Publications

Found 4258 results
Author [ Title(Asc)] Type Year
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Srivastava, M., Hansen M., Burke J., Parker A., Reddy S., Saurabh G., et al. (2006).  Wireless Urban Sensing Systems.
Motlicek, P., Ullal V.., & Hermansky H. (2007).  Wide-Band Perceptual Audio Coding Based on Frequency-Domain Linear Prediction. Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing (ICASSP 2007). 1, 265-268.
Paxson, V., & Floyd S. (1995).  Wide-Area Traffic: The Failure of Poisson Modeling. IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking. 3(3), 226-244.
Paxson, V., & Floyd S. (1997).  Why We Don't Know How To Simulate The Internet. Proceedings of the 1997 Winter Simulation Conference.
Vinyals, O., Jia Y., & Darrell T. (2013).  Why Size Matters: Feature Coding as Nystrom Sampling.
Ananthanarayanan, G., Ghodsi A., Shenker S. J., & Stoica I. (2012).  Why Let Resources Idle? Aggressive Cloning of Jobs with Dolly. 1-6.
Petruck, M. R. L. (2009).  Why Is This Day Different from All Others?.
Mirghafori, N., Fosler-Lussier E., & Morgan N. (1995).  Why Is ASR Harder For Fast Speech And What Can We Do About It?. IEEE Snowbird Workshop '95.
Wegmann, S., & Gillick L. (2010).  Why Has (Reasonably Accurate) Automatic Speech Recognition Been So Hard to Achieve?.
Gilbert, A. L., Regier T., Kay P., & Ivry R. B. (2006).  Whorf Hypothesis Is Supported in the Right Visual Field but Not The Left. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 103(2), 489-494.
Hinds, D.. A., Stuve L.. L., Nilsen G.. B., Halperin E., Eskin E., Ballinger D.. G., et al. (2005).  Whole-Genome Patterns of Common DNA Variation in Three Human Populations. Science. 307(5712), 1072-1079.
Parton, K., McKeown K. R., Coyne B., Diab M. T., Grishman R., Hakkani-Tür D., et al. (2009).  Who, What, When, Where, Why? Comparing Multiple Approaches to the Cross-Lingual 5W Task. 423-431.
Frampton, M., Fernández R.., Ehlen P.., C. Christoudias M., Darrell T., & Peters S. (2009).  Who is "You"? Combining Linguistic and Gaze Features to Resolve Second-Person References in Dialogue. 273-281.
Greenberg, S. (2001).  Whither Speech Technology? - A Twenty-First Century Perspective. Proceedings of the 7th European Conference on Speech Communication and Technology (Eurospeech 2001).
Choi, J., Larson M., Li X., Friedland G., & Hanjalic A. (2016).  Where to be wary: The impact of widespread photo-taking and image enhancement practices on users' geo-privacy.
Willinger, W., & Paxson V. (1998).  Where Mathematics Meets the Internet. Notices of the American Mathematical Society. 45(8), 961-970.
Bryant, J., Chang N., Porzel R., & Sanders K. (2001).  Where is natural language understanding? Toward context-dependent utterance interpretation. Proceedings of the 7th Annual Conference on Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing AMLaP.
Knox, M. Tai, Mirghafori N., & Friedland G. (2012).  Where did I go Wrong?: Identifying Troublesome Segments for Speaker Diarization Systems.
Friedrich, T., & Neumann F. (2010).  When to Use Bit-Wise Neutrality. Natural Computing. 9(1), 283-294.
Bailey, D. R. (1997).  When Push Comes to Shove: A Computational Model of the Role of Motor Control in the Acquisition of Action Verbs.
Bailey, D. R. (1997).  When Push Comes to Shove: A Computational Model of the Role of Motor Control in the Acquisition of Action Verbs.
Frieze, A., Karp R. M., & Reed B. (1995).  When is the assignment bound tight for the asymmetric traveling-salesman problem?. SIAM Journal on Computing. 24(3), 484-493.
Frieze, A., Karp R. M., & Reed B. (1992).  When is the Assignment Bound Tight for the Asymmetric Traveling-Salesman Problem?.
Marczak, B., Scott-Railton J., Marquis-Boire M., & Paxson V. (2014).  When Governments Hack Opponents: A Look at Actors and Technology.
Faria, A., & Morgan N. (2008).  When a Mismatch Can Be Good: Large Vocabulary Speech Recognition Trained with Idealized Tandem Features. 1574-1577.

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