7,075 research outputs found
The loss of *g before *m in Proto-Slavic
This paper proposes a new sound rule for Proto-Slavic, according to which *g (from PIE *g, *gw, *gh, and *gwh) was lost before *m. This development was posterior to Winter’s law and the merger of voiced and aspirated stop in Slavic. The operation of the rule is illustrated by new etymologies of four Slavic words: *ama, *jama ‘hole, pit’, *těmę ‘sinciput’, *mąžь ‘husband, man’, and *remy ‘leather belt’
Text Analytics for Android Project
Most advanced text analytics and text mining tasks include text classification, text clustering, building ontology, concept/entity extraction, summarization, deriving patterns within the structured data, production of granular taxonomies, sentiment and emotion analysis, document summarization, entity relation modelling, interpretation of the output. Already existing text analytics and text mining cannot develop text material alternatives (perform a multivariant design), perform multiple criteria analysis,
automatically select the most effective variant according to different aspects (citation index of papers (Scopus, ScienceDirect, Google Scholar) and authors (Scopus, ScienceDirect, Google Scholar), Top 25 papers, impact factor of journals, supporting phrases, document name and contents, density of keywords), calculate utility degree and market value. However, the Text Analytics for Android Project can perform the aforementioned functions. To the best of the knowledge herein, these functions have not been previously implemented; thus this is the first attempt to do so. The Text Analytics for Android Project is briefly described in this article
Poetic Lithuania of Miłosz
The article deals with the images of Lithuania found in Czesław Miłosz’s poetry. The novels and essays have only been used to confirm the conclusions drawn from the interpretation of selected poems. Despite the frequently-declared unwillingness of the author of Dolina Issy (The Valley of the Issa) to accept and use any autobiographical elements in literature, the land of his childhood has always been present in all the poet’s works. The explanation of this fascination with nostalgia seems to be unsatisfactory. The author of the article perceives the poetic images of Lithuania created by the uprooted immigrant as a symbol of his inner, not purely geographical, settlement. The subject of the discussion is the ever-changing perception of the Eastern-Borderland, which corresponds to particular stages of the protagonist’s journey through life. The starting point is the experience of eviction. It modifies the originally idealized vision of the “little homeland” and makes the hero’s attempt to reject or “amputate” it. The poems from the Światło dzienne (Daylight) collection surprise the reader by a hostile attitude towards the poet’s youth spent in Lithuania and the perception of those early memories as some destructive forces threatening the artist. It is only after a many years’ quest that the borderland heritage is appreciated and conquered again. Now, however, it acquires a different, more symbolic form. The cycle Miasto bez imienia (A Town without a Name) and the poem Gdzie wschodzi słońce i kędy zapada (Where the Sun Rises and Sets) are evidence of a gradual transformation. The faithful recreation in the poet’s memory of particular places and people changes into the construction of some outside religious space, built from the traces of the real world. Lithuania changes into a perfect reality, a Super-Land, capable of retaining the past and combining it with the present. It is a prop freeing the poet from the waste land of Urizen
Visual literacy and visual communication for global education: innovations in teaching e-learning in art, design and communication
This paper presents the (student) proceedings of a successful inter-university co-operation between a research university and a university of applied sciences, in the field of Visual Literacy and Visual Communication. The origin lays in the international symposium “Digital Communities for Global Education” (Enschede NL, 2006) and the start was a web-based course in Informational Graphic Design. The ongoing development is an experimental master course in which students of both institutes work together. The participating professors are also involved in European Co-operative networks as well as Trans Atlantic- and Euro-Asian ones. Participating students are coming from all over the world so give the course a multi cultural character.\ud
Research questions for the project are 1) what is the universal content of a message and 2) how can this message be encoded? 3) what factors do influence the interaction processes in networked education
A posteriori metadata from automated provenance tracking: Integration of AiiDA and TCOD
In order to make results of computational scientific research findable,
accessible, interoperable and re-usable, it is necessary to decorate them with
standardised metadata. However, there are a number of technical and practical
challenges that make this process difficult to achieve in practice. Here the
implementation of a protocol is presented to tag crystal structures with their
computed properties, without the need of human intervention to curate the data.
This protocol leverages the capabilities of AiiDA, an open-source platform to
manage and automate scientific computational workflows, and TCOD, an
open-access database storing computed materials properties using a well-defined
and exhaustive ontology. Based on these, the complete procedure to deposit
computed data in the TCOD database is automated. All relevant metadata are
extracted from the full provenance information that AiiDA tracks and stores
automatically while managing the calculations. Such a protocol also enables
reproducibility of scientific data in the field of computational materials
science. As a proof of concept, the AiiDA-TCOD interface is used to deposit 170
theoretical structures together with their computed properties and their full
provenance graphs, consisting in over 4600 AiiDA nodes
Initial explorations of ARM processors for scientific computing
Power efficiency is becoming an ever more important metric for both high
performance and high throughput computing. Over the course of next decade it is
expected that flops/watt will be a major driver for the evolution of computer
architecture. Servers with large numbers of ARM processors, already ubiquitous
in mobile computing, are a promising alternative to traditional x86-64
computing. We present the results of our initial investigations into the use of
ARM processors for scientific computing applications. In particular we report
the results from our work with a current generation ARMv7 development board to
explore ARM-specific issues regarding the software development environment,
operating system, performance benchmarks and issues for porting High Energy
Physics software.Comment: Submitted to proceedings of the 15th International Workshop on
Advanced Computing and Analysis Techniques in Physics Research (ACAT2013),
Beijing. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1311.100
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