214 research outputs found

    Prehistoric Sculpture

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    A Monte Carlo Evaluation of Weighted Community Detection Algorithms

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    The past decade has been marked with a proliferation of community detection algorithms that aim to organize nodes (e.g., individuals, brain regions, variables) into modular structures that indicate subgroups, clusters, or communities. Motivated by the emergence of big data across many fields of inquiry, these methodological developments have primarily focused on the detection of communities of nodes from matrices that are very large. However, it remains unknown if the algorithms can reliably detect communities in smaller graph sizes (i.e., 1000 nodes and fewer) which are commonly used in brain research. More importantly, these algorithms have predominantly been tested only on binary or sparse count matrices and it remains unclear the degree to which the algorithms can recover community structure for different types of matrices, such as the often used cross-correlation matrices representing functional connectivity across predefined brain regions. Of the publicly available approaches for weighted graphs that can detect communities in graph sizes of at least 1000, prior research has demonstrated that Newman's spectral approach (i.e., Leading Eigenvalue), Walktrap, Fast Modularity, the Louvain method (i.e., multilevel community method), Label Propagation, and Infomap all recover communities exceptionally well in certain circumstances. The purpose of the present Monte Carlo simulation study is to test these methods across a large number of conditions, including varied graph sizes and types of matrix (sparse count, correlation, and reflected Euclidean distance), to identify which algorithm is optimal for specific types of data matrices. The results indicate that when the data are in the form of sparse count networks (such as those seen in diffusion tensor imaging), Label Propagation and Walktrap surfaced as the most reliable methods for community detection. For dense, weighted networks such as correlation matrices capturing functional connectivity, Walktrap consistently outperformed the other approaches for recovering communities

    Optimizar la participación comunitaria a través del magazín Tarde Informativa de la emisora Bacatá Estereo del municipio de Funza, implementando el nuevo método Jacahen

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    Tesis de la Sede Principal UNIMINUTO - BogotáSe lleva a cabo en nuestros tiempos una discusión bizantina sobre el campo de acción del comunicador social–periodista. Se cree todavía que sigue siendo “un emisor”. También hay quienes consideran que el comunicador debe ser un “relacionista público” o un asesor de imagen, que ayude a vender algo (pueden ser ideas, productos, ideologías políticas, etc.). No son pocas las teorías que apuntan a que el comunicador debe ser un comunicólogo (siguiendo el ejemplo etimológico del sociólogo y del antropólogo, es decir siguiendo el logos- conocimiento) y no un técnico de la comunicación, pero poco se puede escuchar de un Comunicador Social-Periodista (teniendo en cuenta los dos componentes de su formación) que se perfile al campo investigativo por excelencia, a tratar de identificar las notorias falencias investigativas que existen en su campo de acción y proponer alternativas de cambio para enriquecimiento y valoración de su ejercicio

    Optimizar la participación comunitaria a través del magazín Tarde Informativa de la emisora Bacatá Estereo del municipio de Funza, implementando el nuevo método Jacahen

    Get PDF
    Tesis de la Sede Principal UNIMINUTO - BogotáSe lleva a cabo en nuestros tiempos una discusión bizantina sobre el campo de acción del comunicador social–periodista. Se cree todavía que sigue siendo “un emisor”. También hay quienes consideran que el comunicador debe ser un “relacionista público” o un asesor de imagen, que ayude a vender algo (pueden ser ideas, productos, ideologías políticas, etc.). No son pocas las teorías que apuntan a que el comunicador debe ser un comunicólogo (siguiendo el ejemplo etimológico del sociólogo y del antropólogo, es decir siguiendo el logos- conocimiento) y no un técnico de la comunicación, pero poco se puede escuchar de un Comunicador Social-Periodista (teniendo en cuenta los dos componentes de su formación) que se perfile al campo investigativo por excelencia, a tratar de identificar las notorias falencias investigativas que existen en su campo de acción y proponer alternativas de cambio para enriquecimiento y valoración de su ejercicio

    The fine-structure of volatility feedback I: multi-scale self-reflexivity

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    We attempt to unveil the fine structure of volatility feedback effects in the context of general quadratic autoregressive (QARCH) models, which assume that today's volatility can be expressed as a general quadratic form of the past daily returns. The standard ARCH or GARCH framework is recovered when the quadratic kernel is diagonal. The calibration of these models on US stock returns reveals several unexpected features. The off-diagonal (non ARCH) coefficients of the quadratic kernel are found to be highly significant both In-Sample and Out-of-Sample, but all these coefficients turn out to be one order of magnitude smaller than the diagonal elements. This confirms that daily returns play a special role in the volatility feedback mechanism, as postulated by ARCH models. The feedback kernel exhibits a surprisingly complex structure, incompatible with models proposed so far in the literature. Its spectral properties suggest the existence of volatility-neutral patterns of past returns. The diagonal part of the quadratic kernel is found to decay as a power-law of the lag, in line with the long-memory of volatility. Finally, QARCH models suggest some violations of Time Reversal Symmetry in financial time series, which are indeed observed empirically, although of much smaller amplitude than predicted. We speculate that a faithful volatility model should include both ARCH feedback effects and a stochastic component

    Immune function in female B6C3F1 mice is modulated by DE-71, a commercial polybrominated diphenyl ether mixture

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    Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) are an important class of flame-retardants that are environmentally persistent and bioaccumulative. Toxicity of these compounds has become a concern because detectable levels of PBDEs are present in humans and wildlife and they are structurally similar to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). This study examined the effects of the commercial penta-BDE mixture, DE-71, in adult female B6C3F1 mice on hematology, serum clinical chemistry, thyroid hormones, tissue histology, and several immunotoxicity end-points (lymphocyte proliferation, NK cell activity, splenic immunophenotypes, and SRBC-specific-IgM production). Mice were exposed via oral gavage for 28 days to achieve total administered doses (TAD) of 0, 0.5, 5, 50, or 100 mg/kg. No changes in histology, clinical chemistry, body or organ weights were observed. Serum total T3 and T4 levels were not altered by any of the DE-71 treatments. Peripheral blood monocyte numbers were decreased by the 0.5, 5, and 50 mg/kg treatments, but not by the 100 mg/kg TAD concentration. Compared to controls, mitogen-stimulated T- and B-cell proliferation was increased by the 100 mg/kg TAD concentration (ED50 = 60 mg/kg TAD [2.14 mg/kg/day] and 58 mg/kg TAD [2.57 mg/kg/day], respectively). NK cell activity was decreased compared to controls by the 100 mg/kg TAD concentration (ED50 = 20 mg/kg TAD [0.7 mg/kg/day]). No alterations were noted in thymic T-cell populations or in SRBC-specific-IgM production. Numbers of CD19+CD21−, CD19+CD21+, CD4+CD8−, CD4−CD8+, CD4−CD8−, and MHC-II+ cells in the spleen were not affected. However, the numbers of splenic CD4+CD8+ cells were decreased compared to the controls by 0.5, 5, and 100 mg/kg TAD. This study provides an assessment of the systemic toxicity and immunotoxicity of DE-71, and indicates that immune parameters are modulated at exposure concentrations lower than previously reported

    ARTEFACTS: How do we want to deal with the future of our one and only planet?

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    The European Commission’s Science and Knowledge Service, the Joint Research Centre (JRC), decided to try working hand-in-hand with leading European science centres and museums. Behind this decision was the idea that the JRC could better support EU Institutions in engaging with the European public. The fact that European Union policies are firmly based on scientific evidence is a strong message which the JRC is uniquely able to illustrate. Such a collaboration would not only provide a platform to explain the benefits of EU policies to our daily lives but also provide an opportunity for European citizens to engage by taking a more active part in the EU policy making process for the future. A PILOT PROGRAMME To test the idea, the JRC launched an experimental programme to work with science museums: a perfect partner for three compelling reasons. Firstly, they attract a large and growing number of visitors. Leading science museums in Europe have typically 500 000 visitors per year. Furthermore, they are based in large European cities and attract local visitors as well as tourists from across Europe and beyond. The second reason for working with museums is that they have mastered the art of how to communicate key elements of sophisticated arguments across to the public and making complex topics of public interest readily accessible. That is a high-value added skill and a crucial part of the valorisation of public-funded research, never to be underestimated. Finally museums are, at present, undergoing something of a renaissance. Museums today are vibrant environments offering new techniques and technologies to both inform and entertain, and attract visitors of all demographics.JRC.H.2-Knowledge Management Methodologies, Communities and Disseminatio

    Navigating a river by its bends. A study on transnational social networks as resources for the transformation of Cambodia

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    This article explores in what ways first generation Cambodian French and Cambodian American returnees create and employ the social capital available in their transnational social networks upon their return to Cambodia. The triangular interdependence between the returnees, their overseas immigrant communities and homeland society is taken as a starting point. The central argument is that Cambodian French and Cambodian American returnees build different relationships to Cambodia due to: (1) the influence of their immigrant communities in the countries of resettlement; and (2) the contexts of their exit from Cambodia. Regarding debates on the contribution of returnees to an emergent nation, findings in this multisited casestudy bring forward that ideas of return held by the three parties involved may force remigrants into transnationalism in both host and home countries. Findings also demonstrate that social capital may be seen as a resource or a restraint in the lives of returnees
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