2,462 research outputs found
The Muir String Quartet, November 10, 1994
This is the concert program of the Muir String Quartet performance on Thursday, November 10, 1994 at 8:00 p.m., at the Tsai Performance Center, 685 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Works performed were String Quartet in G major, K. 387 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Quartet for Clarinet, Violin, Cello and Piano by Paul Hindemith, and Clarinet Quintet in A major, Op. 146 by Max Reger. Digitization for Boston University Concert Programs was supported by the Boston University Humanities Library Endowed Fund
A Story of Parametric Trace Slicing, Garbage and Static Analysis
This paper presents a proposal (story) of how statically detecting
unreachable objects (in Java) could be used to improve a particular runtime
verification approach (for Java), namely parametric trace slicing. Monitoring
algorithms for parametric trace slicing depend on garbage collection to (i)
cleanup data-structures storing monitored objects, ensuring they do not become
unmanageably large, and (ii) anticipate the violation of (non-safety)
properties that cannot be satisfied as a monitored object can no longer appear
later in the trace. The proposal is that both usages can be improved by making
the unreachability of monitored objects explicit in the parametric property and
statically introducing additional instrumentation points generating related
events. The ideas presented in this paper are still exploratory and the
intention is to integrate the described techniques into the MarQ monitoring
tool for quantified event automata.Comment: In Proceedings PrePost 2017, arXiv:1708.0688
Cross-understanding will help complex and diverse teams achieve mutually agreeable solutions
Teams whose members have diverse backgrounds can experience differences in task knowledge, sensitivities to various aspects of the task system, as well as beliefs and preferences about how to best approach or solve a problem. How might managers deal with this? Niranjan Janardhanan, Kyle Lewis, Rhonda R. Reger, and Cynthia K. Stevens write that, rather than focusing on common ground, team leaders should emphasise cross-understanding. Understanding the bases of someone’s views will help get to the real reasons behind differences in opinion, and therefore help to achieve mutually agreeable solutions
Rudolfs K. Zalups sheet music collection
The collection consists of bound volumes and loose sheet music published in the late 1920s through the late 1970s. Music includes piano pieces as well as music in English, French, German, Latvian, Polish, and Russian.
Find this collection in the University Libraries\u27 cataloghttps://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/finding-aids/1119/thumbnail.jp
String Department Student Recital, April 21, 1994
This is the concert program of the String Department Student Recital on Thursday, April 21, 1994 at 8:00 p.m., at the Marshall Room, 855 Commonwealth Avenue. Works performed were "Caprice Basque," Op. 24 by Pablo de Sarasate, Suite No. 1, Op. 131d by Max Reger, Sonata for Violin and Piano by Claude Debussy, Sonata No. 8 in C major, K. 246 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, No. 14: Moderato, No. 17: Sostenuto, and No. 20: Allegretto from 24 "Caprices," Op. 1 by Niccolò Paganini, and I. Allegro vivace from Violin Concerto by Aram Khachaturian. Digitization for Boston University Concert Programs was supported by the Boston University Humanities Library Endowed Fund
Deliberation behind closed doors: transparency and lobbying in the European Union [by Daniel Naurin]
This book makes a refreshingly empirical contribution to discussions of the European
Union and its democratic deficit, specifically on the possible role of increased transparency
in alleviating the latter. Naurin rightly challenges us to think about transparency and its
effects – to ‘take transparency seriously’ rather than merely assume its panacea-like
effects for European Union democracy and legitimacy. With this in mind, Naurin’s work
focuses on investigating what deliberative democracy theorists label the civilizing effect
of publicity
Operational Semantics of Process Monitors
CSPe is a specification language for runtime monitors that can directly
express concurrency in a bottom-up manner that composes the system from
simpler, interacting components. It includes constructs to explicitly flag
failures to the monitor, which unlike deadlocks and livelocks in conventional
process algebras, propagate globally and aborts the whole system's execution.
Although CSPe has a trace semantics along with an implementation demonstrating
acceptable performance, it lacks an operational semantics. An operational
semantics is not only more accessible than trace semantics but also
indispensable for ensuring the correctness of the implementation. Furthermore,
a process algebra like CSPe admits multiple denotational semantics appropriate
for different purposes, and an operational semantics is the basis for
justifying such semantics' integrity and relevance. In this paper, we develop
an SOS-style operational semantics for CSPe, which properly accounts for
explicit failures and will serve as a basis for further study of its
properties, its optimization, and its use in runtime verification
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