Academic literature on the topic 'CCC-Tool'

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Journal articles on the topic "CCC-Tool"

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Hamuľák, Ondrej, and Tanel Kerikmäe. "Indirect Effect of EU Law under Constitutional Scrutiny – the Overview of Approach of Czech Constitutional Court." International and Comparative Law Review 16, no. 1 (2016): 69–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/iclr-2016-0005.

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Summary The paper deals with the non-normative impacts of the EU law in the national legal systems (Czech Republic in particular) and focuses on the approach of the Czech Constitutional Court (CCC) towards the so-called principle of indirect effect of EU law. The authors examine the case law of CCC and offer the conclusions about the place, constitutional relevance and (national) limits of the EU-consistent interpretation of national law. CCC up to date case law clearly indicates that a EU-consistent interpretation is the most ideal tool for meeting the Czech Republic’s membership obligations. But it is simultaneously a tool for preserving the autonomy of the national authorities applying law and reduces possible tensions between supranational and nation law. CCC accepts the indirect effect broadly and used this concept even in controversial cases (European arrest warrant, State responsibility for damages etc.). But still it does not approach this effect without reservations. CCC points on the necessity to protect the fundamental constitutional values (‘Solange’ concept) even in connection with the duty of EU-consistent interpretation.
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Kostanyan, Artak A., Andrey A. Voshkin, and Vera V. Belova. "Analytical, Preparative, and Industrial-Scale Separation of Substances by Methods of Countercurrent Liquid-Liquid Chromatography." Molecules 25, no. 24 (2020): 6020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25246020.

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Countercurrent liquid-liquid chromatographic techniques (CCC), similar to solvent extraction, are based on the different distribution of compounds between two immiscible liquids and have been most widely used in natural product separations. Due to its high load capacity, low solvent consumption, the diversity of separation methods, and easy scale-up, CCC provides an attractive tool to obtain pure compounds in the analytical, preparative, and industrial-scale separations. This review focuses on the steady-state and non-steady-state CCC separations ranging from conventional CCC to more novel methods such as different modifications of dual mode, closed-loop recycling, and closed-loop recycling dual modes. The design and modeling of various embodiments of CCC separation processes have been described.
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Griffin, Richard B., B. Wynne Griffin, and K. W. VanVuren. "Dollarizing The Cash Conversion Cycle." Journal of Business & Economics Research (JBER) 12, no. 3 (2014): 271. http://dx.doi.org/10.19030/jber.v12i3.8731.

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For most companies to be financially successful, it is critically important that operating cash flows be effectively managed. The Cash Conversion Cycle (CCC) is a traditional tool that companies use to measure the average time required for operating cash flows to cycle from cash out for the payment of payables and back to cash flow in from the collection of receivables. Knowledge that the rate their operating cash flow is speeding up or slowing down, as indicated by a decreasing or increasing CCC, while useful information, is of limited value to the company. The CCC indicates nothing about the absolute dollar amount of the cash flow. This paper illustrates a method by which the current year actual CCC and the next year target CCC, along with a few other items of data, can be used to forecast the dollar amount of the next years operating cash flows. The extension of the CCC to enable it to help forecast the dollar amount of operating cash flows makes the CCC more useful to companies attempting to effectively manage operating cash flows.
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Wahby, A. F. "Combined Cell Culture Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay for Quantification of Poliovirus Neutralization- Relevant Antibodies." Clinical Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology 7, no. 6 (2000): 915–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/cdli.7.6.915-919.2000.

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ABSTRACT A combined cell culture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (CCC-ELISA) was developed for measuring the neutralizing antipoliovirus antibodies in human sera. The binding of different concentrations of each of the three poliovirus types to BGM cells in the presence and absence of a constant dilution from each test and reference serum was measured in the CCC-ELISA. The titers of the viruses neutralized by each serum were measured with the titration curves and used for interpretation of neutralizing titers to the three poliovirus types. Analysis of human sera revealed that the sensitivity and specificity of the CCC-ELISA and the microneutralization assay were comparable. The CCC-ELISA is nonsubjective, rapid, and highly reproducible. Furthermore, the CCC-ELISA could potentially be used as a seroepidemiologic tool for assessment of the humoral response to the cell culture infectious viruses.
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Borno, Hala, Patricia Li, Sylvia Zhang, et al. "Implementation of clinician-facing prostate cancer therapeutic clinical trial decision tool at a comprehensive cancer center." Journal of Clinical Oncology 39, no. 6_suppl (2021): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/jco.2021.39.6_suppl.19.

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19 Background: The conventional model for clinical trial (CT) recruitment relies on clinicians to identify potential CTs for patients. Internet technology can be leveraged as a decision tool to enhance the CT recruitment process. Methods: An internet-based, clinician-facing decision tool was developed in genitourinary medical oncology clinic at a Comprehensive Cancer Center (CCC). The tool provided access to a real-time, tailored list of treatment CTs actively recruiting patients with PCa at the CCC based on clinical characteristics inputted by user. The clinical data was summarized. All clinicians (n = 9) with access to the decision tool completed a survey to assess effectiveness and satisfaction. Results: During a 9-month pilot period, user engagement increased from a baseline of 36 to 136 cases per month, with a total of 644 cases overall. Among cases, 525 had metastatic disease, 436 of which were metastatic castration resistant PCa (mCRPC). Overall, 145 cases were classified as having oligo-metastatic ( < = 3) PCa, 93 of whom were also mCRPC. Prior treatments received included abiraterone in hormone-sensitive PCa (HSPC 19.3%, CRPC 48.7%); enzalutamide (HSPC 3.7%, CRPC 34.9%) apalutamide (HSPC 1.3%, CRPC 6.9%), taxane (HSPC 17.2%, CRPC 27.8%), radium-223 (6.1%), sipuleucel-T (18.3%), parp inhibitors (4%), or check-point inhibitors (6%). Clinician-inputted genomics of cases included CDK12 (20.9%), MSI-high disease (13.6%), BRCA1/2 (32.7%), ARID1a (7.3%), ATM (21.8%), FANCA (4.5%), or CHEK2 (6.4%) and HDAC2 (0.9%). Among survey respondents, use of tool in clinic was reported sometimes (22%), often/always (78%). Results of decision tool were reported to inform treatment sometimes (22%) or often/always (78%). Respondents confidence in often/always knowing all available CTs increased from a baseline of 0% to 89%, and 89% of users reported very/complete satisfaction with decision tool. Conclusions: An internet-based CT decision tool for provides detailed clinical characteristics of patients for whom CTs are being considered at a CCC. Clinicians using the decision tool report high levels of satisfaction. The tool was effective in increasing confidence in knowledge of current available CTs. Data gathered in the decision tool may inform future CT development. Future research with expanded use of decision tool among referring clinicians will assess its impact in promoting diversity among CT participants.
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Zillmann, E., M. Schönert, H. Lilienthal, et al. "Crop Ground Cover Fraction and Canopy Chlorophyll Content Mapping using RapidEye imagery." ISPRS - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences XL-7/W3 (April 28, 2015): 149–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/isprsarchives-xl-7-w3-149-2015.

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Remote sensing is a suitable tool for estimating the spatial variability of crop canopy characteristics, such as canopy chlorophyll content (CCC) and green ground cover (GGC%), which are often used for crop productivity analysis and site-specific crop management. Empirical relationships exist between different vegetation indices (VI) and CCC and GGC% that allow spatial estimation of canopy characteristics from remote sensing imagery. However, the use of VIs is not suitable for an operational production of CCC and GGC% maps due to the limited transferability of derived empirical relationships to other regions. Thus, the operational value of crop status maps derived from remotely sensed data would be much higher if there was no need for reparametrization of the approach for different situations. <br><br> This paper reports on the suitability of high-resolution RapidEye data for estimating crop development status of winter wheat over the growing season, and demonstrates two different approaches for mapping CCC and GGC%, which do not rely on empirical relationships. The final CCC map represents relative differences in CCC, which can be quickly calibrated to field specific conditions using SPAD chlorophyll meter readings at a few points. The prediction model is capable of predicting SPAD readings with an average accuracy of 77%. The GGC% map provides absolute values at any point in the field. A high R² value of 80% was obtained for the relationship between estimated and observed GGC%. The mean absolute error for each of the two acquisition dates was 5.3% and 8.7%, respectively.
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Soin, Alexander, Tatiana Maryutina, Natalya Musina, and Andrey Soin. "New Possibility for REE Determination in Oil." International Journal of Spectroscopy 2012 (May 15, 2012): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/174697.

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A novel approach of rare earth elements (REE) determination in crude oil is suggested. Special application of countercurrent chromatography (CCC) is used as a sample pretreatment tool. An oil sample is continuously pumped through the rotating coil column (RCC) as a mobile phase, while an aqueous phase (nitric acid solution) is retained as a stationary phase. Two phases are kept well mixed and agitated, but there is no emulsion at the interface under the chosen conditions. Special features of CCC give an opportunity to vary the volume of oil samples to be analyzed from 10 mL to 1 L or more. Trace metals are preconcentrated into 10 mL of stationary phase (acidic solutions) pumped out of the column so that analysis can be easily determined with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) without additional sample preparation procedures. Optimal concentration of nitric acid in the stationary phase for preconcentration of REE from oil by CCC has been investigated. The combination of CCC with ICP-MS gives the possibility to develop a rapid, reliable, and accurate method of trace metal including rare earth elements (REE) determination in crude oils and oil products. Such method could be an alternative for unexpanded and expensive neutron-activation analysis (NAA).
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Das, Sourav, and Debasish Roy Raja. "Susceptibility analysis of landslide in Chittagong City Corporation Area, Bangladesh." International Journal of Environment 4, no. 2 (2015): 157–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/ije.v4i2.12635.

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In Chittagong city, landslide phenomena is the most burning issue which causes great problems to the life and properties and it is increasing day by day and becoming one of the main problems of city life. On 11 June 2007, a massive landslide happened in Chittagong City Corporation (CCC) area, a large number of foothill settlements and slums were demolished; more than 90 people died and huge resource destruction took place. It is therefore essential to analyze the landslide susceptibility for CCC area to prepare mitigation strategies as well as assessing the impacts of climate change. To assess community susceptibility of landslide hazard, a landslide susceptibility index map has been prepared using analytical hierarchy process (AHP) model based on geographic information system (GIS) and remote sensing (RS) and its susceptibility is analyzed through community vulnerability assessment tool (CVAT). The major findings of the research are 27% of total CCC area which is susceptible to landslide hazard and whereas 6.5 sq.km areas are found very highly susceptible. The landslide susceptible areas of CCC have also been analyzed in respect of physical, social, economic, environmental and critical facilities and it is found that the overall CCC area is highly susceptible to landslide hazard. So the findings of the research can be utilized to prioritize risk mitigation investments, measures to strengthen the emergency preparedness and response mechanisms for reducing the losses and damages due to future landslide events. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/ije.v4i2.12635 International Journal of Environment Vol.4(2) 2015: 157-181
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Mount, Cristin A., Patricia A. Short, George R. Mount, and Christina M. Schofield. "An End-of-Year Oral Examination for Internal Medicine Residents: An Assessment Tool for the Clinical Competency Committee." Journal of Graduate Medical Education 6, no. 3 (2014): 551–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.4300/jgme-d-13-00365.1.

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Abstract Background Comprehensive evaluations of clinical competency consume a large amount of time and resources. An oral examination is a unique evaluation tool that can augment a global performance assessment by the Clinical Competency Committee (CCC). Objective We developed an oral examination to aid our CCC in evaluating resident performance. Methods We reviewed tools used in our internal medicine residency program and other training programs in our institution. A literature search failed to identify reports of a similar evaluation tool used in internal medicine programs. We developed and administered an internal medicine oral examination (IMOE) to our postgraduate year–1 and postgraduate year–2 internal medicine residents annually over a 3-year period. The results were used to enhance our CCC's discussion of overall resident performance. We estimated the costs in terms of faculty time away from patient care activities. Results Of the 54 residents, 46 (86%) passed the IMOE on their first attempt. Of the 8 (14%) residents who failed, all but 1 successfully passed after a mentored study period and retest. Less than 0.1 annual full-time equivalent per faculty member was committed by most faculty involved, and the time spent on the IMOE replaced regular resident daily conference activities. Conclusions The results of the IMOE were added to other assessment tools and used by the CCC for a global assessment of resident performance. An oral examination is feasible in terms of cost and can be easily modified to fit the needs of various competency committees.
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Lecuna, M., F. Pennecchi, A. Malengo, and P. G. Spazzini. "Calibration curve computing (CCC) software v2.0: a new release of the INRIM regression tool." Measurement Science and Technology 31, no. 11 (2020): 114004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-6501/ab7d6e.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "CCC-Tool"

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Juang, Sheng-Chau, and 莊勝超. "A Performance Analysis Tool for CCC Parallel Programming Language." Thesis, 2004. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/95718623774884938522.

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碩士<br>國立中正大學<br>資訊工程研究所<br>92<br>CCC is a high-level parallel programming language that supports both data parallelism and task parallelism. In CCC, data parallelism is specified in single-instruction-multiple-data model, while task parallelism is specified in multiple-instruction-multiple-data model. In CCC, task parallelism supports both message passing communication abstraction and shared variables synchronization abstraction. This thesis describes the design and implementation of a performance analysis tool for CCC. Performance analysis includes performance instrumentation and performance visualization. Performance instrumentation involves statically inserting performance event trace functions into the programs and dynamically measures and records the collected performance events. Performance visualization analyzes the performance event data files and presents both numerical performance statistics and graphical performance visualization. The information provided by this tool can significantly help programmers understand the performance behaviors of parallel CCC programs.
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Nardini, Pascal, Min Chen, Francesca Samsel, Roxana Bujack, Michael Böttinger, and Gerik Scheuermann. "The Making of Continuous Colormaps." 2019. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A34288.

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Continuous colormaps are integral parts of many visualization techniques, such as heat-maps, surface plots, and flow visualization. Despite that the critiques of rainbow colormaps have been around and well-acknowledged for three decades, rainbow colormaps are still widely used today. One reason behind the resilience of rainbow colormaps is the lack of tools for users to create a continuous colormap that encodes semantics specific to the application concerned. In this paper, we present a web-based software system, CCC-Tool (short for Charting Continuous Colormaps) under the URL https://ccctool.com, for creating, editing, and analyzing such application-specific colormaps. We introduce the notion of “colormap pecification (CMS)” that maintains the essential semantics required for defining a color mapping scheme. We provide users with a set of advanced utilities for constructing CMS’s with various levels of complexity, examining their quality attributes using different plots, and exporting them to external application software. We present two case studies, demonstrating that the CCC-Tool can help domain scientists as well as visualization experts in designing semantically-rich colormaps.
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Book chapters on the topic "CCC-Tool"

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"Studies Involving Jeffreys’s Transcultural Self-Efficacy Tool (TSET) and/or Jeffreys’s Cultural Competence and Confidence (CCC) Model." In Teaching Cultural Competence in Nursing and Health Care. Springer Publishing Company, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/9780826119971.ap01.

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Velliaris, Donna M., and Janine M. Pierce. "A Living ‘CCC'ase Study." In Case Studies as a Teaching Tool in Management Education. IGI Global, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-0770-3.ch004.

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This chapter describes the Coglin Clothing Company (CCC), the focus of a multidisciplinary Live/Living Case Study (LCS) that was developed and introduced at the Eynesbury Institute of Business and Technology (EIBT) between 2010-2013. The LCS methodology endeavoured to address educational obstacles that had arisen from EIBT's international student population for whom it was first designed, but were typical problems of ‘business education' in general. This work begins by attending to issues such as: generalised problems of the education-experience business-related gap; the benefits of integrating more than one business discipline; the difficulties of handling various and conflicting sources of information; and the indispensability of action learning for deeper comprehension. A LCS was integrated across eight separate courses, including one titled ‘Management Principles'. The relevant literature is presented, followed by a discussion of the value of LCSs for acculturating (international) students to ‘real-life' business scenarios.
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Conference papers on the topic "CCC-Tool"

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Barakat, Akram, and Ali Hadi. "Windows Forensic Investigations Using PowerForensics Tool." In 2016 Cybersecurity and Cyberforensics Conference (CCC). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ccc.2016.18.

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Wang, Hantao, and Hong Wang. "A Detection System of Tool Parameter Using Machine Vision." In 2018 37th Chinese Control Conference (CCC). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.23919/chicc.2018.8482618.

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Li, Xinyu, Qin Zhou, Qilong Xue, Lixin Li, Xin Xia, and Yuanyuan Zuo. "Analysis of Straightening Behavior of the Electronic Automatic Vertical Drilling Tool." In 2018 37th Chinese Control Conference (CCC). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.23919/chicc.2018.8483283.

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Peng, Xiaolin, Yexi Yin, and Hengfeng Qin. "Five-Axis Machining Tool Path Planning Algorithm Based on Directional Distance Theory." In 2018 37th Chinese Control Conference (CCC). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.23919/chicc.2018.8483227.

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Jiajia, Zheng, Zeng Yuan, and Gu Zhenyu. "Operation State Online Recognition Method for Machine Tool Based on Power Feature Model." In 2018 37th Chinese Control Conference (CCC). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.23919/chicc.2018.8482600.

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Franco, Mauricio Alberto Sanchez, and Jaime A. Pavlich-Mariscal. "Zoomable modeling tool — Una herramienta de visualización de modelos de software basado en el paradigma de Zoomable User Interfaces." In 2016 IEEE 11th Colombian Computing Conference (CCC). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/columbiancc.2016.7750769.

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Waldherr, Steffen, Frank Allgower, and Elling W. Jacobsen. "Kinetic perturbations as robustness analysis tool for biochemical reaction networks." In 2009 Joint 48th IEEE Conference on Decision and Control (CDC) and 28th Chinese Control Conference (CCC 2009). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cdc.2009.5400939.

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Henriksson, Robert, Mikael Norrlof, Stig Moberg, Erik Wernholt, and Thomas B. Schon. "Experimental comparison of observers for tool position estimation of industrial robots." In 2009 Joint 48th IEEE Conference on Decision and Control (CDC) and 28th Chinese Control Conference (CCC 2009). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cdc.2009.5400313.

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Feng, Yu, and Philippe Chevrel. "Structured LFT representation of digital LTI filters/controllers implementation as a graphic tool." In 2009 Joint 48th IEEE Conference on Decision and Control (CDC) and 28th Chinese Control Conference (CCC). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cdc.2009.5399550.

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Andrieu, Vincent, Laurent Praly, and Alessandro Astolfi. "Homogeneity in the bi-limit as a tool for observer and feedback design." In 2009 Joint 48th IEEE Conference on Decision and Control (CDC) and 28th Chinese Control Conference (CCC). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cdc.2009.5400263.

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