63,626 research outputs found

    How to Defeat W\"{u}thrich’s Abysmal Embarrassment Argument against Space-Time Structuralism

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    In his 2009 PSA Recent Ph.D. Award winning contribution to the bi-annual PSA Conference at Pittsburgh in 2008, C. Wu ̈thrich mounted an argument against struc- turalism about space-time in the context of the General Theory of Relativity (GTR), to the effect that structuralists cannot discern space-time points. An “abysmal embarrass- ment” for the structuralist, Wu ̈thrich judged. Wu ̈thrich’s characterisation of space-time structuralism is however incorrect. We demonstrate how, on the basis of a correct char- acterisation of space-time structuralism, it is possible to discern space-time points in the GTR-structures under consideration. Thus Wu ̈thrich’s argument crumbles

    Review: Guan Wei at Hanart T Z Gallery

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    This review is scripted in English. It was published in Asian Art News in 1996 (March/April issue). (Jerry Wu\u2723).https://digital.kenyon.edu/zhoudocs/1092/thumbnail.jp

    Essay: Qiu Z(h)i-Jie: Artist as the Writing Hand

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    The document is printed except for a trivial amendment on the second page. (Jerry Wu\u2723).https://digital.kenyon.edu/zhoudocs/1216/thumbnail.jp

    Exhibition Introduction: A Tale of Two Rooms and a Blind Man

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    This exhibition description was prepared by Z Gallery in February 1996 for the show A Tale of Two Rooms and a Blind Man debuted later that year in March. (Jerry Wu\u2723).https://digital.kenyon.edu/zhoudocs/1199/thumbnail.jp

    A Correlational Encoder Decoder Architecture for Pivot Based Sequence Generation

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    Interlingua based Machine Translation (MT) aims to encode multiple languages into a common linguistic representation and then decode sentences in multiple target languages from this representation. In this work we explore this idea in the context of neural encoder decoder architectures, albeit on a smaller scale and without MT as the end goal. Specifically, we consider the case of three languages or modalities X, Z and Y wherein we are interested in generating sequences in Y starting from information available in X. However, there is no parallel training data available between X and Y but, training data is available between X & Z and Z & Y (as is often the case in many real world applications). Z thus acts as a pivot/bridge. An obvious solution, which is perhaps less elegant but works very well in practice is to train a two stage model which first converts from X to Z and then from Z to Y. Instead we explore an interlingua inspired solution which jointly learns to do the following (i) encode X and Z to a common representation and (ii) decode Y from this common representation. We evaluate our model on two tasks: (i) bridge transliteration and (ii) bridge captioning. We report promising results in both these applications and believe that this is a right step towards truly interlingua inspired encoder decoder architectures.Comment: 10 page

    Realising intelligent virtual design

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    This paper presents a vision and focus for the CAD Centre research: the Intelligent Design Assistant (IDA). The vision is based upon the assumption that the human and computer can operate symbiotically, with the computer providing support for the human within the design process. Recently however the focus has been towards the development of integrated design platforms that provide general support irrespective of the domain, to a number of distributed collaborative designers. This is illustrated within the successfully completed Virtual Reality Ship (VRS) virtual platform, and the challenges are discussed further within the NECTISE, SAFEDOR and VIRTUE projects
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