488 research outputs found

    La actuación de los órganos de control externo en la fiscalización de las universidades públicas

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    El propósito de este trabajo consiste en investigar, a partir de los informes de fiscalización sobre universidades, dos aspectos: 1) el tipo de información que los órganos de control externo facilitan en los informes de fiscalización sobre universidades; y 2) el grado de homogeneidad de dichos informes. Ello permitirá concluir si se cumplen las exigencias mínimas reguladas por las normas de auditoría vigentes y si la información presentada en los informes de fiscalización es homogénea.universidades, informes de fiscalización, índice de información.

    Efficiently Storing Well-Composed Polyhedral Complexes Computed Over 3D Binary Images

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    A 3D binary image I can be naturally represented by a combinatorial-algebraic structure called cubical complex and denoted by Q(I ), whose basic building blocks are vertices, edges, square faces and cubes. In Gonzalez-Diaz et al. (Discret Appl Math 183:59–77, 2015), we presented a method to “locally repair” Q(I ) to obtain a polyhedral complex P(I ) (whose basic building blocks are vertices, edges, specific polygons and polyhedra), homotopy equivalent to Q(I ), satisfying that its boundary surface is a 2D manifold. P(I ) is called a well-composed polyhedral complex over the picture I . Besides, we developed a new codification system for P(I ), encoding geometric information of the cells of P(I ) under the form of a 3D grayscale image, and the boundary face relations of the cells of P(I ) under the form of a set of structuring elements. In this paper, we build upon (Gonzalez-Diaz et al. 2015) and prove that, to retrieve topological and geometric information of P(I ), it is enough to store just one 3D point per polyhedron and hence neither grayscale image nor set of structuring elements are needed. From this “minimal” codification of P(I ), we finally present a method to compute the 2-cells in the boundary surface of P(I ).Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad MTM2015-67072-

    Encoding Specific 3D Polyhedral Complexes Using 3D Binary Images

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    We build upon the work developed in [4] in which we presented a method to “locally repair” the cubical complex Q(I) associated to a 3D binary image I, to obtain a “well-composed” polyhedral complex P(I), homotopy equivalent to Q(I). There, we developed a new codification system for P(I), called ExtendedCubeMap (ECM) representation, that encodes: (1) the (geometric) information of the cells of P(I) (i.e., which cells are presented and where), under the form of a 3D grayscale image gP ; (2) the boundary face relations between the cells of P(I), under the form of a set BP of structuring elements. In this paper, we simplify ECM representations, proving that geometric and topological information of cells can be encoded using just a 3D binary image, without the need of using colors or sets of structuring elements. We also outline a possible application in which well-composed polyhedral complexes can be useful.Junta de Andalucía FQM-369Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad MTM2012-32706Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad MTM2015-67072-

    Spatiotemporal Barcodes for Image Sequence Analysis

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    Taking as input a time-varying sequence of two-dimensional (2D) binary images, we develop an algorithm for computing a spatiotemporal 0–barcode encoding lifetime of connected components on the image sequence over time. This information may not coincide with the one provided by the 0–barcode encoding the 0–persistent homology, since the latter does not respect the principle that it is not possible to move backwards in time. A cell complex K is computed from the given sequence, being the cells of K classified as spatial or temporal depending on whether they connect two consecutive frames or not. A spatiotemporal path is defined as a sequence of edges of K forming a path such that two edges of the path cannot connect the same two consecutive frames. In our algorithm, for each vertex v ∈ K, a spatiotemporal path from v to the “oldest” spatiotemporally-connected vertex is computed and the corresponding spatiotemporal 0–bar is added to the spatiotemporal 0–barcode.Junta de Andalucía FQM-369Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad MTM2012-3270

    Understanding the relevance of national culture in international business research: a quantitative analysis

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    This review is a comprehensive quantitative analysis of the International Business literature whose focus is on national culture. The analysis relies on a broad range of bibliometric techniques as productivity rankings, citation analysis (individual and cumulative), study of collaborative research patterns, and analysis of the knowledge base. It provides insights on (I) faculty and institutional research productivity and performance; (II) articles, institutions, and scholars’ influence in the contents of the field and its research agenda; and (III) national and international collaborative research trends. The study also explores the body of literature that has exerted the greatest impact on the researched set of selected articles.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Well-Composed Cell Complexes

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    Well-composed 3D digital images, which are 3D binary digital images whose boundary surface is made up by 2D manifolds, enjoy important topological and geometric properties that turn out to be advantageous for some applications. In this paper, we present a method to transform the cubical complex associated to a 3D binary digital image (which is not generally a well-composed image) into a cell complex that is homotopy equivalent to the first one and whose boundary surface is composed by 2D manifolds. This way, the new representation of the digital image can benefit from the application of algorithms that are developed over surfaces embedded in ℝ3

    3D well-composed polyhedral complexes

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    A binary three-dimensional (3D) image II is well-composed if the boundary surface of its continuous analog is a 2D manifold. In this paper, we present a method to locally “repair” the cubical complex Q(I)Q(I) (embedded in R3R3) associated to II to obtain a polyhedral complex P(I)P(I) homotopy equivalent to Q(I)Q(I) such that the boundary surface of P(I)P(I) is a 2D manifold (and, hence, P(I)P(I) is a well-composed polyhedral complex). For this aim, we develop a new codification system for a complex KK, called ExtendedCubeMap (ECM) representation of KK, that codifies: (1) the information of the cells of KK (including geometric information), under the form of a 3D grayscale image gPgP; and (2) the boundary face relations between the cells of KK, under the form of a set BPBP of structuring elements that can be stored as indexes in a look-up table. We describe a procedure to locally modify the ECM representation EQEQ of the cubical complex Q(I)Q(I) to obtain an ECM representation of a well-composed polyhedral complex P(I)P(I) that is homotopy equivalent to Q(I)Q(I). The construction of the polyhedral complex P(I)P(I) is accomplished for proving the results though it is not necessary to be done in practice, since the image gPgP (obtained by the repairing process on EQEQ) together with the set BPBP codify all the geometric and topological information of P(I)P(I)

    Topological tracking of connected components in image sequences

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    Persistent homology provides information about the lifetime of homology classes along a filtration of cell complexes. Persistence barcode is a graphi- cal representation of such information. A filtration might be determined by time in a set of spatiotemporal data, but classical methods for computing persistent homology do not respect the fact that we can not move back- wards in time. In this paper, taking as input a time-varying sequence of two-dimensional (2D) binary digital images, we develop an algorithm for en- coding, in the so-called spatiotemporal barcode, lifetime of connected compo- nents (of either the foreground or background) that are moving in the image sequence over time (this information may not coincide with the one provided by the persistence barcode). This way, given a connected component at a specific time in the sequence, we can track the component backwards in time until the moment it was born, by what we call a spatiotemporal path. The main contribution of this paper with respect to our previous works lies in a new algorithm that computes spatiotemporal paths directly, valid for both foreground and background and developed in a general context, setting the ground for a future extension for tracking higher dimensional topological features in nD binary digital image sequences.Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad MTM2015-67072-
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