Id |
Subject |
Object |
Predicate |
Lexical cue |
T32 |
0-43 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Simulation methods and statistical analysis |
T33 |
44-156 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Berkeley Madonna 8.3.18 (developed by Robert Macey and George Oster of the University of California at Berkeley. |
T34 |
157-186 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Copyright©1993–2001 Robert I. |
T35 |
187-204 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Macey & George F. |
T36 |
205-247 |
Sentence |
denotes |
Oster) was employed for the curve fitting. |
T37 |
248-348 |
Sentence |
denotes |
The fourth-order Runge–Kutta method, with tolerance set at 0.001, was used to perform curve fitting. |
T38 |
349-483 |
Sentence |
denotes |
While the curve fitting is in progress, Berkeley Madonna displays the root mean square deviation between the data and best run so far. |
T39 |
484-565 |
Sentence |
denotes |
The coefficient of determination (R2) was employed to assess the goodness-of-fit. |
T40 |
566-638 |
Sentence |
denotes |
SPSS 13.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA) was employed to calculate the R2. |