15,176 research outputs found

    Some Requests for Machine Learning Research from the East African Tech Scene

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    Based on 46 in-depth interviews with scientists, engineers, and CEOs, this document presents a list of concrete machine research problems, progress on which would directly benefit tech ventures in East Africa.Comment: Presented at NIPS 2018 Workshop on Machine Learning for the Developing Worl

    A text-to-picture system for russian language

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    This paper presents motivation and design of the general purpose text-to-picture synthesis system. The described TTP system is designed for Russian language processing and operates with the natural language analysis subsystem, the stage processing subsystem, and the rendering subsystem. Every processing stage has been described and the basic design ideas of the system architecture have been highlighted. User study has been performed and further work reasons are explained

    Multiband effective bond-orbital model for nitride semiconductors with wurtzite structure

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    A multiband empirical tight-binding model for group-III-nitride semiconductors with a wurtzite structure has been developed and applied to both bulk systems and embedded quantum dots. As a minimal basis set we assume one s-orbital and three p-orbitals, localized in the unit cell of the hexagonal Bravais lattice, from which one conduction band and three valence bands are formed. Non-vanishing matrix elements up to second nearest neighbors are taken into account. These matrix elements are determined so that the resulting tight-binding band structure reproduces the known Gamma-point parameters, which are also used in recent kp-treatments. Furthermore, the tight-binding band structure can also be fitted to the band energies at other special symmetry points of the Brillouin zone boundary, known from experiment or from first-principle calculations. In this paper, we describe details of the parametrization and present the resulting tight-binding band structures of bulk GaN, AlN, and InN with a wurtzite structure. As a first application to nanostructures, we present results for the single-particle electronic properties of lens-shaped InN quantum dots embedded in a GaN matrix.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, two supplementary file

    Do automated digital health behaviour change interventions have a positive effect on self-efficacy? A systematic review and meta-analysis

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    © 2019 Taylor & Francis. This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Health Psychology Review on 20/01/2020, available online: https://doi.org/10.1080/17437199.2019.1705873.Self-efficacy is an important determinant of health behaviour. Digital interventions are a potentially acceptable and cost-effective way of delivering programmes of health behaviour change at scale. Whether behaviour change interventions work to increase self-efficacy in this context is unknown. This systematic review and meta-analysis sought to identify whether automated digital interventions are associated with positive changes in self-efficacy amongst non-clinical populations for five major health behaviours, and which BCTs are associated with that change. A systematic literature search identified 20 studies (n=5624) that assessed changes in self-efficacy and were included in a random effects meta-analysis. Interventions targeted: healthy eating (k=4), physical activity (k=9), sexual behaviour (k=3), and smoking (k=4). No interventions targeting alcohol use were identified. Overall, interventions had a small, positive effect on self-efficacy (푔 = 0.190, CI [0.078; 0.303]). The effect of interventions on self-efficacy did not differ as a function of health behaviour type (Qbetween = 7.3704 p = 0.061, df = 3). Inclusion of the BCT ‘information about social and environmental consequences’ had a small, negative effect on self-efficacy (Δ푔= - 0.297, Q=7.072, p=0.008). Whilst this review indicates that digital interventions can be used to change self-efficacy, which techniques work best in this context is not clear.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio

    Human computer interaction for international development: past present and future

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    Recent years have seen a burgeoning interest in research into the use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) in the context of developing regions, particularly into how such ICTs might be appropriately designed to meet the unique user and infrastructural requirements that we encounter in these cross-cultural environments. This emerging field, known to some as HCI4D, is the product of a diverse set of origins. As such, it can often be difficult to navigate prior work, and/or to piece together a broad picture of what the field looks like as a whole. In this paper, we aim to contextualize HCI4D—to give it some historical background, to review its existing literature spanning a number of research traditions, to discuss some of its key issues arising from the work done so far, and to suggest some major research objectives for the future
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