688 research outputs found
The Immediate Practical Implication of the Houghton Report: Provide Green Open Access Now
Among the many important implications of Houghton et alâs (2009) timely and illuminating JISC analysis of the costs and benefits of providing free online access (âOpen Access,â OA) to peer-reviewed scholarly and scientific journal articles one stands out as particularly compelling: It would yield a forty-fold benefit/cost ratio if the worldâs peer-reviewed research were all self-archived by its authors so as to make it OA. There are many assumptions and estimates underlying Houghton et alâs modelling and analyses, but they are for the most part very reasonable and even conservative. This makes their strongest practical implication particularly striking: The 40-fold benefit/cost ratio of providing Green OA is an order of magnitude greater than all the other potential combinations of alternatives to the status quo analyzed and compared by Houghton et al. This outcome is all the more significant in light of the fact that self-archiving already rests entirely in the hands of the research community (researchers, their institutions and their funders), whereas OA publishing depends on the publishing community. Perhaps most remarkable is the fact that this outcome emerged from studies that approached the problem primarily from the standpoint of the economics of publication rather than the economics of research
Open Access Policy: Numbers, Analysis, Effectiveness
The PASTEUR4OA project analyses what makes an Open Access (OA) policy
effective. The total number of institutional or funder OA policies worldwide is
now 663 (March 2015), over half of them mandatory. ROARMAP, the policy
registry, has been rebuilt to record more policy detail and provide more
extensive search functionality. Deposit rates were measured for articles in
institutions' repositories and compared to the total number of WoS-indexed
articles published from those institutions. Average deposit rate was over four
times as high for institutions with a mandatory policy. Six positive
correlations were found between deposit rates and (1) Must-Deposit; (2)
Cannot-Waive-Deposit; (3) Deposit-Linked-to-Research-Evaluation; (4)
Cannot-Waive-Rights-Retention; (5) Must-Make-Deposit-OA (after allowable
embargo) and (6) Can-Waive-OA. For deposit latency, there is a positive
correlation between earlier deposit and (7) Must-Deposit-Immediately as well as
with (4) Cannot-Waive-Rights-Retention and with mandate age. There are not yet
enough OA policies to test whether still further policy conditions would
contribute to mandate effectiveness but the present findings already suggest
that it would be useful for current and future OA policies to adopt the seven
positive conditions so as to accelerate and maximise the growth of OA.Comment: 49 pages, 21 figures, 15 tables. Pasteur4OA Work Package 3 report:
Open Access policies 201
A system design for human factors studies of speech-enabled Web browsing
This paper describes the design of a system which will subsequently be used as the basis of a range of empirical studies aimed at discovering how best to harness speech recognition capabilities in multimodal multimedia computing. Initial work focuses on speech-enabled browsing of the World Wide Web, which was never designed for such use. System design is complete, and is being evaluated via usability testing
Fermionic construction of partition function for multi-matrix models and multi-component TL hierarchy
We use -component fermions to present -fold
integrals as a fermionic expectation value. This yields fermionic
representation for various -matrix models. Links with the -component
KP hierarchy and also with the -component TL hierarchy are discussed. We
show that the set of all (but two) flows of -component TL changes standard
matrix models to new ones.Comment: 16 pages, submitted to a special issue of Theoretical and
Mathematical Physic
Fermionic approach to the evaluation of integrals of rational symmetric functions
We use the fermionic construction of two-matrix model partition functions to
evaluate integrals over rational symmetric functions. This approach is
complementary to the one used in the paper ``Integrals of Rational Symmetric
Functions, Two-Matrix Models and Biorthogonal Polynomials'' \cite{paper2},
where these integrals were evaluated by a direct method.Comment: 34 page
Hamiltonian Dynamics, Classical R-matrices and Isomonodromic Deformations
The Hamiltonian approach to the theory of dual isomonodromic deformations is
developed within the framework of rational classical R-matrix structures on
loop algebras. Particular solutions to the isomonodromic deformation equations
appearing in the computation of correlation functions in integrable quantum
field theory models are constructed through the Riemann-Hilbert problem method.
The corresponding -functions are shown to be given by the Fredholm
determinant of a special class of integral operators.Comment: LaTeX 13pgs (requires lamuphys.sty). Text of talk given at workshop:
Supersymmetric and Integrable Systems, University of Illinois, Chicago
Circle, June 12-14, 1997. To appear in: Springer Lecture notes in Physic
Combining depth and intensity images to produce enhanced object detection for use in a robotic colony
Robotic colonies that can communicate with each other and interact with their ambient environments can be utilized for a wide range of research and industrial applications. However amongst the problems that these colonies face is that of the isolating objects within an environment. Robotic colonies that can isolate objects within the environment can not only map that environment in de-tail, but interact with that ambient space. Many object recognition techniques ex-ist, however these are often complex and computationally expensive, leading to overly complex implementations. In this paper a simple model is proposed to isolate objects, these can then be recognize and tagged. The model will be using 2D and 3D perspectives of the perceptual data to produce a probability map of the outline of an object, therefore addressing the defects that exist with 2D and 3D image techniques. Some of the defects that will be addressed are; low level illumination and objects at similar depths. These issues may not be completely solved, however, the model provided will provide results confident enough for use in a robotic colony
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