16,512 research outputs found
New Zealand Film Industry: Building Culture and Identity
Below Australia, as close to the bottom of the populated world as one can go, lies the small country of New Zealand, the true “land down-under.” New Zealand offers close to 103,500 square miles of picturesque and varied landscape, along with a population of less than 5 million, as of the 2016 census. Despite its isolated geography and small population, the country has made a large international presence, especially in the film industry. The development of the New Zealand film industry is unique, beginning soon after the birth of film itself but refraining from substantial growth until recent years. The passion and perseverance of the Kiwi filmmakers have pushed film in New Zealand past economic and social challenges to be regarded as nearly fundamental to growing and keeping the New Zealand identity
Setting the Backdrop: Analyzing the Collection and Implementation of Cross-Cultural Research in Screenwriting Setting Development
Undergraduate
Creative and Artisti
Pushing Forward: A Look into the Environment of South Korean Female Film Directors
The Busan International Film Festival, held in Busan, South Korea, is known as Asia’s largest film event, drawing filmmakers and movie stars from all over the world. The 2017 festival witnessed a notable feat in which for the first time, the festival was bookended by films directed by women (Brasor). Though the filmmakers themselves argued that the lineup of their films was unintentional, nonetheless the event shows that female directors were gaining notice at the festival—an uncommon trend globally and in South Korea. Though conditions are improving, female film directors face unique social and economic challenges in South Korea, a society traditionally rooted in Confucian ideals and recovering from a violent recent history
Intertwining of birth-and-death processes
It has been known for a long time that for birth-and-death processes started
in zero the first passage time of a given level is distributed as a sum of
independent exponentially distributed random variables, the parameters of which
are the negatives of the eigenvalues of the stopped process. Recently, Diaconis
and Miclo have given a probabilistic proof of this fact by constructing a
coupling between a general birth-and-death process and a process whose birth
rates are the negatives of the eigenvalues, ordered from high to low, and whose
death rates are zero, in such a way that the latter process is always ahead of
the former, and both arrive at the same time at the given level. In this note,
we extend their methods by constructing a third process, whose birth rates are
the negatives of the eigenvalues ordered from low to high and whose death rates
are zero, which always lags behind the original process and also arrives at the
same time.Comment: 12 pages. 1 figure. Some typoes corrected and minor change
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