517 research outputs found
Enhancing Service Lifecycle Management - Costing as Part of Service Descriptions
Outsourcing of IT and business processes results in an increased exchange of services. For inter-organizational service exchange to be successful, the participating network players have to establish unified and thus interoperable means of service description. An analysis of contemporary approaches identified a deficit of almost all approaches to address monetary aspects of a service, especially costs. This paper argues that costs are prevalent in almost all stages of a services’ lifecycle, and thus its’ role within Service Lifecycle Management (SLM) is paramount. Recognizing this discrepancy, the paper proposes a basic version of a costing model that allows for a multi-periodic depiction of service-related costs as part of a service description. It is modeled and implemented as an extension of USDL, the Unified Service Description Language. A case example from the financial services industry demonstrates the artifact’s applicability
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Birds of a feather petition together? Characterizing e-petitioning through the lens of platform data
E-petitioning platforms are increasingly popular in Western democracies and considered by some lawmakers and scholars to enhance citizen participation in political decision-making. In addition to social media and other channels for informal political communication, online petitioning is regarded as both a useful instrument to afford citizens a more important role in the political process and allow them to express support for issues which they find relevant. Building on existing pre-internet systems, e-petitioning websites are increasingly implemented to make it easier and faster to set up and sign petitions. However, little attention has so far been given to the relationship between different styles of usage and the causes supported by different groups of users. The functional difference between signing paper-based petitions vs. doing so online is especially notable with regard to users who sign large numbers of petitions. To characterize this relationship, we examine the intensity of user participation in the German Bundestag’s online petitioning platform through the lens of platform data collected over a period of five years, and conduct an analysis of highly active users and their political preferences. We find that users who sign just a single petition favor different policy areas than those who sign many petitions on a variety of issues. We conclude our analysis with observations on the potential of behavioral data for assessing the dynamics of online participation, and suggest that quantity (the number of signed petitions) and quality (favored policy areas) need more systematic joint assessment
Processamento mĂnimo de repolho.
O presente Comunicado TĂ©cnico tem por objetivo apresentar as diferentes etapas relacionadas com o processamento mĂnimo do repolho.bitstream/item/42121/1/COT11001.pd
Morphology and evolution of umbral dots and their substructures
Substructures - dark lanes and tails - of umbral dots (UDs) were predicted by
numerical simulations of magnetoconvection. We analyse a 6 h 23 min time series
of broadband images of a large umbra in the active region NOAA 10634, acquired
with the 1-m Swedish Solar Telescope, in the wavelength band around 602 nm. A
43 min part of this series was reconstructed with the MFBD method, reaching a
spatial resolution of 0.14". We measure brightness, size, lifetime, and
horizontal velocities of various umbral structures. Most (90 %) of UDs and
bright point-like features in faint LBs split and merge, and their median
lifetimes are 3.5 or 5.7 min, depending on whether the split or merge event is
considered as the end of their life. Both UDs and features in faint LBs that do
not split or merge are clearly smaller (0.15") than the average size (0.17") of
all features. Horizontal motions of umbral bright small-scale features are
directed either into the umbra or along faint LBs with mean horizontal
velocities of 0.34 km/s. Features faster than 0.4 km/s appear mostly at the
periphery of the umbra. The intensity of dark lanes, measured in four bright
central UDs (CUDs), is by a factor 0.8 lower than the peak intensity of CUDs.
The width of dark lanes is probably less than the resolution limit 0.14". The
characteristic time of substructure changes of UDs is ~4 min. We observe narrow
(0.14") bright and dark filaments connected with PUDs. Usually one dark and two
bright filaments form a 0.4" wide tail attached to one PUD, resembling a short
dark-cored penumbral filament. Our results indicate the similarity between PUDs
and PGs located at the tips of bright penumbral filaments. The features seen in
numerical MHD simulations are consistent with our observations of dark lanes in
CUDs and tails attached to PUDs.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, Astronomy & Astrophysics, in pres
How Digital Are the Digital Humanities? An Analysis of Two Scholarly Blogging Platforms
In this paper we compare two academic networking platforms, HASTAC and Hypotheses, to show the distinct ways in which they serve specific communities in the Digital Humanities (DH) in different national and disciplinary contexts. After providing background information on both platforms, we apply co-word analysis and topic modeling to show thematic similarities and differences between the two sites, focusing particularly on how they frame DH as a new paradigm in humanities research. We encounter a much higher ratio of posts using humanities-related terms compared to their digital counterparts, suggesting a one-way dependency of digital humanities-related terms on the corresponding unprefixed labels. The results also show that the terms digital archive, digital literacy, and digital pedagogy are relatively independent from the respective unprefixed terms, and that digital publishing, digital libraries, and digital media show considerable cross-pollination between the specialization and the general noun. The topic modeling reproduces these findings and reveals further differences between the two platforms. Our findings also indicate local differences in how the emerging field of DH is conceptualized and show dynamic topical shifts inside these respective contexts
How dopamine shapes representations in auditory cortex
The neural representation of sound in the auditory cortex is not invariably predetermined by its acoustical properties, but it is constantly reshaped while the listener acquires new experiences. Such plastic changes are a prerequisite for lifelong learning and allow some degree of rehabilitation after brain injuries. Several neurotransmitter systems modulate these plastic changes. In this paper, we focus on how the neurotransmitter dopamine modulates learning-related plasticity in auditory cortex, and how animal and human research can complement each other in providing an experimental approach that has relevance for studying mechanisms of recovery of functio
High-order aberration compensation with Multi-frame Blind Deconvolution and Phase Diversity image restoration techniques
Context. For accurately measuring intensities and determining magnetic field
strengths of small-scale solar (magnetic) structure, knowledge of and
compensation for the point spread function is crucial. For images recorded with
the Swedish 1-meter Solar Telescope, restoration with Multi-Frame Blind
Deconvolution and Joint Phase Diverse Speckle methods lead to remarkable
improvements in image quality but granulation contrasts that are too low,
indicating additional stray light. Aims. We propose a method to compensate for
stray light from high-order atmospheric aberrations not included in MFBD and
JPDS processing. Methods. To compensate for uncorrected aberrations, a
reformulation of the image restoration process is proposed that allows the
average effect of hundreds of high-order modes to be compensated for by relying
on Kolmogorov statistics for these modes. The applicability of the method
requires simultaneous measurements of Fried's parameter r0. The method is
tested with simulations as well as real data and extended to include
compensation for conventional stray light. Results. We find that only part of
the reduction of granulation contrast in SST images is due to uncompensated
high-order aberrations. The remainder is still unaccounted for and attributed
to stray light from the atmosphere, the telescope with its re-imaging system
and to various high-altitude seeing effects. Conclusions. We conclude that
statistical compensation of high-order modes is a viable method to reduce the
loss of contrast occurring when a limited number of aberrations is explicitly
compensated for with MFBD and JPDS processing. We show that good such
compensation is possible with only 10 recorded frames. The main limitation of
the method is that already MFBD and JPDS processing introduces high-order
compensation that, if not taken into account, can lead to over-compensation.Comment: in press in Astronomy & Astrophysic
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