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  2. Unified Medical Language System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unified_Medical_Language...

    The Unified Medical Language System (UMLS) is a compendium of many controlled vocabularies in the biomedical sciences (created 1986). [1] It provides a mapping structure among these vocabularies and thus allows one to translate among the various terminology systems; it may also be viewed as a comprehensive thesaurus and ontology of biomedical concepts.

  3. TRACE (psycholinguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRACE_(psycholinguistics)

    "TRACE was the first model that instantiated the activation of multiple word candidates that match any part of the speech input." [4] A simulation of speech perception involves presenting the TRACE computer program with mock speech input, running the program, and generating a result. A successful simulation indicates that the result is found to ...

  4. Cohort model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohort_model

    The cohort model is based on the concept that auditory or visual input to the brain stimulates neurons as it enters the brain, rather than at the end of a word. [5] This fact was demonstrated in the 1980s through experiments with speech shadowing, in which subjects listened to recordings and were instructed to repeat aloud exactly what they heard, as quickly as possible; Marslen-Wilson found ...

  5. UML state machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UML_state_machine

    The UML specification [1] prescribes that a transition involves exiting all nested states from the current active state (which might be a direct or transitive substate of the main source state) up to, but not including, the least common ancestor (LCA) state of the main source and main target states. As the name indicates, the LCA is the lowest ...

  6. Glossary of Unified Modeling Language terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_Unified...

    In UML 1.x, it was also possible to have a discrete list of values, but this was eliminated in UML 2.0. 2. It specifies how many objects may be connected across an instance of an association which is written as a range of values (like 1..*). Mandatory - A required multiplicity, the lower bound is at least one, usually 1..1 or 1

  7. C4 model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C4_model

    The C4 model was created by the software architect Simon Brown between 2006 and 2011 on the roots of Unified Modelling Language (UML) and the 4+1 architectural view model. The launch of an official website under a Creative Commons license [3] and an article [4] published in 2018 popularised the emerging technique. [1]

  8. Activity diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Activity_diagram

    Activity diagrams [1] are graphical representations of workflows of stepwise activities and actions [2] with support for choice, iteration, and concurrency. In the Unified Modeling Language, activity diagrams are intended to model both computational and organizational processes (i.e., workflows), as well as the data flows intersecting with the related activities.

  9. Executable UML - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executable_UML

    It was described for the first time in 2002 in the book "Executable UML: A Foundation for Model-Driven Architecture". [1] The language "combines a subset of the UML (Unified Modeling Language) graphical notation with executable semantics and timing rules." [2] The Executable UML method is the successor to the Shlaer–Mellor method. [3]