7,029 research outputs found
Mapping Big Data into Knowledge Space with Cognitive Cyber-Infrastructure
Big data research has attracted great attention in science, technology,
industry and society. It is developing with the evolving scientific paradigm,
the fourth industrial revolution, and the transformational innovation of
technologies. However, its nature and fundamental challenge have not been
recognized, and its own methodology has not been formed. This paper explores
and answers the following questions: What is big data? What are the basic
methods for representing, managing and analyzing big data? What is the
relationship between big data and knowledge? Can we find a mapping from big
data into knowledge space? What kind of infrastructure is required to support
not only big data management and analysis but also knowledge discovery, sharing
and management? What is the relationship between big data and science paradigm?
What is the nature and fundamental challenge of big data computing? A
multi-dimensional perspective is presented toward a methodology of big data
computing.Comment: 59 page
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Gorillas in the House of Light
The Gorilla House at London Zoo was the first in a series of remarkable modernist zoo buildings to be built in Britain by Berthold Lubetkin in the 1930s. In this article his Gorilla House is considered in relation to the pioneering work on the significance of the ‘Animal’ in western philosophy initiated by Derrida. Lubetkin's modernist structure is seen to constitute an anthropocentric reinstating of the human order over the animal, a rear-guard action against a culture-wide anxiety stemming from what Freud called humanity's second trauma, the threat to the foundations of humanist thought posed by Darwinian theory. This article contends that the anthropoid apes were a magnet for such fears from the moment of their discovery, and seeks to establish the precise nature of the menace that Lubetkin chose to place in this landmark of modernism, in this first ‘House of Light’
Aerospace medicine and biology: A continuing bibliography with indexes (supplement 338)
This bibliography lists 139 reports, articles and other documents introduced into the NASA Scientific and Technical Information System during June 1990. Subject coverage includes: aerospace medicine and psychology, life support systems and controlled environments, safety equipment, exobiology and extraterrestrial life, and flight crew behavior and performance
Information Compression, Intelligence, Computing, and Mathematics
This paper presents evidence for the idea that much of artificial
intelligence, human perception and cognition, mainstream computing, and
mathematics, may be understood as compression of information via the matching
and unification of patterns. This is the basis for the "SP theory of
intelligence", outlined in the paper and fully described elsewhere. Relevant
evidence may be seen: in empirical support for the SP theory; in some
advantages of information compression (IC) in terms of biology and engineering;
in our use of shorthands and ordinary words in language; in how we merge
successive views of any one thing; in visual recognition; in binocular vision;
in visual adaptation; in how we learn lexical and grammatical structures in
language; and in perceptual constancies. IC via the matching and unification of
patterns may be seen in both computing and mathematics: in IC via equations; in
the matching and unification of names; in the reduction or removal of
redundancy from unary numbers; in the workings of Post's Canonical System and
the transition function in the Universal Turing Machine; in the way computers
retrieve information from memory; in systems like Prolog; and in the
query-by-example technique for information retrieval. The chunking-with-codes
technique for IC may be seen in the use of named functions to avoid repetition
of computer code. The schema-plus-correction technique may be seen in functions
with parameters and in the use of classes in object-oriented programming. And
the run-length coding technique may be seen in multiplication, in division, and
in several other devices in mathematics and computing. The SP theory resolves
the apparent paradox of "decompression by compression". And computing and
cognition as IC is compatible with the uses of redundancy in such things as
backup copies to safeguard data and understanding speech in a noisy
environment
Building Cyberspace. Information, Place and Policy
Information and place have always been linked. From prehistoric forest and hydraulic expire to canal network and the networked knowledge economy, the space of flows gives rise to the way human beings perceive the world as well as to the objects they perceive. The historical relationship between information and place is important in understanding Cyberspace as a space of information that reshapes our engagement with the physical world
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