89,464 research outputs found
The impact of cloud computing on startups’ success in Portugal: a quantitative study
Dissertation presented as the partial requirement for obtaining a Master's degree in Statistics and Information Management, specialization in Information Analysis and ManagementIn opposition to traditional on-premises architectures, the consumption of cloud computing services
has risen exponentially over the last decade, led by Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google
Cloud. Simultaneously, Portugal has become an attractive hub for young entrepreneurs from all across
the world, aiming to launch and grow their startups motivated by the high quality of education and
the booming ecosystem of accelerators and incubators. This dissertation aims to understand the
interaction between these phenomena, studying the impact of cloud computing on the business
success of Portuguese startups through a quantitative analysis. Leveraging Intricately and Crunchbase
as data sources, this study hopes to depict the relationship between cloud computing consumption
and the success of a startup, based on its funding round status
Learning Opposites with Evolving Rules
The idea of opposition-based learning was introduced 10 years ago. Since then
a noteworthy group of researchers has used some notions of oppositeness to
improve existing optimization and learning algorithms. Among others,
evolutionary algorithms, reinforcement agents, and neural networks have been
reportedly extended into their opposition-based version to become faster and/or
more accurate. However, most works still use a simple notion of opposites,
namely linear (or type- I) opposition, that for each assigns its
opposite as . This, of course, is a very naive estimate of
the actual or true (non-linear) opposite , which has been
called type-II opposite in literature. In absence of any knowledge about a
function that we need to approximate, there seems to be no
alternative to the naivety of type-I opposition if one intents to utilize
oppositional concepts. But the question is if we can receive some level of
accuracy increase and time savings by using the naive opposite estimate
according to all reports in literature, what would we be able to
gain, in terms of even higher accuracies and more reduction in computational
complexity, if we would generate and employ true opposites? This work
introduces an approach to approximate type-II opposites using evolving fuzzy
rules when we first perform opposition mining. We show with multiple examples
that learning true opposites is possible when we mine the opposites from the
training data to subsequently approximate .Comment: Accepted for publication in The 2015 IEEE International Conference on
Fuzzy Systems (FUZZ-IEEE 2015), August 2-5, 2015, Istanbul, Turke
The Mode of Computing
The Turing Machine is the paradigmatic case of computing machines, but there
are others, such as Artificial Neural Networks, Table Computing,
Relational-Indeterminate Computing and diverse forms of analogical computing,
each of which based on a particular underlying intuition of the phenomenon of
computing. This variety can be captured in terms of system levels,
re-interpreting and generalizing Newell's hierarchy, which includes the
knowledge level at the top and the symbol level immediately below it. In this
re-interpretation the knowledge level consists of human knowledge and the
symbol level is generalized into a new level that here is called The Mode of
Computing. Natural computing performed by the brains of humans and non-human
animals with a developed enough neural system should be understood in terms of
a hierarchy of system levels too. By analogy from standard computing machinery
there must be a system level above the neural circuitry levels and directly
below the knowledge level that is named here The mode of Natural Computing. A
central question for Cognition is the characterization of this mode. The Mode
of Computing provides a novel perspective on the phenomena of computing,
interpreting, the representational and non-representational views of cognition,
and consciousness.Comment: 35 pages, 8 figure
Source Localization by Gradient Estimation Based on Poisson Integral
International audienceWe consider the problem of localizing the source of a diffusion process. The source is supposed to be isotropic, and several sensors, equipped on a vehicle moving without position information, provide pointwise measures of the quantity being emitted. The solution we propose is based on computing the gradient -- and higher-order derivatives such as the Hessian -- from Poisson integrals: in opposition to other solutions previously proposed, this computation does neither require specific knowledge of the solution of the diffusion process, nor the use of probing signals, but only exploits properties of the PDE describing the diffusion process. The theoretical results are illustrated by simulations
Learning Opposites Using Neural Networks
Many research works have successfully extended algorithms such as
evolutionary algorithms, reinforcement agents and neural networks using
"opposition-based learning" (OBL). Two types of the "opposites" have been
defined in the literature, namely \textit{type-I} and \textit{type-II}. The
former are linear in nature and applicable to the variable space, hence easy to
calculate. On the other hand, type-II opposites capture the "oppositeness" in
the output space. In fact, type-I opposites are considered a special case of
type-II opposites where inputs and outputs have a linear relationship. However,
in many real-world problems, inputs and outputs do in fact exhibit a nonlinear
relationship. Therefore, type-II opposites are expected to be better in
capturing the sense of "opposition" in terms of the input-output relation. In
the absence of any knowledge about the problem at hand, there seems to be no
intuitive way to calculate the type-II opposites. In this paper, we introduce
an approach to learn type-II opposites from the given inputs and their outputs
using the artificial neural networks (ANNs). We first perform \emph{opposition
mining} on the sample data, and then use the mined data to learn the
relationship between input and its opposite . We have validated
our algorithm using various benchmark functions to compare it against an
evolving fuzzy inference approach that has been recently introduced. The
results show the better performance of a neural approach to learn the
opposites. This will create new possibilities for integrating oppositional
schemes within existing algorithms promising a potential increase in
convergence speed and/or accuracy.Comment: To appear in proceedings of the 23rd International Conference on
Pattern Recognition (ICPR 2016), Cancun, Mexico, December 201
- …