「pervasive」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

pervasive

1語右で並び替え

該当件数:117件

  • In 2003, Pervasive acquired Data Junction Corporation, makers o
  • nate this world, much as their buildings and pervasive advertising dominate both the city and the s
  • ved Fe3+ oxides volumetrically small, though pervasive and spectrally dominant.
  • ptors, while others are due to its role as a pervasive and powerful antioxidant, with a particular
  • d and insignificant statement of policy to a pervasive and transformative regulatory measure by def
  • f the claim that television is an especially pervasive and pernicious contributor to the "dumbing-d
  • r and Director for the Institute for Mobile, Pervasive, and Agile Computing Technologies (IMPACT) a
  • s not suffer from these disadvantages: it is pervasive, and most programming languages treat 0 as a
  • el and Distributed Systems and Networks, the Pervasive and Mobile Computing Journal, the Journal on
  • rthoclase (adularia) alteration, often quite pervasive and producing distinct salmon-pink alteratio
  • outh Asian geopolitics and economics shows a pervasive and hostile anti-India bias due to the BBC's
  • but it is a fast-growing industry utilizing pervasive and ambient technology to create new kinds o
  • d defining context of use is the single most pervasive and important factor.
  • e economic and social disorganization became pervasive and the discipline of Austro-Hungarian soldi
  • Imitation is often pervasive, and may be either strict or free; the time
  • us of research conducted at TecO has been on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing, with emphasis on w
  • Nortel has recognized hyperconnectivity as a pervasive and growing market condition that is at the
  • Such enzymes are pervasive and, for example, are required for the synth
  • The Wiesel Commission report also documented pervasive anti-Semitism and violence against Jews in R
  • omes normal, then ubiquitous, and finally so pervasive as to be invisible, that the really profound
  • l Area, as well as maintaining a presence as pervasive as the Kempeitai had.
  • nd to explore issues reflective of attitudes pervasive at the time of their composition.
  • ctive Data Warehouse is an important part of pervasive BI as it provides historical data infused wi
  • y", as the use of hyperbole in pop lyrics is pervasive but never admitted.
  • Reacting against the pervasive Calvinism of the Great Awakening, the succes
  • e behind socialist realism also underlay the pervasive censorship of Communist societies.
  • Perhaps the most pervasive commemoration of his legacy is the use of hi
  • Centre for Pervasive Computing
  • relationship with Lotus Software and the IBM Pervasive Computing Division.
  • Telematics, and is attached to the Chair for Pervasive Computing Systems, currently held by Michael
  • rch lab with the title "TecO: Technology for Pervasive Computing".
  • tate physicist who has made contributions to pervasive computing, pioneered the use of copper and s
  • and is the founding Editor-in-Chief of IEEE Pervasive Computing.
  • determination of what constitutes "severe or pervasive conduct" is invariably based on an examinati
  • His opposition to this pervasive corruption around him has been suggested as
  • to probe the nature and distribution of the pervasive dark matter, and employing individual stars
  • Pervasive Data MatchMerge
  • Pervasive DataRush
  • Pervasive DataSolutions
  • Newton was an outsider to the more pervasive depictions of American life in the 1950s and
  • order could be diagnosed), or if symptoms of pervasive developmental disorder are present unless pr
  • Infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy is a rare pervasive developmental disorder that primarily affect
  • tention deficit disorder, hyperactivity, and pervasive developmental disorders.
  • erapy (ECT) as a potential treatment of this pervasive disorder.
  • it appears to be a reversal of the otherwise pervasive effects of confirmation bias: in this area,
  • In the 1980s a pervasive effort was made to reconstruct the ground.
  • rists unwittingly reveal an unattractive and pervasive ethnocentrism to O'Rourke's cameras.
  • work with Patterson and Sassaman, revealing pervasive flaws in the Internet's certificate authorit
  • Hexazinone is a known and pervasive groundwater contaminant, due to its high wat
  • The advent of cable television and its pervasive growth has seen the masses exposed to a wide
  • Care'06 the first workshop on ubiquitous and pervasive healthcare.
  • of the CLDC and has been responsible for the pervasive hiring of mobster Angelo "the Hook" LaPietra
  • rest of the PRC where control over media is pervasive, Hong Kong enjoys "real press freedom" accor
  • achusetts Institute of Technology to develop pervasive, human-centered computing.
  • an motives, which contrasts sharply with the pervasive idea that consumer tastes are heterogeneous.
  • and his generation; Brock avoided the dense, pervasive imitation and full textures of contemporary
  • nance and unblended textures, as well as the pervasive imitation and canonic writing techniques of
  • five voices, and like those of Gombert, use pervasive imitation with all the voices being equal; t
  • of the period, such as smooth polyphony and pervasive imitation, but he was unusually attentive to
  • mic and social crises of the middle class is pervasive in the film, the emphasis is on the existent
  • ial election, a color which has since become pervasive in Iran.
  • e to the medieval fantasy settings otherwise pervasive in the MUD genre and for providing strong su
  • receded as the Lipscomb view has become more pervasive in the fellowship nationally.
  • ACLOs were specially pervasive in Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil.
  • has been suggested as an underlying disease pervasive in all forms of addiction.
  • Government propaganda, pervasive in North Korea itself, is not overtly presen
  • DTMB has been a pervasive influence on naval architecture for 70 years
  • s hometown, worrying and singing against the pervasive influence of globalization.
  • Use of the term is based on the pervasive influence of American media and not a define
  • culpture didn't end as much as they became a pervasive influence, fundamental to the related develo
  • Wienerite, very largely due to Andrew Neil's pervasive influence.
  • It is a tragic tale of pervasive, institutionalized, bureaucratic incompetenc
  • rs available from the ONI that show just how pervasive internet censorship is in a certain country
  • g or refuting' [evidence], given the alleged pervasive involvement of law enforcement in his theory
  • with inefficient irrigation systems lead to pervasive irrigation practices, with farmers applying
  • MPAA Rating: R for pervasive language, some drug and sexual content.
  • loop, with a polyglutamyl domain displaying pervasive length differences in length.
  • never in the paired manner of Josquin or the pervasive manner of the later Franco-Flemish composers
  • his piece can be seen as a commentary on the pervasive media culture in America, as it explores how
  • Pervasive Media Studio
  • Planet strategy, based on his background in pervasive messaging.
  • Pervasive metadata and discovery: WS-Referral
  • Despite its pervasive nature, there has been a lack of etiological
  • ponents of the plug-in argue Auto-Tune has a pervasive negative effect on society's perception and
  • uthentic combat episodes with a concept of a pervasive Otherworld that merges with our reality in a
  • ukotun returned to Stanford, and founded the Pervasive Parallelism Laboratory at Stanford after gat
  • Begging and homelessness are also pervasive, particularly around the bus and train stati
  • d Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders--'a pervasive pattern of grandiosity (in fantasy or behavi
  • It is a personality trait marked by a pervasive pattern of negative attitudes and passive, u
  • CS) released survey results that demonstrate pervasive political influence of science at the Food a
  • istory of the movement that created the most pervasive political impulse in American politics.
  • o an anti-colonial revolt, but constituted a pervasive political revolution.
  • nts, and ants are known to be among the most pervasive postdispersal seed predators.
  • Due to the neighborhood's pervasive poverty during the Great Depression, the nei
  • alleged racial harassment was a persistent, pervasive practice, the appellate court held that the
  • ), and for developing the programming of the pervasive process of polyketide synthesis".
  • "Riot In Cell Block #9" is a classic and pervasive R&B song composed by Jerry Leiber and Mike S
  • against Georgians occurred in the context of pervasive racism and xenophobia in Russia."
  • SAA requires consistent and pervasive, real-time monitoring of network resources t
  • Background (CMB) radiation spectrum - an all pervasive sea of microwave radiation originating just
  • a focus in communication mechanisms that are pervasive, secure and intuitive for humans to perceive
  • al needs of men and women, but rather to the pervasive sex-role stereotype that caring for family m
  • A pervasive societal machismo and misogyny are also reve
  • Pervasive Software
  • Pervasive Software develops and distributes data infra
  • In some cases bioturbation is so pervasive that it completely obliterates sedimentary s
  • Death is a pervasive theme in his work (Clark, 1996), and Tom die
  • Allmusic notes a "swinging R&B vibe pervasive throughout the album," judging that "while c
  • oyment in that it was sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the condition of the victim's emplo
  • There is an entirely different and pervasive tradition concerning the cup of the Last Sup
  • ld be unable to pay their obligations caused pervasive uncertainty during the crisis.
  • Panic of 1837 - pervasive USA economic recession w/ bank failures; a 5
  • Panic of 1873 - pervasive USA economic recession w/ bank failures, kno
  • articles Katz analyzes and comments on “the pervasive use of sports metaphors in presidential disc
  • ovelty of the calculus of structures was its pervasive use of deep inference, which it was argued i
  • has been perpetuated by its long history and pervasive use.