| 11. | Fission refers to the splitting of one terminal node into two distinct terminal nodes prior to Vocabulary Insertion.
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| 12. | Fission refers to the splitting of one terminal node into two distinct terminal nodes prior to Vocabulary Insertion.
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| 13. | A leaf node, however, is a terminal node that does not dominate other nodes in the tree.
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| 14. | This list specifies interpretive operations that realize in a semantic sense the terminal nodes of a complete syntactic derivation.
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| 15. | The phonological exponents of the feature bundle terminal nodes in the syntactic tree are listed in the Exponent List.
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| 16. | Decision trees have three types of nodes : a root node, internal nodes, and leaf or terminal nodes.
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| 17. | Each beta node outputs WME lists which are either stored in a beta memory or sent directly to a terminal node.
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| 18. | Every tree node has an operator function and every terminal node has an operand, making mathematical expressions easy to evolve and evaluate.
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| 19. | Typically this is produced by arranging the terminal nodes " downwards " on the page in order of their evolutionary divergence.
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| 20. | In some cases, terminal nodes may have more than one network address, for example, each link interface may be uniquely identified.
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