these computers require a constant source of electricity.
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
basically another name for your code. what composes your program. the file extension indicates the programming language it was written in.
|
the program instructions you enter using a text editor
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
a list of commands typed into one or more text files, using a high-level language.
|
a collection of high-level language program statements in a text file.
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
able to read the program and understand it (english type statement)
|
the current code that makes up a program; needs interpreted or compiled mod12
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
code computer programmers can manipulate to change how a piece of software, a &"program&" or &"application&", works
|
must be human generated for software; first step to make software
|
0 | 0 |
source code
|
is a set of statements a programmer writes in a programming language.
|
programming statements written in a high level programming language
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
a program in a high-level language before being compiled
|
a program written in a high-level language, created in the text editor
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
the programming code used to build a software product.
|
must be human generated for software; first step to make software
|
0 | 0 |
source code
|
the original high-level language program written by the computer programmer.
|
- computer hardware does not understand high-level languages - source code must be translated into a language the computer understands
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
basically another name for your code. what composes your program. the file extension indicates the programming language it was written in.
|
a collection of high-level language program statements in a text file.
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
a list of commands typed into one or more text files, using a high-level language.
|
the program instructions you enter using a text editor
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
the programming code used to build a software product.
|
code computer programmers can manipulate to change how a piece of software, a &"program&" or &"application&", works
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
basically another name for your code. what composes your program. the file extension indicates the programming language it was written in.
|
any collection of computer instructions, possibly with comments, written using a human-readable programming language, usually as plain text. every program starts off with you creating this type of code.
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
a text listing of commands in a high level programming language to be compiled, interpreted or assembled into an executable computer program.
|
programming code that has not yet been compiled into an executable file.
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
basically another name for your code. what composes your program. the file extension indicates the programming language it was written in.
|
the actual written code of a program before it is translated into machine code.
|
0 | 0 |
source code
|
language used to write programs. it is interpreted line by line by the computer and can be edited at any time.
|
is any collection of computer instructions, possibly with comments, written using a human-readable programming language, usually as plain text.
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
the program code that you create using an editor and that either is interpreted or is compiled
|
the current code that makes up a program; needs interpreted or compiled mod12
|
3 | 1 |
source code
|
a text listing of commands in a high level programming language to be compiled, interpreted or assembled into an executable computer program.
|
a program, stored in a file, in a high-level language before being compiled or interpreted.
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
able to read the program and understand it (english type statement)
|
program code, few lines to 1,000,000's java, c++ etc, tell a program how to function
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
is the coding input into a system by the programmer from which the machine code is developed for computer use.
|
-computers cannot excite source code -usually written by humans in computer language -programs called compilers transform source code into object code, which is executable
|
0 | 0 |
source code
|
the program instructions you enter using a text editor
|
any collection of computer instructions, possibly with comments, written using a human-readable programming language, usually as plain text. every program starts off with you creating this type of code.
|
3 | 1 |
source code
|
the original high-level language program written by the computer programmer.
|
the human-readable version of a program created in a high-level language by a programmer
|
0 | 0 |
source code
|
a list of commands typed into one or more text files, using a high-level language.
|
the actual written code of a program before it is translated into machine code.
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
a collection of high-level language program statements in a text file.
|
the actual written code of a program before it is translated into machine code.
|
3 | 1 |
source code
|
the readable statements of a program, written in a programming language; they are later translated into object code.
|
the statements you write in a programming language before they are translated to object code
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
program code is also called source code.
|
the statements you write in a programming language before they are translated to object code
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
text listing of commands to be compiled / assembled into executable program
|
a program, stored in a file, in a high-level language before being compiled or interpreted.
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
able to read the program and understand it (english type statement)
|
the program code that you create using an editor and that either is interpreted or is compiled
|
0 | 0 |
source code
|
code computer programmers can manipulate to change how a piece of software, a &"program&" or &"application&", works
|
-underlying code under &"the hood: of a software package - built by the programmers involved with the development of the application -usually unseen by the regular users of the software
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
programming code that has not yet been compiled into an executable file.
|
a program, stored in a file, in a high-level language before being compiled or interpreted.
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
the actual written code of a program before it is translated into machine code.
|
any collection of computer instructions, possibly with comments, written using a human-readable programming language, usually as plain text. every program starts off with you creating this type of code.
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
is a set of statements a programmer writes in a programming language.
|
the original program in a high level language
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
source code can be anything that anyone can write. higher level language. ex: .c .java files.
|
any collection of computer instructions, possibly with comments, written using a human-readable programming language, usually as plain text. every program starts off with you creating this type of code.
|
3 | 1 |
source code
|
instructions or statements in a high-level programming language; normally stored in a file that's named to indicate both its function and programming language.
|
the instructions programmers write in a higher-level language. normally written in a file named to indicate both its purpose and language.
|
0 | 0 |
source code
|
a text listing of commands in a high level programming language to be compiled, interpreted or assembled into an executable computer program.
|
a program in a high-level language before being compiled and has a .java extension
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
the readable statements of a program, written in a programming language; they are later translated into object code.
|
program code is also called source code.
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
a program made up of statements
|
program statements written using a programming language, such as c# or java.
|
0 | 0 |
source code
|
the programmer's procedural language
|
programming language statements
|
3 | 1 |
source code
|
human readable version of a program created in a high-level language by a programmer; source code must first be translated into machine language using a compiler or interpreter
|
human understandable code that is written by the programmer in the language that is being used for development. this is then converted to machine code by a compiler or interpreter.
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
the actual lines of instructional code that make the program work, is not accessible to the general public
|
must be human generated for software; first step to make software
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
the actual written code of a program before it is translated into machine code.
|
the program instructions you enter using a text editor
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
a collection of computer instructions written using a programming language
|
instructions that make up the software, entered by the programmer using a programming language.
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
a text listing of commands to be compiled or assembled into an executable computer program.
|
program code, few lines to 1,000,000's java, c++ etc, tell a program how to function
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
human readable computer code
|
computer code written by humans and understandable by humans. source code must be translated into machine code before it can be processed
|
3 | 1 |
source code
|
programs written in high-level language
|
high-level language instructions.
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
computer code as written by humans and understood by humans
|
human readable computer code
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
programming code that has not yet been compiled into an executable file.
|
text listing of commands to be compiled / assembled into executable program
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
the program code that you create using an editor and that either is interpreted or is compiled
|
program code, few lines to 1,000,000's java, c++ etc, tell a program how to function
|
3 | 1 |
source code
|
programming statements written in a high level programming language
|
the original program in a high level language
|
3 | 1 |
source code
|
the instructions the programmer has written in high-level language
|
the human-readable version of a program created in a high-level language by a programmer
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
the actual lines of instructional code that make the program work, is not accessible to the general public
|
code computer programmers can manipulate to change how a piece of software, a &"program&" or &"application&", works
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
statements written by programmer
|
the statements a programmer writes in a high level programming language
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
the actual lines of instructional code that make the program work, is not accessible to the general public
|
the programming code used to build a software product.
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
the human-readable version of a program created in a high-level language by a programmer
|
a collection of computer instructions written in a human-readable programming language.
|
3 | 1 |
source code
|
the instructions the programmer has written in high-level language
|
the original high-level language program written by the computer programmer.
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
programming language statements
|
program statements written in a programming language
|
2 | 1 |
source code
|
programming code that has not yet been compiled into an executable file.
|
a program in a high-level language before being compiled and has a .java extension
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
- computer hardware does not understand high-level languages - source code must be translated into a language the computer understands
|
the human-readable version of a program created in a high-level language by a programmer
|
1 | 0 |
source code
|
- computer hardware does not understand high-level languages - source code must be translated into a language the computer understands
|
a collection of computer instructions written in a human-readable programming language.
|
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