111,209 research outputs found
Book Review: âASIA ON TOUR: Exploring the rise of Asian tourismâ
A review of the book "Asia on Tour: Exploring the Rise of Asian Tourism," edited by Tim Winter, Peggy Teo and T. C. Chang is presented
Chang, Ji-Mei
University of Southern California, Department of Curriculum, Teaching, & Special Education, 1989, Ph.D.
University of Southern California, School of Education, 1978, M.S.
National Chengchi University, Department of Education, 1970, B.A.https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/erfa_bios/1002/thumbnail.jp
Review: Christian Intercultural Communication
A Review: Chang, C. Tim, and Ashley E. Chang. Christian Intercultural Communication: Sharing Godâs Love with People of Other Cultures. Dubuque, IA: Kendall Hunt Publishing Company, 2021. 277 Pages. $82.11
Eileen Chang and cinema
The death of Eileen Chang on September 8, 1995 in Los Angeles made headlines in all the Chinese newspapers. In the Chinese-speaking areas of Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Mainland China, a veritable cult of mystique has been built around her by both public media and the large number of her fans (who called themselves Chang-mi or Chang-fansâ). However, in the last twenty-three years of her life Chang lived quietly and incognito in Los Angeles, shunning all social contact and escaping publicity by constantly changing her residences in numerous hotels, motels, and small apartment houses until her death in an obscure apartment building in the Westwood section of Los Angeles. This âmysteryâ of her last years adds only more glamour to her legend: she was like a retired movie star past her prime, like Greta Garbo
Transductive Multi-label Zero-shot Learning
Zero-shot learning has received increasing interest as a means to alleviate
the often prohibitive expense of annotating training data for large scale
recognition problems. These methods have achieved great success via learning
intermediate semantic representations in the form of attributes and more
recently, semantic word vectors. However, they have thus far been constrained
to the single-label case, in contrast to the growing popularity and importance
of more realistic multi-label data. In this paper, for the first time, we
investigate and formalise a general framework for multi-label zero-shot
learning, addressing the unique challenge therein: how to exploit multi-label
correlation at test time with no training data for those classes? In
particular, we propose (1) a multi-output deep regression model to project an
image into a semantic word space, which explicitly exploits the correlations in
the intermediate semantic layer of word vectors; (2) a novel zero-shot learning
algorithm for multi-label data that exploits the unique compositionality
property of semantic word vector representations; and (3) a transductive
learning strategy to enable the regression model learned from seen classes to
generalise well to unseen classes. Our zero-shot learning experiments on a
number of standard multi-label datasets demonstrate that our method outperforms
a variety of baselines.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, Accepted to BMVC 2014 (oral
Publikationsliste PD Dr. Heide Hoffmann - Publikationen zum Ăkolandbau
Publikationen von
Heide Hoffmann
C. Stroemel
S. MĂŒller
G. Marx
N. KĂŒnkel
Ch.-L. Chang
W. HĂŒbner
K. Reute
A note on the phonetic evolution of yod-pa-red in Central Tibet.
Despite the current inconsistent spellings such as yod-red (Tournadre 1996: 229-231 et passim, 2003), yog-red (Denwood 1999: 158 et passim), and yoáž„o-red (Hu et al. 1989: 64 et passim) of the existential copula and auxiliary verb which is pronounced as yÉÉ Ì ree Ì (Chang and Shefts 1964: 15) or yo:re ' (Tournadre 1996: 229-231) there is widespread agreement that yod-pa-red is the etymological origin of this morpheme (Chang and Chang 1968: 106ff, Tournadre 1996: 229). It is regularly spelled yod-pa-red in the newspaper articles collected from the Mi dmaáč
s brñan par (äșșæ°ç« ć ± Peoples Pictorial) by Kamil SedlĂĄÄek (1972, e.g. p. 27, bsam-gyi yod-pa-red âhe was thinkingâ). The pronunciation of this auxiliary is not what one would predict from the spelling. In all likelihood it is the frequency and unstressed syntactic position of the word which led to this deviant phonetic development. The existence of studies and handbooks for the language of Lhasa over more than a century permits us to trance the phonetic development of yod-pa-red with surprising precision
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