1,598,048 research outputs found
"This is our land": ethnic violence and internal displacement in north-east India
"This report focuses on the situation of people internally displaced by three situations of generalised violence, which between them caused the displacement of over
800,000 people within the region:
violence and displacement in Assam and Meghalaya states in December 2010 and January 2011; violence and displacement in Western Assam during the 1990s and 2000s; and
violence and displacement from Mizoram state to Tripura state in 1997 and 2009.
Repression and Displacement of Main Character in Elizabeth Gilbert's Novel Eat, Pray, Love (a Psychological Analysis)
This study deals with Repression and Displacement of Main Character in Elizabeth Gilbert's Novel Eat, Pray, Love. The objectives of this study were to find out the causing of repression and the displacement in the novel. This study was limited to analyze Liz as the main character. This study applied descriptive qualitative method. The data were taken from Elizabeth Gilbert's novel Eat, Pray, Love. The findings indicated that Liz got repressions which are triggered by two factors; the crisis of self identity and marriage conflict. And then the displacement that occurred to the main character after getting repressions were losing faith about marriage, disorder eating habit, and converting new orientation of spiritual life. Keyword : repression, displacement, character, nove
Mass Displacement Networks
Despite the large improvements in performance attained by using deep learning
in computer vision, one can often further improve results with some additional
post-processing that exploits the geometric nature of the underlying task. This
commonly involves displacing the posterior distribution of a CNN in a way that
makes it more appropriate for the task at hand, e.g. better aligned with local
image features, or more compact. In this work we integrate this geometric
post-processing within a deep architecture, introducing a differentiable and
probabilistically sound counterpart to the common geometric voting technique
used for evidence accumulation in vision. We refer to the resulting neural
models as Mass Displacement Networks (MDNs), and apply them to human pose
estimation in two distinct setups: (a) landmark localization, where we collapse
a distribution to a point, allowing for precise localization of body keypoints
and (b) communication across body parts, where we transfer evidence from one
part to the other, allowing for a globally consistent pose estimate. We
evaluate on large-scale pose estimation benchmarks, such as MPII Human Pose and
COCO datasets, and report systematic improvements when compared to strong
baselines.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Lateral cephalometric analysis of asymptomatic volunteers and symptomatic patients with and without bilateral temporomandibular joint disk displacement
Few studies of dentofacial and orthodontic structural relationships relative to temporomandibular joint (TMJ) dysfunction have been reported. We undertook this investigation to determine any correlation of orthodontic and dentofacial characteristics with TMJ bilateral disc displacement. The population of patients was selected from a TMJ clinic where a control group of asymptomatic volunteers had been previously established and standardized. Differences in skeletal structural features were determined among three study groups: (1) asymptomatic volunteers with no TMJ disk displacement, (2) symptomatic patients with no TMJ disc displacement, and (3) symptomatic patients with bilateral TMJ disk displacement. Thirty-two asymptomatic volunteers without disk displacement (25 female, 7 male) were compared with the same number each of symptomatic patients without TMJ disk displacement and symptomatic patients with bilateral TMJ disk displacement. All subjects had undergone a standardized clinical examination, bilateral TMJ magnetic resonance imaging, and lateral cephalometric radiographic analysis. The groups were matched according to sex, TMJ status, age, and Angle classification of malocclusion. Seventeen lateral cephalometric radiographic cranial base, maxillomandibular, and vertical dimension variables were evaluated and compared among the study groups. The mean angle of SNB, or the intersection of the sella-nasion plane and the nasion–point B line (indicating mandibular retrognathism relative to cranial base), of the symptomatic patients-with-displacement group was significantly smaller than that in the asymptomatic volunteers and symptomatic patients without bilateral disk displacement (p \u3c 0.05). Female subjects showed smaller linear measurements of mandibular length, lower facial height, and total anterior facial height than male subjects in all three groups (p \u3c 0.05). The mean angle of ANB, or the intersection of the nasion–point A and nasion–point B planes (indicating retrognathism of mandible relative to maxilla), was significantly greater in female than in male subjects, in all groups (p \u3c 0.05). Symptomatic patients with bilateral disk displacement had a retropositioned mandible, indicated by a smaller mean SNB angle compared with that in asymptomatic volunteers and symptomatic patients with no disk displacement on either side. Lateral cephalometric radiographic assessment may improve predictability of TMJ disk displacement in orthodontic patients but is not diagnostic; nor does the assessment explain any cause-and-effect relationship. (Am J Orthod Dentofacial Orthop 1998;114:248-55.
Nano-scale displacement sensing based on Van der Waals interaction
We propose the nano-scale displacement sensor with high resolution for
weak-force systems could be realized based on vertical stacked two-dimensional
(2D) atomic corrugated layer materials bound through Van der Waals (VdW)
interaction. Using first-principles calculations, we found the electronic
structure of bi-layer blue phosphorus (BLBP) varies appreciably to both the
lateral and vertical interlayer displacement. The variation of electronic
structure due to the lateral displacement is attributed to the changing of the
interlayer distance dz led by atomic layer corrugation, which is in a uniform
picture with vertical displacement. Despite different stacking configurations,
the change of in-direct band gap is proportional to dz-2. This stacking
configuration independent dz-2 law is found also works for other graphene-like
corrugated bi-layer materials, for example MoS2. By measuring the tunable
electronic structure using absorption spectroscopy, the nano-scale displacement
could be detected. BLBP represents a large family of bi-layer 2D atomic
corrugated materials for which the electronic structure is sensitive to the
interlayer vertical and lateral displacement, thus could be used for nano-scale
displacement sensor. Since this kind of sensor is established on atomic layers
coupled through VdW interaction, it provides unique applications in
measurements of nano-scale displacement induced by tiny external force
Asymptotic behavior of Structures made of Plates
The aim of this work is to study the asymptotic behavior of a structure made
of plates of thickness when . This study is carried on
within the frame of linear elasticity by using the unfolding method. It is
based on several decompositions of the structure displacements and on the
passing to the limit in fixed domains. We begin with studying the displacements
of a plate. We show that any displacement is the sum of an elementary
displacement concerning the normal lines on the middle surface of the plate and
a residual displacement linked to these normal lines deformations. An
elementary displacement is linear with respect to the variable 3. It is
written where U is a displacement of the mid-surface of
the plate. We show a priori estimates and convergence results when . We characterize the limits of the unfolded displacements of a plate as well
as the limits of the unfolded of the strained tensor. Then we extend these
results to the structures made of plates. We show that any displacement of a
structure is the sum of an elementary displacement of each plate and of a
residual displacement. The elementary displacements of the structure (e.d.p.s.)
coincide with elementary rods displacements in the junctions. Any e.d.p.s. is
given by two functions belonging to where S is the skeleton of the
structure (the plates mid-surfaces set). One of these functions : U is the
skeleton displacement. We show that U is the sum of an extensional displacement
and of an inextensional one. The first one characterizes the membrane
displacements and the second one is a rigid displacement in the direction of
the plates and it characterizes the plates flexion. Eventually we pass to the
limit as in the linearized elasticity system, on the one hand we
obtain a variational problem that is satisfied by the limit extensional
displacement, and on the other hand, a variational problem satisfied by the
limit of inextensional displacements
Why Are Older Workers At Greater Risk of Displacement?
The conventional wisdom says that older workers are less likely to be displaced than younger workers. While true in the past, the conventional wisdom is no longer true today; the advantage that older workers had has disappeared. This loss of relative job security is troubling. Once displaced, older workers are less likely to be reemployed, have less time to adjust their retirement plans, and are more likely to retire prematurely. Given the contraction of the nation’s retirement income system and rising longevity, these adverse effects make displacement increasingly injurious to older workers. This brief analyzes changes in the displacement of older and prime-age workers since the mid-1990s and the effect of three factors – tenure, educational attainment, and employment in manufacturing – identified as having a significant effect on displacement risk. The results show that all three factors contributed to the rising dislocation risk older workers face and their rising risk vis-à-vis prime-age workers. The brief proceeds as follows. The first section presents the three factors identified in the literature as affecting displacement. The second section reviews the data and methodology used to analyze the effects of these factors on the changing displacement risk of older and prime-age workers. The third section reports the findings, and the fourth section concludes.
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