Institution
Nokia
Company•Espoo, Finland•
About: Nokia is a company organization based out in Espoo, Finland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Signal & Mobile station. The organization has 16625 authors who have published 28347 publications receiving 695725 citations. The organization is also known as: Nokia Oyj & Oy Nokia Ab.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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27 May 2005TL;DR: In this article, a mobile terminal has a controller, a display and an input device connected to the controller, and a digital object browser for browsing among a plurality of available digital objects.
Abstract: A mobile terminal has a controller, a display and an input device connected to the controller, and a digital object browser for browsing among a plurality of available digital objects. A first representation and a second representation of each of the digital objects are presentable on a display screen. The first representations of the digital objects are presented along a predefined path on the display screen, the first representation of a focused one of the digital objects being shown in a focus area on the display screen. For the focused digital object, the second representation thereof is presented in a preview area on the display screen. In response to a user input given on the input device, a desired scrolling operation is performed among the first representations presented, thereby shifting the positions of the first representations on the display screen along the path accordingly, updating the focus area to reflect a change in focus from the focused digital object to another digital object by presenting in the focus area the first representation of the other digital object, as well as updating the preview area correspondingly by presenting therein the second representation of the other digital object.
287 citations
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23 May 2006TL;DR: In this article, a text input method is described for an electronic apparatus having a user interface with text input means and a display screen, where word completion functionality is provided for predicting word candidates for partial word inputs made by the user with the text input.
Abstract: A text input method is described for an electronic apparatus having a user interface with text input means and a display screen. Word completion functionality is provided for predicting word candidates for partial word inputs made by the user with the text input means . The method involves receiving a partial word input from the user and deriving a set of word completion candidates using the word completion functionality. Each of the word completion candidates in the set has a prefix and a suffix, wherein the prefix corresponds to the partial word input. The method also involves presenting the suffices for at least a sub set of the word completion candidates in a predetermined area on the display screen, wherein each of the presented suffices is made selectable for the user. In an embodiment this predetermined area is the space bar of a virtual keyboard, the area which still has its original function decreasing as more possible suffices are displayed there.
286 citations
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29 Jun 1994TL;DR: An illuminated keyboard as mentioned in this paper is a type of keyboard in which the keys are operable in at least two different modes and each key is provided with symbols or areas of color which denote the different modes.
Abstract: An illuminated keyboard in which the keys are operable in at least two different modes. Each key is provided with symbols or areas of color which denote the different modes. The symbols or areas are selectively illuminated depending upon which mode is selected. Thus, in one mode, one area of the keys will be illuminated, while in another mode, another area of the keys will be illuminated. Thus, only the symbols or areas of color on denoting a selected mode are differentially visibly distinguishable by the user, assisting the user to press the correct key, in any selected mode.
286 citations
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TL;DR: For some datasets the structure discovered by the data mining algorithms is expected, given the row and column margins of the datasets, while for other datasets the discovered structure conveys information that is not captured by the margin counts.
Abstract: The problem of assessing the significance of data mining results on high-dimensional 0--1 datasets has been studied extensively in the literature. For problems such as mining frequent sets and finding correlations, significance testing can be done by standard statistical tests such as chi-square, or other methods. However, the results of such tests depend only on the specific attributes and not on the dataset as a whole. Moreover, the tests are difficult to apply to sets of patterns or other complex results of data mining algorithms. In this article, we consider a simple randomization technique that deals with this shortcoming. The approach consists of producing random datasets that have the same row and column margins as the given dataset, computing the results of interest on the randomized instances and comparing them to the results on the actual data. This randomization technique can be used to assess the results of many different types of data mining algorithms, such as frequent sets, clustering, and spectral analysis. To generate random datasets with given margins, we use variations of a Markov chain approach which is based on a simple swap operation. We give theoretical results on the efficiency of different randomization methods, and apply the swap randomization method to several well-known datasets. Our results indicate that for some datasets the structure discovered by the data mining algorithms is expected, given the row and column margins of the datasets, while for other datasets the discovered structure conveys information that is not captured by the margin counts.
284 citations
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17 Feb 2001TL;DR: In this paper, a method for indicating an end of transmitting data frames in order to enable a UTRAN (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System) Terrestrial Radio Access Network) to assign a common packet channel to another user equipment (UE) in a UE for a CDMA mobile communication system is presented.
Abstract: Disclosed is a method for indicating an end of transmitting data frames in order to enable a UTRAN (UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System) Terrestrial Radio Access Network) to assign a common packet channel to another user equipment (UE) in a UE for a CDMA mobile communication system. The UE requests assignment of any one of a number of common packet channels assignable in the UTRAN; the UE is assigned a common packet channel by the UTRAN in response to the to request; the UE sequentially transmits the data frames and their associated control frames over the assigned common packet channel; and the UE transmits at least one control frame, in an appointed field of which a given bit pattern appointed with the UTRAN is registered, in order to inform the UTRAN of an end of data transmission upon completing data transmission through the data frames.
282 citations
Authors
Showing all 16635 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Federico Capasso | 134 | 1189 | 76957 |
Andreas Richter | 110 | 769 | 48262 |
Shunpei Yamazaki | 109 | 3476 | 66579 |
Jinsong Huang | 105 | 290 | 49042 |
Marc Pollefeys | 98 | 601 | 36463 |
Merouane Debbah | 96 | 652 | 41140 |
Benjamin J. Eggleton | 92 | 1195 | 34486 |
Jérôme Faist | 91 | 970 | 37221 |
Jean-Pierre Hubaux | 90 | 415 | 35837 |
Bernd Girod | 87 | 604 | 32298 |
Howard E. Katz | 87 | 475 | 27991 |
J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves | 86 | 602 | 25151 |
Ramesh Raskar | 86 | 670 | 30675 |
Ananth Dodabalapur | 85 | 394 | 27246 |
Stephen A. Spector | 85 | 424 | 41705 |