1,770 research outputs found
An assessment of warm fog: Nucleation, control, and recommended research
A state-of-the-art survey is given of warm fog research which has been performed up to, and including, 1974. Topics covered are nucleation, growth, coalescence, fog structures and visibility, effects of surface films, drop size spectrum, optical properties, instrumentation, liquid water content, condensation nuclei. Included is a summary of all reported fog modification experiments. Additional data is provided on air flow, turbulence, a summary of recommendations on instruments to be developed for determining turbulence, air flow, etc., as well as recommendations of various fog research tasks which should be performed for a better understanding of fog microphysics
Visual style: Qualitative and context-dependent categorization
Style is an ordering principle by which to structure artifacts in a design domain. The application of a visual order entails some explicit grouping property that is both cognitively plausible and contextually dependent. Central to cognitive-contextual notions are the type of representation used in analysis and the flexibility to allow semantic interpretation. We present a model of visual style based on the concept of similarity as a qualitative context-dependent categorization. The two core components of the model are semantic feature extraction and self-organizing maps (SOMs). The model proposes a method of categorizing two-dimensional unannotated design diagrams using both low-level geometric and high-level semantic features that are automatically derived from the pictorial content of the design. The operation of the initial model, called Q-SOM, is then extended to include relevance feedback (Q-SOM:RF). The extended model can be seen as a series of sequential processing stages, in which qualitative encoding and feature extraction are followed by iterative recategorization. Categorization is achieved using an unsupervised SOM, and contextual dependencies are integrated via cluster relevance determined by the observer's feedback. The following stages are presented: initial per feature detection and extraction, selection of feature sets corresponding to different spatial ontologies, unsupervised categorization of design diagrams based on appropriate feature subsets, and integration of design context via relevance feedback. From our experiments we compare different outcomes from consecutive stages of the model. The results show that the model provides a cognitively plausible and context-dependent method for characterizing visual style in design. Copyright © 2006 Cambridge University Press
Scalable Online Conformance Checking Using Incremental Prefix-Alignment Computation
Conformance checking techniques aim to collate observed process behavior with
normative/modeled process models. The majority of existing approaches focuses
on completed process executions, i.e., offline conformance checking. Recently,
novel approaches have been designed to monitor ongoing processes, i.e., online
conformance checking. Such techniques detect deviations of an ongoing process
execution from a normative process model at the moment they occur. Thereby,
countermeasures can be taken immediately to prevent a process deviation from
causing further, undesired consequences. Most online approaches only allow to
detect approximations of deviations. This causes the problem of falsely
detected deviations, i.e., detected deviations that are actually no deviations.
We have, therefore, recently introduced a novel approach to compute exact
conformance checking results in an online environment. In this paper, we focus
on the practical application and present a scalable, distributed implementation
of the proposed online conformance checking approach. Moreover, we present two
extensions to said approach to reduce its computational effort and its
practical applicability. We evaluate our implementation using data sets
capturing the execution of real processes
From Soft Walls to Infrared Branes
Five dimensional warped spaces with soft walls are generalizations of the
standard Randall-Sundrum compactifications, where instead of an infrared brane
one has a curvature singularity (with vanishing warp factor) at finite proper
distance in the bulk. We project the physics near the singularity onto a
hypersurface located a small distance away from it in the bulk. This results in
a completely equivalent description of the soft wall in terms of an effective
infrared brane, hiding any singular point. We perform explicitly this
calculation for two classes of soft wall backgrounds used in the literature.
The procedure has several advantages. It separates in a clean way the physics
of the soft wall from the physics of the five dimensional bulk, facilitating a
more direct comparison with standard two-brane warped compactifications.
Moreover, consistent soft walls show a sort of universal behavior near the
singularity which is reflected in the effective brane Lagrangian. Thirdly, for
many purposes, a good approximation is obtained by assuming the bulk background
away from the singularity to be the usual Randall-Sundrum metric, thus making
the soft wall backgrounds better analytically tractable. We check the validity
of this procedure by calculating the spectrum of bulk fields and comparing it
to the exact result, finding very good agreement.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, v2: subsection on IR brane potentials and
appendix on fermions added, version to appear in PR
Ethnicity, voter alignment and political party affiliation - an African case: Zambia
Conventional wisdom holds that ethnicity provides the social cleavage for voting behav-iour and party affiliation in Africa. Because this is usually inferred from aggregate data of national election results, it might prove to be an ecological fallacy. The evidence based on individual data from an opinion survey in Zambia suggests that ethnicity matters for voter alignment and even more so for party affiliation, but it is certainly not the only factor. The analysis also points to a number of qualifications which are partly methodology-related. One is that the degree of ethnic voting can differ from one ethno-political group to the other depending on various degrees of ethnic mobilisation. Another is that if smaller eth-nic groups or subgroups do not identify with one particular party, it is difficult to find a significant statistical correlation between party affiliation and ethnicity - but that does not prove that they do not affiliate along ethnic lines.Wahlverhalten und Mitgliedschaft in politischen Parteien Afrikas ist nur wenig untersucht worden. Gewöhnlich wird argumentiert, dass Ethnizität als soziale Konfliktlinie das Wahlverhalten und die Parteienmitgliedschaft strukturiert. Da dieses Argument auf hoch aggregierten Wahldaten beruht, kann hier ein ökologischer Fehlschuss vorliegen. Die vorliegende Analyse beruht deshalb auf individuellen Umfragedaten aus Sambia. Das Ergebnis ist, dass Ethnizität tatsächlich eine Rolle für das Wahlverhalten und die Parteienmitgliedschaft spielt, aber keineswegs den einzigen Erklärungsfaktor darstellt. Die Analyse offenbart zudem eine Reihe von Einschränkungen und Qualifizierungen, die teilweise methodischer Natur sind. Eine ist, dass ethnisches Wahlverhalten und Parteienmitgliedschaft von einer ethnischen Gruppe zur anderen unterschiedlich ist, dass, wenn sich kleinere ethnische Gruppen oder Untergruppen mit keiner Partei identifizieren, es schwierig wird, statistisch signifikante Korrelationen zu finden - was indessen noch nicht beweist, dass Ethnizität keine Rolle spielt
Overcoming cross-scale challenges to climate change adaptation for local government: A focus on Australia
This paper aims to identify key cross-scale challenges to planned adaptation within the context of local government in Australia, and suggest enabling actions to overcome such challenges. Many of the impacts of climate change and variability have or will be experienced at the local level. Local governments are embedded in a larger governance context that has the potential to limit the effectiveness of planned adaptation initiatives on the ground. This study argues that research on constraints and barriers to adaptation must place greater attention to understanding the broader multi-governance system and cross-scale constraints that shape adaptation at the local government scale. The study identified seven key enabling actions for overcoming cross-scale challenges faced by local governments in Australia when undertaking climate change adaptation planning and implementation. A central conclusion of this study is that a cooperative and collaborative approach is needed where joint recognition of the scale of the issue and its inherent cross-scale complexities are realised. Many of the barriers or constraints to adaptation planning are interlinked, requiring a whole government approach to adaptation planning. The research suggests a stronger role at the state and national level is required for adaptation to be facilitated and supported at the local level. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht
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