Essays about: "probability judgment"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 12 essays containing the words probability judgment.
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1. Punctuation Restoration as Post-processing Step for Swedish Language Automatic Speech Recognition
University essay from Luleå tekniska universitet/Institutionen för system- och rymdteknikAbstract : This thesis focuses on the Swedish language, where punctuation restoration, especially as a postprocessing step for the output of Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) applications, needs furtherresearch. I have collaborated with NewsMachine AB, a company that provides large-scale mediamonitoring services for its clients, for which it employs ASR technology to convert spoken contentinto text. READ MORE
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2. Reliability Assessment of Passive ICS in an SMR as part of the PSA Analysis
University essay from KTH/FysikAbstract : Passive safety systems are increasingly being utilized in prospective nuclear power plant designs. Indeed, the use of safety systems driven by natural phenomena might be seen as an unmitigated virtue. READ MORE
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3. Japanese Translation of Technical Terms in Debian
University essay from Högskolan Dalarna/Institutionen för språk, litteratur och lärandeAbstract : The notion that consistency is important when translating technical terms is nothing new in itself. Despite this, it is not uncommon to see the very same technical terms being translated into a multitude of words, even when various efforts to unify the process have been proposed. READ MORE
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4. Searching for the silver lining of the US cloud
University essay from Stockholms universitet/Institutionen för data- och systemvetenskapAbstract : We live in a society where more and more services are available online, and to an increasing extent, people expect that there should be a digital solution. The demand for digitalization of the public sector is increasing. READ MORE
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5. Are normative probabilty judgments a "system two"-operation?
University essay from Umeå universitet/Institutionen för psykologiAbstract : Previous research on human judgment and decision making has demonstrated systematic and predictable biases of judgment in experimental settings. One example of this is the tendency to intuitively violate the conjunction rule - a simple rule of probability. This was well illustrated in the famous Linda-problem. (Tversky & Kahneman, 1983). READ MORE