9,342 research outputs found
Quality Improvement in Health Care: A Framework for Price and Output Measurement
The durability of health care treatment, the substantial technical change in health care treatment, and the prevalence of third-party payment interact to create substantial difficulty in measuring the price and output of health care. This paper provides a framework for analyzing the demand for health care taking into account these difficulties. It then suggests how this framework might be used to improve measurement of health care prices and output.
Community-Based Production of Open Source Software: What Do We Know About the Developers Who Participate?
This paper seeks to close an empirical gap regarding the motivations, personal attributes and behavioral patterns among free/libre and open source (FLOSS) developers, especially those involved in community-based production, and its findings on the existing literature and the future directions for research. Respondents to an extensive web-surveyâs (FLOSS-US 2003) questions about their reasons for work on FLOSS are classified according to their distinct âmotivational profilesâ by hierarchical cluster analysis. Over half of them also are matched to projects of known membership sizes, revealing that although some members from each of the clusters are present in the small, medium and large ranges of the distribution of project sizes, the mixing fractions for the large and the very small project ranges are statistically different. Among developers who changed projects, there is a discernable flow from the bottom toward the very small towards to large projects, some of which is motivated by individuals seeking to improve their programming skills. It is found that the profile of early motivation, along with other individual attributes, significantly affects individual developersâ selections of projects from different regions of the size range.Open source software, FLOSS project, community-based peer production, population heterogeneity, micro-motives, motivational profiles, web-cast surveys, hierarchical cluster analysis
Bringing Impressionism to Life with Neural Style Transfer in Come Swim
Neural Style Transfer is a striking, recently-developed technique that uses
neural networks to artistically redraw an image in the style of a source style
image. This paper explores the use of this technique in a production setting,
applying Neural Style Transfer to redraw key scenes in 'Come Swim' in the style
of the impressionistic painting that inspired the film. We document how the
technique can be driven within the framework of an iterative creative process
to achieve a desired look, and propose a mapping of the broad parameter space
to a key set of creative controls. We hope that this mapping can provide
insights into priorities for future research.Comment: 3 pages, 6 figures, paper is a case study of how Neural Style
Transfer can be used in a movie production contex
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