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21
Integrating a Natural Language Message Pre-Processor with UIMA
In: DTIC (2008)
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22
CSIR at TREC 2008 Expert Search Task: Modeling Expert Evidence in Expert Search
In: DTIC (2008)
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23
CEMAP II: An Architecture and Specifications to Facilitate the Importing of Real-World Data into the CASOS Software Suite
In: DTIC (2008)
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24
Aiding the Workflow of Email Conversations by Enhancing Email with Semantics
Scerri, Simon. - 2007
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25
The Role of Email in Faculty-Student Relationships Toward Understanding Engagement and Retention
In: Electronic Theses and Dissertations (2007)
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26
IkeNet: Social Network Analysis of E-mail Traffic in the Eisenhower Leadership Development Program
In: DTIC (2007)
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27
A case study of Japanese students: e-mail exchange in English: feedback focusing on communicability
Matsuo, Naoko. - 2007
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28
Effect of Emailed Messages on Return Use of a Nutrition Education Website and Subsequent Changes in Dietary Behavior
Woodall, W Gill; Buller, David B; Saba, Laura; Zimmerman, Donald; Waters, Emily; Hines, Joan M; Cutter, Gary R; Starling, Randall. - : Gunther Eysenbach; Centre for Global eHealth Innovation, Toronto, Canada, 2007
Abstract: Reviewer: Campbell, Marci ; Reviewer: Kirk, Sara ; [This item is a preserved copy and is not necessarily the most recent version. To view the current item, visit http://www.jmir.org/2007/3/e27/ ] Background: At-risk populations can be reached with Web-based disease prevention and behavior change programs. However, such eHealth applications on the Internet need to generate return usage to be effective. Limited evidence is available on how continued usage can be encouraged. Objective: This analysis tested whether routine email notification about a nutrition education website promoted more use of the website. Methods: Adults from six rural counties in Colorado and New Mexico, United States (n = 755) participating in a randomized trial and assigned to the intervention group (n = 380) received, over a period of 4 months, email messages alerting them to updates on the website, along with hyperlinks to new content. Update alerts were sent approximately every 5 weeks (each participant received up to 4 messages). Log-ons to the website were the primary outcome for this analysis. Results: A total of 23.5% (86/366) of the participants responded to at least one email, and 51.2% (44/86) of these participants responded to half of the email messages by logging on to the website. Significantly more log-ons occurred on email notification days compared to all other days (OR = 3.71, 95% CI = 2.72-5.06). More log-ons also occurred just after the notification but declined each day thereafter (OR = 0.97, 95% CI = 0.96-0.98 one day further from mass email). Non-Hispanics (OR = 0.46, 95% CI = 0.26-0.84), older participants (OR = 1.04, 95% CI = 1.04-1.06), and those using the Internet most recently (OR = 0.62, 95% CI = 0.51-0.77) were more likely to log on. Responders to the messages had a more positive change in fruit and vegetable intake (mean change = +1.69) than nonresponders (+0.05), as measured with a food frequency assessment (adjusted Spearman partial correlation coefficient = 0.14, P = .049). Compared to nonresponders, responders were more likely to be non-Hispanic (P = .01), older (P < .001), and had used the Internet more recently (P < .001). Conclusions: Messages sent by email appeared to promote a modest short-lived increase in use of a disease prevention website by some adults. Those who responded to the messages by logging on to the website may have been influenced to improve their diet.
Keyword: adult; attrition; behavior change; diet; electronic mail; Internet; nonresponse; Original Paper; usage
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1807/16636
http://dx.doi.org/ 10.2196/jmir.9.3.e27
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29
Detecting Potential Insider Threats Through Email Datamining
In: DTIC (2006)
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30
UMass at TREC 2006: Enterprise Track
In: DTIC (2006)
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31
Un exemple d'utilisation du courriel pour diffuser une proposition citoyenne
In: Mots. Les langages du politique, n 80, 1, 2006-07-01, pp.61-72 (2006)
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32
Análisis de los fenómenos lingüísticos de los mensajes de correo electrónico en catalán desde la prespectiva de la traducción automática
Oliver, Antoni; Moré, Joaquim; Climent, Salvador (Climent Roca). - : Sociedad Española para el Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural (SEPLN), 2005
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33
The Role, Status and Style of Workplace Email: a Study of Two New Zealand Workplaces
Waldvogel, Joan. - : Victoria University of Wellington, 2005
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34
A generic approach to software support for linguistic annotation using XML
In: http://www.cogsci.ed.ac.uk/~dmck/Papers/carletta-specom.ps (2002)
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35
Code-switching behavior in email writing among fluent bilinguals of Bulgarian and English
Stoyanova, Kalina S.. - : University of Montana, 2002
In: Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers (2002)
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36
Integrated Feasibility Experiment for Bio-Security: IFE-Bio, A TIDES Demonstration
In: DTIC (2001)
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37
Language Maintenance at a Distance: The Daily Russian "Vitamin"
In: DTIC (2001)
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38
A study of communications between subject matter experts and individual students in electronic mail contexts
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39
Towards a Flexible and Contextually Appropriate Generation of Spoken Utterances
In: Proceedings 1998 IEEE 4th Workshop Interactive Voice Technology for Telecommunications Applications. IVTTA '98 ; 4th IEEE Workshop Interactive Voice Technology for Telecommunications Applications (IVTTA 1998) ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03639805 ; 4th IEEE Workshop Interactive Voice Technology for Telecommunications Applications (IVTTA 1998), Sep 1998, Torino, Italy. pp.124-129, &#x27E8;10.1109/IVTTA.1998.727706&#x27E9; ; https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/727706 (1998)
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40
The New Logic of Hypertext: Electronic Documents, Literary Theory, and Air Force Publications
In: DTIC (1996)
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