Four-class labels
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0 | 0 |
data visualization
|
allows users to see data transform info into a business perspective
|
- describes technologies allowing users to &"see&"/visualize data to transform info to business perspective - simplify complex data in easy to grasp/understand format
|
0 | 0 |
data visualization
|
an outcome and process of placing data in graphical context to assist with conveying its significance. displays information that could be overlooked in tabular or text form.
|
refers to the techniques used to communuicate data or information by encoding it as visual objects to communicate information clearly and efficiently
|
3 | 1 |
data visualization
|
refers to the techniques used to communuicate data or information by encoding it as visual objects to communicate information clearly and efficiently
|
refers to the techniques used to communicate data or information by encoding it as visual objects (e.g., points, lines or bars) contained in graphics.
|
2 | 1 |
data visualization
|
the process of presenting data to users in visual formats, thereby making it applications more attractive and understandable to users &"the value of visualization&"
|
these techniques, dss typically help users better understand the output, visually appealing the users
|
1 | 0 |
data visualization
|
organizations use presentation tools to present the results of analyses to users in visual formats such as charts, graphs, figures, and tables
|
-transform data into another media (graphical, sound) to quickly display results and analyze trends -can be interactive/ show relationships and network, before system
|
0 | 0 |
data visualization
|
displaying data in ways that promote thinking
|
a visual representation of data withers goal of clearly communicating or better understanding the meaning of the data
|
2 | 1 |
data visualization
|
provides a picture that reflects the data, can lead to better understanding on what the data means
|
it can help quickly draw conclusions and see relationships among the data.
|
1 | 0 |
data visualization
|
a way of displaying data that is visually simple and easy to interpret like a chart or graph
|
is the synthesis of many disciplines which take advantage of large data sets, technology and human perception.
|
3 | 1 |
data visualization
|
describes technologies that allows users to see or visualize data to transform information into a business perspective
|
- describes technologies allowing users to &"see&"/visualize data to transform info to business perspective - simplify complex data in easy to grasp/understand format
|
2 | 1 |
data visualization
|
graphic display of statistics. used as a communication tool with charts to convince people in a compelling way to take action on info.
|
describes the graphical display of data to make it easier for an audience to make sense of it and find important patterns within it.
|
2 | 1 |
data visualization
|
use graphics to show data for reasoning about quantitative info and description, exploration, tabulation, or decoration
|
refers to the techniques used to communuicate data or information by encoding it as visual objects to communicate information clearly and efficiently
|
2 | 1 |
data visualization
|
presenting data in a visual way such as with graphs and charts; helps business people glean data insights they might not otherwise discern from tabular data
|
describes the graphical display of data to make it easier for an audience to make sense of it and find important patterns within it.
|
1 | 0 |
data visualization
|
the study of the visual representation of data, meaning &"information&" which has been abstracted in some schematic form, including attributes or variables for the units of information
|
refers to the techniques used to communuicate data or information by encoding it as visual objects to communicate information clearly and efficiently
|
3 | 1 |
data visualization
|
data presented to users in visual formats such as text, graphics, and tables following data processing; makes it applications more attractive and understandable to users
|
the process of presenting data to users in visual formats, thereby making it applications more attractive and understandable to users &"the value of visualization&"
|
1 | 0 |
data visualization
|
-transform data into another media (graphical, sound) to quickly display results and analyze trends -can be interactive/ show relationships and network, before system
|
involves creating charts, graphs, images, diagrams, etc. to allow for better communication and understanding of big data sets
|
3 | 1 |
data visualization
|
abstracting data to provide information in a visual format ●enhances the user's ability to efficiently comprehend the meaning of the data.
|
process of abstracting data to provide a visual representation of the data that enhances the user's ability to effectively comprehend the meaning of the data
|
2 | 1 |
data visualization
|
after processing, data presented to users in visual formats such as text, graphics, and tables.
|
after data has been processed it can be presented to users in visual formats such as text, graphics and tables -gis -reality mining
|
2 | 1 |
data visualization
|
is the synthesis of many disciplines which take advantage of large data sets, technology and human perception.
|
describes the graphical display of data to make it easier for an audience to make sense of it and find important patterns within it.
|
0 | 0 |
data visualization
|
is the synthesis of many disciplines which take advantage of large data sets, technology and human perception.
|
graphic display of statistics. used as a communication tool with charts to convince people in a compelling way to take action on info.
|
1 | 0 |
data visualization
|
use graphics to show data for reasoning about quantitative info and description, exploration, tabulation, or decoration
|
the study of the visual representation of data, meaning &"information&" which has been abstracted in some schematic form, including attributes or variables for the units of information
|
1 | 0 |
data visualization
|
organizations use presentation tools to present the results of analyses to users in visual formats such as charts, graphs, figures, and tables
|
involves creating charts, graphs, images, diagrams, etc. to allow for better communication and understanding of big data sets
|
2 | 1 |
data visualization
|
abstracting data to provide information in a visual format
|
the representation of data in graphical and multimedia formats for human analysis.
|
3 | 1 |
data visualization
|
the process of presenting data to users in visual formats, thereby making it applications more attractive and understandable to users.
|
these techniques, dss typically help users better understand the output, visually appealing the users
|
1 | 0 |
data visualization
|
an outcome and process of placing data in graphical context to assist with conveying its significance. displays information that could be overlooked in tabular or text form.
|
refers to the techniques used to communicate data or information by encoding it as visual objects (e.g., points, lines or bars) contained in graphics.
|
2 | 1 |
data visualization
|
a way of displaying data that is visually simple and easy to interpret like a chart or graph
|
describes the graphical display of data to make it easier for an audience to make sense of it and find important patterns within it.
|
2 | 1 |
data visualization
|
the study of the visual representation of data, meaning &"information&" which has been abstracted in some schematic form, including attributes or variables for the units of information
|
a term used to describe the use of graphical displays to summarize and present information about a data set. applies pattern recognition, spatial awareness & aesthetics
|
3 | 1 |
data visualization
|
allows users to &"see&" or visualize data to transform information into a business perspective -sophisticated analysis techniques such as pie charts, controls, instruments, maps, time-series graphs, and more
|
abstracting data to provide info in a visual format -enhance user's ability to efficiently comprehend the meaning of data -pie/bar charts -heat map -gantt chart -line graphs -scatter plots
|
2 | 1 |
data visualization
|
a way of displaying data that is visually simple and easy to interpret like a chart or graph
|
graphic display of statistics. used as a communication tool with charts to convince people in a compelling way to take action on info.
|
2 | 1 |
data visualization
|
describes the use of graphical displays to summarize and present information about a data set with many tools available such as graphs, charts and tables
|
a term used to describe the use of graphical displays to summarize and present information about a data set.
|
3 | 1 |
data visualization
|
the process of displaying data (often in large quantities) in a meaningful fashion to provide insights that will support better decisions.
|
the process of displaying data meaningfully in order to improve decision-making
|
2 | 1 |
data structures
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group of related data items stored under the same name (implementation)
|
data structures are the actual representations of data and operations, i.e. implementation
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1 | 0 |
data structures
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a method of organizing data characterized by the access provided to the data. databases are mapped to a number of different files maintained by the underlying o.s.
|
is a specialized format for organizing and storing data. it is a scheme for organizing related pieces of information. examples are arrays, linked lists, queues, stacks, binary trees, etc.
|
0 | 0 |
data structures
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a method of organizing data characterized by the access provided to the data. databases are mapped to a number of different files maintained by the underlying o.s.
|
describe the set of objects and how they are related.
|
1 | 0 |
data structures
|
a collection of data values, the relationships among them, and the functions or operations that can be applied to the data.
|
- specific arrangements of data attributes that define a single instance of a data flow.
|
2 | 1 |
data structures
|
is a specialized format for organizing and storing data. it is a scheme for organizing related pieces of information. examples are arrays, linked lists, queues, stacks, binary trees, etc.
|
collection of data items in memory of a running program that are organized in some fashion that allows items to be stored and retrieved by some fixed methods
|
1 | 0 |
data structures
|
a method of organizing data characterized by the access provided to the data. databases are mapped to a number of different files maintained by the underlying o.s.
|
collection of data items in memory of a running program that are organized in some fashion that allows items to be stored and retrieved by some fixed methods
|
0 | 0 |
data structures
|
a collection of data values, the relationships among them, and the functions or operations that can be applied to the data.
|
a collection of data elements with operations that store and manipulate individual elements
|
0 | 0 |
data structures
|
that enabled the programs to adequately manipulate information.
|
the sum of rules concerning different forms of data and their associations to each other
|
2 | 1 |
data structures
|
describe the set of objects and how they are related.
|
is a specialized format for organizing and storing data. it is a scheme for organizing related pieces of information. examples are arrays, linked lists, queues, stacks, binary trees, etc.
|
1 | 0 |
type safety
|
enforced by the compiler to ensure data is not used in an incorrect or meaningless way
|
the feature of programming languages that prevents assigning values of an incorrect data type.
|
2 | 1 |
web sites
|
a related collection of web pages that is created and maintained by an individual, company, educa6tional institution, or other organization.
|
collection of web pages that is created and maintained by a person, group, or organization
|
2 | 1 |
web sites
|
a related collection of web pages that is created and maintained by an individual
|
collection of web pages that is created and maintained by a person, group, or organization
|
1 | 0 |
web sites
|
a related collection of web pages that is created and maintained by an individual
|
created or maintained by one person or company.
|
3 | 1 |
web sites
|
a collection of related wed pages stored on a server that users can display using a web browser
|
collections of related web pages using a web browser
|
1 | 0 |
web sites
|
collection of web pages that is created and maintained by a person, group, or organization
|
created or maintained by one person or company.
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
a time-ordered sequence of observations taken at regular intervals (usually a line graph of two variables)
|
data set is composed of quantitative entries taken at regular intervals over a period of time.
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
data set is composed of quantitative entries taken at regular intervals over a period of time.
|
a time-ordered sequence of observations taken at regular intervals
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
- a forecasting technique that uses a series of past data points to make a forecast 5 major characteristics: trend, smoothness, mean-reverting, seasonality, and structural break
|
models that predict future demand based on past history trends
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
resulting set of data points taken over specific time intervals
|
a time-ordered sequence of observations taken at regular intervals
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
defined as some quantity that is measured sequentially in time over some interval.
|
variables that are measured at regular intervals over time
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
measurement taken @ regular time intervals
|
a time-ordered sequence of observations taken at regular intervals
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
data set is composed of quantitative entries taken at regular intervals over a period of time.
|
a set of observations on a quantitative variable collected over time
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
a set of observations on a quantitative variable collected over time
|
resulting set of data points taken over specific time intervals
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
time series have the property of functions; only (at most) one data point lands at each possible time
|
multiple instance of one or more measures taken at equidistant points in time
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
an ordered sequence of values of a single quantitative variable measured at regular intervals over time
|
defined as some quantity that is measured sequentially in time over some interval.
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
data points on a graph that may represent an interval of time
|
data on single measurement at multiple points in time
|
3 | 1 |
time series
|
- observations recorded at different points in time (usually equally spaced) example: monthly sales, daily share price
|
set of values for a particular variable for many time periods e.g. quarterly sales over last five years monthly cpi over last 12 years daily returns over last 180 days
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
collection of data points corresponding to temporal measurements of a quantitative variable
|
data on single measurement at multiple points in time
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
a time-ordered sequence of observations taken at regular intervals (usually a line graph of two variables)
|
resulting set of data points taken over specific time intervals
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
a forecasting technique that uses a series of past data points to make a forecast
|
models that predict future demand based on past history trends
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
data collected over several time periods; oooxooo
|
a collection of data recorded over a period of time
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
o1 o2 o3 x o4 o5 o6 -only one group -interested in how participants change -good if you're worried about history affects or maturation
|
a time-ordered sequence of observations taken at regular intervals; data points indexed in time order for a one unit of observation (i.e.: single individual, etc.).
|
3 | 1 |
time series
|
- observations recorded at different points in time (usually equally spaced) example: monthly sales, daily share price
|
when data is recorded sequentially over time and time is an important aspect -equally space monthly, quarterly etc.
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
a set of sequential observations of a variable or variables over time. the time period can be anything--year, quarter, month, week, day, hour, etc.
|
when data is recorded sequentially over time and time is an important aspect -equally space monthly, quarterly etc.
|
0 | 0 |
time series
|
describe how a numerical variable change as a function of time
|
a sequence of data which shows how the value of a variable changes over time. normally such data are collected on a regular periodic basis
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
multiple instance of one or more measures taken at equidistant points in time
|
a time-ordered sequence of observations taken at regular intervals; data points indexed in time order for a one unit of observation (i.e.: single individual, etc.).
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
collection of data points corresponding to temporal measurements of a quantitative variable
|
data points on a graph that may represent an interval of time
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
o1 o2 o3 x o4 o5 o6 -only one group -interested in how participants change -good if you're worried about history affects or maturation
|
multiple instance of one or more measures taken at equidistant points in time
|
0 | 0 |
time series
|
a set of data collected at regular intervals of time, used in understanding cause and effect to make decisions about the future
|
o1 o2 o3 x o4 o5 o6 -only one group -interested in how participants change -good if you're worried about history affects or maturation
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
measurement taken @ regular time intervals
|
a set of observations on a quantitative variable collected over time
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
time series have the property of functions; only (at most) one data point lands at each possible time
|
a set of data collected at regular intervals of time, used in understanding cause and effect to make decisions about the future
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
-a forecasting technique that uses a series of past data points to make a forecast -assumes needs follow a pattern
|
- a forecasting technique that uses a series of past data points to make a forecast 5 major characteristics: trend, smoothness, mean-reverting, seasonality, and structural break
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
a set of observations on a quantitative variable collected over time
|
a time-ordered sequence of observations taken at regular intervals
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
a set of two variable data in which a quantity is measured against time
|
a sequence of data which shows how the value of a variable changes over time. normally such data are collected on a regular periodic basis
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
a time-ordered sequence of observations taken at regular intervals (usually a line graph of two variables)
|
measurement taken @ regular time intervals
|
0 | 0 |
time series
|
time series have the property of functions; only (at most) one data point lands at each possible time
|
o1 o2 o3 x o4 o5 o6 -only one group -interested in how participants change -good if you're worried about history affects or maturation
|
2 | 1 |
time series
|
a time-ordered sequence of observations taken at regular intervals (usually a line graph of two variables)
|
a set of observations on a quantitative variable collected over time
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
describe how a numerical variable change as a function of time
|
a set of two variable data in which a quantity is measured against time
|
3 | 1 |
time series
|
set of observations for a variable over periods of time
|
a set of observations on a variable's outcomes in different time periods.
|
1 | 0 |
time series
|
a set of observations measured at successive points in time or over successive periods of time
|
a sequence of values of a variable taken at successive equally spaced points of time
|
0 | 0 |
traditional approach
|
a file processing system is a type of system used to store and manage information for an organization
|
another name for the sdlc.
|
1 | 0 |
traditional approach
|
project initiation project planning project execution project management project completion control
|
formal approach that takes every stage step by step. no stage can proceed until the previous is completed. also known as the waterfall approach or sdlc.
|
0 | 0 |
life cycle
|
refers to the major activities in the course of product's life
|
needs and activities change depending on what stage of life you are in
|
0 | 0 |
life cycle
|
choice of channel often changes over course of product life cycle
|
the stages of an organism's growth and development.
|
3 | 1 |
life cycle
|
the managing the filing of a record from beginning through final disposition
|
process to manage electronic and manual records from beginning through final disposition
|
0 | 0 |
life cycle
|
a cycle made up of important events that take place during different phases of your life
|
a series of changes in form that an organism goes through, returning to the starting state
|
2 | 1 |
life cycle
|
the stages an organism goes through from birth to death
|
the stages of life from reproduction to the death of an organism
|
0 | 0 |
life cycle
|
place in important life phases, such as career, parenting cycle, or educational process
|
choice of channel often changes over course of product life cycle
|
1 | 0 |
life cycle
|
series of stages through which an individual or family passes through during its lifetime
|
stages a family experiences during its lifetime
|
0 | 0 |
life cycle
|
a series of changes in form that an organism goes through, returning to the starting state
|
place in important life phases, such as career, parenting cycle, or educational process
|
2 | 1 |
life cycle
|
sequence of stages in the productive history of an organism
|
the entire sequence of stages in the life of an organism
|
0 | 0 |
life cycle
|
place in important life phases, such as career, parenting cycle, or educational process
|
the stages of an organism's growth and development.
|
0 | 0 |
life cycle
|
refers to the major activities in the course of product's life
|
the stages of an organism's growth and development.
|
2 | 1 |
life cycle
|
refers to the major activities in the course of product's life
|
this is the stage a product goes through beginning with extraction of resources and ending with disposal when it's no longer needed or used.
|
1 | 0 |
life cycle
|
a cycle made up of important events that take place during different phases of your life
|
the stages of an organism's growth and development.
|
0 | 0 |
life cycle
|
a series of changes in form that an organism goes through, returning to the starting state
|
needs and activities change depending on what stage of life you are in
|
0 | 0 |
life cycle
|
a series of changes in form that an organism goes through, returning to the starting state
|
this is the stage a product goes through beginning with extraction of resources and ending with disposal when it's no longer needed or used.
|
0 | 0 |
life cycle
|
a series of changes in form that an organism goes through, returning to the starting state
|
choice of channel often changes over course of product life cycle
|
0 | 0 |
life cycle
|
needs and activities change depending on what stage of life you are in
|
this is the stage a product goes through beginning with extraction of resources and ending with disposal when it's no longer needed or used.
|
0 | 0 |
life cycle
|
choice of channel often changes over course of product life cycle
|
this is the stage a product goes through beginning with extraction of resources and ending with disposal when it's no longer needed or used.
|
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