210 research outputs found
Annual Research Report, 2010-2011
Annual report of collaborative research projects of Old Dominion University faculty and students in partnership with business, industry and government.https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/or_researchreports/1000/thumbnail.jp
Advances in artificial intelligence : 14th Biennial Conference of the Canadian Society for Computational Studies of Intelligence, AI 2001, Ottawa, Canada, June 7-9, 2001 : proceedings
xii, 366 p. : ill. ; 24 cm
Intelligent geospatial decision support system for Malaysian marine geospatial data infrastructure
Marine resources for different uses and activities are characterised by multi-dimensional concepts, criteria, multi-participants, and multiple-use conflicts. In addition, the fuzzy nature in the marine environment has attendant features that increase the complexity of the environment, thus, necessitating the quest for multiple alternative solutions and adequate evaluation, particularly within the context of Marine Geospatial Data Infrastructure (MGDI). However, in the literature of MGDI, there has yet to be a concerted research effort and framework towards holistic consideration of decision making prospects using multi-criteria evaluation (MCE) and intelligent algorithms for effective and informed decision beyond the classical methods. This research, therefore, aims to develop and validate an intelligent decision support system for Malaysian MGDI. An integrated framework built on mixed method research design serves as the mode of inquiry. Initially, the quantitative methodology, comprising of Dynamic Analytic Network Process (DANP) model, comprehensive evaluation index system (CEIS), MCE extensions, geographic information system’s spatial interaction modelling (SIM), and hydrographic data acquisition sub-system was implemented. Within this framework, a case study validation was employed for the qualitative aspect to predict the most viable geospatial extents within Malaysian waters for exploitation of deep sea marine fishery. Quantitative findings showed that the model has an elucidated CEIS with a DANP network model of 7 criteria, 28 sub-criteria, and 145 performance indicators, with 5 alternatives. In the MCE, computed priority values for Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) and Fuzzy AHP are different though their rankings are the same. In addition, the Technique for Order Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution (TOPSIS) and Fuzzy TOPSIS results from the MCE extensions showed that they were similarly ranked for the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) (200 nm) area as predicted by the DANP model. Furthermore, re-arrangement of the priorities in sensitivity analysis enhanced the final judgment for the criteria being evaluated; and for the SIM. Qualitatively, the validation of the DANP through the prediction has cumulated a computed value of 76.39 nm (141.47 Km) where this would be the most viable and economical deep sea fishery exploitation location in Malaysian waters and within the EEZ. In this study, MGDI decision and MgdiEureka are newly formulated terminologies to depict decisions in the realms of MGDI initiatives and the developed applications. The framework would serve as an improved marine geospatial planning for various stakeholders prior to decision making
Language technologies for a multilingual Europe
This volume of the series “Translation and Multilingual Natural Language Processing” includes most of the papers presented at the Workshop “Language Technology for a Multilingual Europe”, held at the University of Hamburg on September 27, 2011 in the framework of the conference GSCL 2011 with the topic “Multilingual Resources and Multilingual Applications”, along with several additional contributions. In addition to an overview article on Machine Translation and two contributions on the European initiatives META-NET and Multilingual Web, the volume includes six full research articles. Our intention with this workshop was to bring together various groups concerned with the umbrella topics of multilingualism and language technology, especially multilingual technologies. This encompassed, on the one hand, representatives from research and development in the field of language technologies, and, on the other hand, users from diverse areas such as, among others, industry, administration and funding agencies. The Workshop “Language Technology for a Multilingual Europe” was co-organised by the two GSCL working groups “Text Technology” and “Machine Translation” (http://gscl.info) as well as by META-NET (http://www.meta-net.eu)
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