5,851 research outputs found

    IDEF5 Ontology Description Capture Method: Concept Paper

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    The results of research towards an ontology capture method referred to as IDEF5 are presented. Viewed simply as the study of what exists in a domain, ontology is an activity that can be understood to be at work across the full range of human inquiry prompted by the persistent effort to understand the world in which it has found itself - and which it has helped to shape. In the contest of information management, ontology is the task of extracting the structure of a given engineering, manufacturing, business, or logistical domain and storing it in an usable representational medium. A key to effective integration is a system ontology that can be accessed and modified across domains and which captures common features of the overall system relevant to the goals of the disparate domains. If the focus is on information integration, then the strongest motivation for ontology comes from the need to support data sharing and function interoperability. In the correct architecture, an enterprise ontology base would allow th e construction of an integrated environment in which legacy systems appear to be open architecture integrated resources. If the focus is on system/software development, then support for the rapid acquisition of reliable systems is perhaps the strongest motivation for ontology. Finally, ontological analysis was demonstrated to be an effective first step in the construction of robust knowledge based systems

    Theoretical foundations for information representation and constraint specification

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    Research accomplished at the Knowledge Based Systems Laboratory of the Department of Industrial Engineering at Texas A&M University is described. Outlined here are the theoretical foundations necessary to construct a Neutral Information Representation Scheme (NIRS), which will allow for automated data transfer and translation between model languages, procedural programming languages, database languages, transaction and process languages, and knowledge representation and reasoning control languages for information system specification

    IDEF3 formalization report

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    The Process Description Capture Method (IDEF3) is one of several Integrated Computer-Aided Manufacturing (ICAM) DEFinition methods developed by the Air Force to support systems engineering activities, and in particular, to support information systems development. These methods have evolved as a distillation of 'good practice' experience by information system developers and are designed to raise the performance level of the novice practitioner to one comparable with that of an expert. IDEF3 is meant to serve as a knowledge acquisition and requirements definition tool that structures the user's understanding of how a given process, event, or system works around process descriptions. A special purpose graphical language accompanying the method serves to highlight temporal precedence and causality relationships relative to the process or event being described

    Survey of Veteran Attitudes and Opinions Relative to Their Education at South Dakota State College

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    Many people have adopted peculiar ideas as to the attitudes and opinions of veterans who are attending colleges under the government program, which is commonly called the G.I. Bill. This report of a veterans study which was carried on during the registration for spring quarter of the 1947-1948 school year at South Dakota State College located at Brookings, South Dakota. It is hoped that these findings may be of some value in straightening out those individuals, giving them a clearer picture of the attitudes and opinions of veterans, and especially of those attending South Dakota State College

    Statistical equilibrium equations for trace elements in stellar atmospheres

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    The conditions of thermodynamic equilibrium, local thermodynamic equilibrium, and statistical equilibrium are discussed in detail. The equations of statistical equilibrium and the supplementary equations are shown together with the expressions for radiative and collisional rates with the emphasize on the solution for trace elements.Comment: presented at the workshop held in Nice, France, 30.7.-4.8.2007, to appear in Non-LTE Line Formation for Trace Elements in Stellar Atmospheres, R. Monier et al. eds., EAS Publ.Se

    Research accomplished at the Knowledge Based Systems Lab: IDEF3, version 1.0

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    An overview is presented of the foundations and content of the evolving IDEF3 process flow and object state description capture method. This method is currently in beta test. Ongoing efforts in the formulation of formal semantics models for descriptions captured in the outlined form and in the actual application of this method can be expected to cause an evolution in the method language. A language is described for the representation of process and object state centered system description. IDEF3 is a scenario driven process flow modeling methodology created specifically for these types of descriptive activities

    Decomposing the scattered field of two-dimensional metaatoms into multipole contributions

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    We introduce a technique to decompose the scattered near field of two-dimensional arbitrary metaatoms into its multipole contributions. To this end we expand the scattered field upon plane wave illumination into cylindrical harmonics as known from Mie theory. By relating these cylin- drical harmonics to the field radiated by Cartesian multipoles, the contribution of the lowest order electric and magnetic multipoles can be identified. Revealing these multipoles is essential for the design of metamaterials because they largely determine the character of light propagation. In par- ticular, having this information at hand it is straightforward to distinguish between effects that result either from the arrangement of the metaatoms or from their particular design

    On the simulation of cohesive fatigue effects in grain boundaries of a piezoelectric mesostructure

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    AbstractFerroelectric materials offer a variety of new applications in the field of smart structures and intelligent systems. Accordingly, the modelling of these materials constitutes an active field of research. A critical limitation of the performance of such materials is given when electrical, mechanical, or mixed loading fatigue occurs, combined with, for instance, microcracking phenomena. In this contribution, fatigue effects in ferroelectric materials are numerically investigated by utilisation of a cohesive-type approach. In view of finite element-based simulations, the geometry of a natural grain structure, as observed on the so-called meso-level, is represented by an appropriate mesh. While the response of the grains themselves is approximated by coupled continuum elements, grain boundaries are numerically incorporated via so-called cohesive-type or interface elements. These offer a great potential for numerical simulations: as an advantage, they do not result in bad-conditioned systems of equations as compared with the application of standard continuum elements inhering a very high ratio of length and height. The grain boundary behaviour is modelled by cohesive-type constitutive laws, designed to capture fatigue phenomena. Being a first attempt, switching effects are planned to be added to the grain model in the future. Two differently motivated fatigue evolution techniques are applied, the first being appropriate for low-cycle-fatigue, and a second one adequate to simulate high-cycle-fatigue. Subsequent to a demonstration of the theoretical and numerical framework, studies of benchmark boundary value problems with fatigue-motivated boundary conditions are presented

    Modelling the effects of land-use and land-cover change on water availability in the Jordan River region

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    Within the GLOWA Jordan River project, a first-time overview of the current and possible future land and water conditions of a major part of the Eastern Mediterranean region (ca. 100 000 km<sup>2</sup>) is given. First, we applied the hydrological model TRAIN to simulate current water availability (runoff and groundwater recharge) and irrigation water demand on a 1 km×1 km spatial resolution. The results demonstrate the scarcity of water resources in the study region, with extremely low values of water availability in the semi-arid and arid parts. Then, a set of four divergent scenarios on the future of water has been developed using a stakeholder driven approach. Relevant drivers for land-use/land-cover change were fed into the LandSHIFT.R model to produce land-use and land-cover maps for the different scenarios. These maps were used as input to TRAIN in order to generate scenarios of water availability and irrigation water demand for the region. For this study, two intermediate scenarios were selected, with projected developments ranging between optimistic and pessimistic futures (with regard to social and economic conditions in the region). Given that climate conditions remain unchanged, the simulations show both increases and decreases in water availability, depending on the future pattern of natural and agricultural vegetation and the related dominance of hydrological processes
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