7,081 research outputs found
A systematic literature review on source code similarity measurement and clone detection: techniques, applications, and challenges
Measuring and evaluating source code similarity is a fundamental software
engineering activity that embraces a broad range of applications, including but
not limited to code recommendation, duplicate code, plagiarism, malware, and
smell detection. This paper proposes a systematic literature review and
meta-analysis on code similarity measurement and evaluation techniques to shed
light on the existing approaches and their characteristics in different
applications. We initially found over 10000 articles by querying four digital
libraries and ended up with 136 primary studies in the field. The studies were
classified according to their methodology, programming languages, datasets,
tools, and applications. A deep investigation reveals 80 software tools,
working with eight different techniques on five application domains. Nearly 49%
of the tools work on Java programs and 37% support C and C++, while there is no
support for many programming languages. A noteworthy point was the existence of
12 datasets related to source code similarity measurement and duplicate codes,
of which only eight datasets were publicly accessible. The lack of reliable
datasets, empirical evaluations, hybrid methods, and focuses on multi-paradigm
languages are the main challenges in the field. Emerging applications of code
similarity measurement concentrate on the development phase in addition to the
maintenance.Comment: 49 pages, 10 figures, 6 table
The absence of community in community forestry: the politics of science and ethics in Nepali forestry policy.
This thesis unravels the complex socio-political processes of policy creation and implementation in Nepal’s community forestry sector. It uses a political ecology framework to investigate the policies and politics that shape how local communities manage forests and derive socio-economic benefits to contribute to livelihoods and the national economy. In the thesis, I examine the struggles between the forest authorities, community rights activists and power elites in forest policy process and implementation of scientific forest management programs. I discuss how different forest ethics influence public opinion and policy. Then I investigate how policy actors combine ethical reasoning and logics (and critiques) of forest science to justify their actions and interventions. I draw on data collected via a multimethod qualitative (research) methodology and analysed using an interpretative approach.
The empirical chapters outline three key themes. First, I examine the role of scientific forestry in Nepal in struggles between the government and community rights activists over how community forestry works. I outline how the government has mobilised forestry science as authentic, undeniably valid and true in order to increase its control over forest resources and community decision-making. In contrast, community rights activists critiqued scientific forestry to counter the government. In particular, I analyse the discourses that the government and community rights activists developed and the political lobbying they pursued to garner public support for constructing and communicating forest management approaches supporting their position.
Second, I discuss forest ethics – specifically utilitarian and preservationist ethics - to show how ethical perceptions shape individual and social norms for forest management and use. I review Nepali forestry history to elucidate how the government historically utilised both utilitarian and preservationist ethics as a means to maintain and reinforce its control over the forests. I demonstrate how the ethical tensions arising from utilitarian and preservationist worldviews animate struggles between forestry stakeholders as individuals and groups, and how ethical discourses are mobilised in support of favoured policies.
Finally, I examine the politics of policy making in Nepal. I argue that the government and interest groups have dominated the forest policy process, allowing little space for civic consultation and research-informed policy. Evidence-based policy making is still nascent, not legally binding, voluntary, and therefore subject to the personal discretion of government decision-makers. Most policy consultations are mere formalities while the ministries utilise public consultation to sell policy-drafts to the cabinet and the parliament as ostensible products of public demand, rather than ministerial discretion. This allows bureaucracy, politicians, and interest groups to dominate policy processes, as key policies are predetermined and negotiated informally outside the official consultations customarily conducted in ministries, cabinet, and the parliament.
This thesis illustrates the power of a political ecology framework to explain complex policy processes and how politics govern the way policy actors interact and determine forest policy outcomes My research highlights the policy failures undergirding community forestry and prospects of forest-based local economy. Policy outcomes are driven by power elites, rather than civic consultation and research. And policy actors often mask their agendas (and efforts to control resources) with the logics of science and ethics. In particular, this research shows how “community forestry” policy processes in Nepal have, ironically, undermined the role of the community and other non-state actors, consolidating the control of bureaucratic and political leaders
2023-2024 Boise State University Undergraduate Catalog
This catalog is primarily for and directed at students. However, it serves many audiences, such as high school counselors, academic advisors, and the public. In this catalog you will find an overview of Boise State University and information on admission, registration, grades, tuition and fees, financial aid, housing, student services, and other important policies and procedures. However, most of this catalog is devoted to describing the various programs and courses offered at Boise State
Integration of heterogeneous data sources and automated reasoning in healthcare and domotic IoT systems
In recent years, IoT technology has radically transformed many crucial industrial and service sectors such as healthcare. The multi-facets heterogeneity of the devices and the collected information provides important opportunities to develop innovative systems and services. However, the ubiquitous presence of data silos and the poor semantic interoperability in the IoT landscape constitute a significant obstacle in the pursuit of this goal. Moreover, achieving actionable knowledge from the collected data requires IoT information sources to be analysed using appropriate artificial intelligence techniques such as automated reasoning. In this thesis work, Semantic Web technologies have been investigated as an approach to address both the data integration and reasoning aspect in modern IoT systems. In particular, the contributions presented in this thesis are the following: (1) the IoT Fitness Ontology, an OWL ontology that has been developed in order to overcome the issue of data silos and enable semantic interoperability in the IoT fitness domain; (2) a Linked Open Data web portal for collecting and sharing IoT health datasets with the research community; (3) a novel methodology for embedding knowledge in rule-defined IoT smart home scenarios; and (4) a knowledge-based IoT home automation system that supports a seamless integration of heterogeneous devices and data sources
Tourism and heritage in the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone
Tourism and Heritage in the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone (CEZ) uses an ethnographic lens to explore the dissonances associated with the commodification of Chornobyl's heritage.
The book considers the role of the guides as experience brokers, focusing on the synergy between tourists and guides in the performance of heritage interpretation. Banaszkiewicz proposes to perceive tour guides as important actors in the bottom-up construction of heritage discourse contributing to more inclusive and participatory approach to heritage management. Demonstrating that the CEZ has been going through a dynamic transformation into a mass tourism attraction, the book offers a critical reflection on heritagisation as a meaning-making process in which the resources of the past are interpreted, negotiated, and recognised as a valuable legacy. Applying the concepts of dissonant heritage to describe the heterogeneous character of the CEZ, the book broadens the interpretative scope of dark tourism which takes on a new dimension in the context of the war in Ukraine.
Tourism and Heritage in the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone argues that post-disaster sites such as Chornobyl can teach us a great deal about the importance of preserving cultural and natural heritage for future generations. The book will be of interest to academics and students who are engaged in the study of heritage, tourism, memory, disasters and Eastern Europe
A Design Science Research Approach to Smart and Collaborative Urban Supply Networks
Urban supply networks are facing increasing demands and challenges and thus constitute a relevant field for research and practical development. Supply chain management holds enormous potential and relevance for society and everyday life as the flow of goods and information are important economic functions. Being a heterogeneous field, the literature base of supply chain management research is difficult to manage and navigate. Disruptive digital technologies and the implementation of cross-network information analysis and sharing drive the need for new organisational and technological approaches. Practical issues are manifold and include mega trends such as digital transformation, urbanisation, and environmental awareness.
A promising approach to solving these problems is the realisation of smart and collaborative supply networks. The growth of artificial intelligence applications in recent years has led to a wide range of applications in a variety of domains. However, the potential of artificial intelligence utilisation in supply chain management has not yet been fully exploited. Similarly, value creation increasingly takes place in networked value creation cycles that have become continuously more collaborative, complex, and dynamic as interactions in business processes involving information technologies have become more intense.
Following a design science research approach this cumulative thesis comprises the development and discussion of four artefacts for the analysis and advancement of smart and collaborative urban supply networks. This thesis aims to highlight the potential of artificial intelligence-based supply networks, to advance data-driven inter-organisational collaboration, and to improve last mile supply network sustainability. Based on thorough machine learning and systematic literature reviews, reference and system dynamics modelling, simulation, and qualitative empirical research, the artefacts provide a valuable contribution to research and practice
On the Principles of Evaluation for Natural Language Generation
Natural language processing is concerned with the ability of computers to understand natural language texts, which is, arguably, one of the major bottlenecks in the course of chasing the holy grail of general Artificial Intelligence. Given the unprecedented success of deep learning technology, the natural language processing community has been almost entirely in favor of practical applications with state-of-the-art systems emerging and competing for human-parity performance at an ever-increasing pace. For that reason, fair and adequate evaluation and comparison, responsible for ensuring trustworthy, reproducible and unbiased results, have fascinated the scientific community for long, not only in natural language but also in other fields. A popular example is the ISO-9126 evaluation standard for software products, which outlines a wide range of evaluation concerns, such as cost, reliability, scalability, security, and so forth. The European project EAGLES-1996, being the acclaimed extension to ISO-9126, depicted the fundamental principles specifically for evaluating natural language technologies, which underpins succeeding methodologies in the evaluation of natural language.
Natural language processing encompasses an enormous range of applications, each with its own evaluation concerns, criteria and measures. This thesis cannot hope to be comprehensive but particularly addresses the evaluation in natural language generation (NLG), which touches on, arguably, one of the most human-like natural language applications. In this context, research on quantifying day-to-day progress with evaluation metrics lays the foundation of the fast-growing NLG community. However, previous works have failed to address high-quality metrics in multiple scenarios such as evaluating long texts and when human references are not available, and, more prominently, these studies are limited in scope, given the lack of a holistic view sketched for principled NLG evaluation.
In this thesis, we aim for a holistic view of NLG evaluation from three complementary perspectives, driven by the evaluation principles in EAGLES-1996: (i) high-quality evaluation metrics, (ii) rigorous comparison of NLG systems for properly tracking the progress, and (iii) understanding evaluation metrics. To this end, we identify the current state of challenges derived from the inherent characteristics of these perspectives, and then present novel metrics, rigorous comparison approaches, and explainability techniques for metrics to address the identified issues.
We hope that our work on evaluation metrics, system comparison and explainability for metrics inspires more research towards principled NLG evaluation, and contributes to the fair and adequate evaluation and comparison in natural language processing
New Pathways to support social-ecological Systems in Change
Klimawandel und Biodiversitätsverlust sowie Verstädterung und demografischer Wandel haben tiefgreifende Auswirkungen auf Städte und ihre Ökosysteme und damit auf die Lebensbedingungen der Mehrheit der Menschheit. Die Geschwindigkeit des Wandels und die Dringlichkeit der Folgen macht Umweltmonitoring zu einem potentiell interessanten Tool für nachhaltige und resiliente Stadtentwicklung. Der erste Artikel gibt einen Überblick über den aktuellen Stand der Fernerkundung in Bezug auf Stadtökologie und zeigt, dass Fernerkundung relevant für nachhaltige Stadtplanung ist. Es bestehen jedoch bestehen Mängel, da viele Studien nicht direkt umsetzbar sind. Der zweite Artikel zeigt, dass eine wachsende Stadt Möglichkeiten für den Ausbau der grünen Infrastruktur bieten kann. Im dritten Artikel wird untersucht, wie sich die städtische Dichte auf die Bereitstellung von Ökosystemdienstleistungen der grünen Infrastruktur auswirkt. Es wird gezeigt, dass eine hohe Siedlungsdichte nicht zwangsläufig zu einem geringeren Biodiversitätspotenzial oder einer geringeren Kühlkapazität führt. Allerdings sind dicht bebaute Gebiete mit geringer Vegetationsbedeckung besonders auf grüne Infrastruktur angewiesen. Der vierte Artikel befasst sich mit der Frage, wie naturbasierte Lösungen durch eine bessere Vernetzung der Beteiligten gestärkt werden können. Auf der Grundlage einer gezielten Literaturrecherche über Informationstechnologie zur Unterstützung sozial-ökologischer Systeme wird ein Instrument zur Entscheidungshilfe entwickelt. Dieses kombiniert ökologische und soziale Indikatoren, um Klimawandeladaption in Übereinstimmung mit den sozio-ökologischen Bedingungen entwickeln zu können. Der fünfte Artikel bietet eine grundsätzliche Perspektive zur Unterstützung der städtischen Nachhaltigkeit, die auf dem ökologischen-Trait Konzept basiert. Zusammen bieten die fünf Artikel Wege für die Fernerkundungswissenschaft und die angewandte Raumplanung für nachhaltige und resiliente Entwicklungen in Städten.Climate change and biodiversity loss, as well as urbanisation and demographic change, are major global challenges of the 21st century. These trends have profound impacts on cities and their ecosystems and thus on the living conditions of the majority of humanity. This raises the need for timely environmental monitoring supporting sustainable and resilient urban developments. The first article is an overview of the state of the art of remote sensing science in relation to urban ecology. The review found that remote sensing can contribute to sustainable urban policy, still insufficiencies remain as many studies are not directly actionable. The second article shows that a growing city can provide opportunities for an increase in green infrastructure. Here, remote sensing is used for long-term analysis of land-use in relation to urban forms in Berlin. The third article examines how urban density affects ecosystem service provision of urban green infrastructure. It is shown that residential density does not necessarily lead to poor biodiversity potential or cooling capacity. However, dense areas with low vegetation cover are particularly dependent on major green infrastructure. The fourth article explores ways to reinforce nature-based solutions by better connecting and informing stakeholders. Based on a focussed literature review on information technology supporting urban social-ecological systems, a decision support tool is developed. The tool combines indicators based on ecological diversity and performance with population density and vulnerability. This way, climate change adaptation can be developed in accordance with socio-ecological conditions. The concluding fifth article offers an outlook on a larger framework in support of urban sustainability, based on the ecological trait concept. Together the five research papers provide pathways for urban remote sensing science and applied spatial planning that can support sustainable and resilient developments in cities
Financial advisor ethics: how institutional logics and self-determination influence advisors and their fiduciary duty
In the United States, Registered Investment Advisor firms have a legal and arguably moral duty to provide advice in the best interest of their clients. However, advisors sometimes fall short of their responsibility leading to clients receiving suboptimal advice, paying for services they do not need, or willingly paying for needed advisory services but are underserved. To find solutions, the researcher begins by determining what gives rise to ethical failures among financial advisors. For this purpose, the researcher investigates competing intra-institutional logics at a large U.S.-based financial advisory firm utilizing a Q methodology study and semi-structured interviews.
Institutional logics theory and self-determination theory constitute the theoretical lenses used in the thesis. The current state of the literature is robust insofar as works relating to various forms of institutional logics and self-determination theory. However, the institutional logics literature is not so well developed regarding intra-institutional logics, which is the relevant issue here. Regarding self-determination theory, where the availability of relevant literature is deep, the researcher finds room to fill a gap by proposing a novel theoretical contribution to update the current self-determination theory framework model. At its essence, the thesis is a work about professional ethics with financial advisors as the focus. Within works found in the popular press, one can discover many articles dealing with financial advisor ethics. However, based on a systematic literature review, the same cannot be said for peer-reviewed academic works. This PhD research project is intended to help fill this along with the aforementioned gaps. The researcher also touches on agency theory and why it was not chosen as a theoretical lens to examine the organization, even though some might assume it would have been an obvious choice.
The emperical contribution derives from findings suggesting that although advisors are intrinsically motivated and care about client wellbeing, they lack sufficient autonomy, are unduly influenced by sales pressure, and are uneasy working in a sales culture that undermines executing their fiduciary responsibilities. The researcher concludes that it is necessary to change the standards for advisor performance evaluations and compensation plans for which recommendations are provided
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