Since "MaxGF" is a specific technical term rather than a broad famous acronym (like SVM or CNN), there are a few key papers that established and utilized this method.
Instead of applying a standard Gaussian smoothing filter (which blurs edges) or a simple threshold (which fails in uneven lighting), the MaxGF works by:
Fiscal Federalism in a Mone- tary Union: The Cooperation Pitfall
In the context of monetary unions (like the Eurozone), appears as a mathematical optimization term in models where national fiscal authorities and a central bank have overlapping or conflicting goals. It typically denotes the point of maximum fiscal stabilization that a national government can exert given the constraints of a shared monetary policy. 2. The Cooperation Pitfall
This is classified as an NP-Hard problem, meaning it is mathematically complex to solve efficiently as the number of users grows.
"Max-Gaussian filter" crack detection
The "maxgf" value is used to determine the ideal . Because individual nations no longer have their own currency or exchange rate to adjust, the "fiscal instrument" becomes the primary tool for responding to local economic shocks. The model calculates maxgf as a first-order condition to find the equilibrium where the union is stabilized without exhausting the fiscal capacity of individual member states. Alternative Contexts
In computer science and social informatics, refers to the Maximum Group Friending problem. This is a theoretical framework used to optimize friend-making likelihood in Online Social Networks (OSNs).