89 research outputs found

    The Seaway Tracker Project

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    The purpose of this paper is to introduce an interpretation model for the deployment of new media in didactics, taking inspiration from theories coming both from Didactics and Semiotics. State of the art experiences are analysed, in order to evaluate and settle novelties and limits in an adequate context. Finally, the project of a new didactic system is described. This system takes advantage from the expert systems technology and from the latest media format research (MPEG-4 and MPEG-7). It exploits the potential of the new media in terms of enhanced dynamic hypertext navigation and interactivity through the use of semantic data

    Risk homeostasis theory - A study of intrinsic compensation

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    Risk homeostasis theory (RHT) suggests that changes made to the intrinsic risk of environments are negated in one of three ways: behavioural adjustments within the environment, mode migration, and avoidance of the physical risk. To date, this three-way model of RHT has little empirical support, whilst research findings on RHT have at times been diametrically opposed. A reconciliation of apparently opposing findings might be possible by suggesting that extrinsic compensation fails to restore previously existing levels of actual risk in cases where behavioural adjustments within the environment are incapable of negating intrinsic risk changes. This paper reports a study in which behavioural adjustments within the physical risk-taking environment are capable of reconciling target with actual risk. The results provide positive support for RHT in the form of overcompensation for the intrinsic risk change on specific driver behaviours

    Algorithmic Complexity for Short Binary Strings Applied to Psychology: A Primer

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    Since human randomness production has been studied and widely used to assess executive functions (especially inhibition), many measures have been suggested to assess the degree to which a sequence is random-like. However, each of them focuses on one feature of randomness, leading authors to have to use multiple measures. Here we describe and advocate for the use of the accepted universal measure for randomness based on algorithmic complexity, by means of a novel previously presented technique using the the definition of algorithmic probability. A re-analysis of the classical Radio Zenith data in the light of the proposed measure and methodology is provided as a study case of an application.Comment: To appear in Behavior Research Method

    Körperbau und Gattenwahl

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    Response Bias and the Generation of Random Sequences

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