4,214 research outputs found
Representing Spatial Geographical Data via variations of Volume and Tempo in Sound
The majority of spatial data are represented visually which can lead to an overload of information if too many data are represented. This study explores and evaluates the methods of representing spatial data using sound, with the aim of increasing the amount of spatial data that can be communicated without information overload. This study was performed for an undergraduate BSc Geograph
The Relationship Between Congestion Control and the Turing Machine
Unified large-scale epistemologies have led to many unfortunate advances, including cache coherence and 128 bit architectures. Given the trends in robust symmetries, cyberneticists shockingly note the refinement of e-commerce, demonstrates the exten- sive importance of artificial intelligence [1]. We understand how systems can be applied to the emula- tion of A* search. While it is entirely an essential purpose, it is derived from known results
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Prisoners’ perceptions of care and rehabilitation from prison officers trained as 5 minute interventionists: analytical summary
The Five Minute Intervention (FMI) project trained prison officers to turn everyday conversations into rehabilitative opportunities using skills such as Socratic questioning, active listening, and affirmation. Webster and Kenny (2015) reported on the experiences of prison officers involved in the FMI pilot. This research reports on the experiences of ten male prisoners who participated in FMI conversations with prison officers. FMI training now forms part of the national training programme for prison staff
The a-number of hyperelliptic curves
It is known that for a smooth hyperelliptic curve to have a large -number,
the genus must be small relative to the characteristic of the field, ,
over which the curve is defined. It was proven by Elkin that for a genus
hyperelliptic curve to have , the genus is bounded by
. In this paper, we show that this bound can be lowered to . The method of proof is to force the Cartier-Manin matrix to have rank one
and examine what restrictions that places on the affine equation defining the
hyperelliptic curve. We then use this bound to summarize what is known about
the existence of such curves when and .Comment: 7 pages. v2: revised and improved the proof of the main theorem based
on suggestions from the referee. To appear in the proceedings volume of Women
in Numbers Europe-
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Visualisation of Uncertainty in a Geodemographic Classifier
We explore some ideas around quantifying and visualising classification uncertainty within a geodemographic classifier. We demonstrate spatially-constrained small-multiples to show geographical variation, their combination with a Gastner population cartogram projection to normalise with respect to population, explore a fuzziness parameter when producing fuzzy-sets, and look at implications of taking into account this uncertainty when profiling population, finding that this can have significant effects that are worth investigating further
The Berry-Keating Hamiltonian and the Local Riemann Hypothesis
The local Riemann hypothesis states that the zeros of the Mellin transform of
a harmonic-oscillator eigenfunction (on a real or p-adic configuration space)
have real part 1/2. For the real case, we show that the imaginary parts of
these zeros are the eigenvalues of the Berry-Keating hamiltonian H=(xp+px)/2
projected onto the subspace of oscillator eigenfunctions of lower level. This
gives a spectral proof of the local Riemann hypothesis for the reals, in the
spirit of the Hilbert-Polya conjecture. The p-adic case is also discussed.Comment: 9 pages, no figures; v2 included more mathematical background, v3 has
minor edits for clarit
Scheme Considered Harmful
Unified pervasive modalities have led to many unproven advances, including forward-error correction and the Ethernet [1, 1, 1, 2]. In fact, few security experts would disagree with the evaluation of spreadsheets, demonstrates the confusing importance of cryptography. We construct new game-theoretic modalities, which we call PETARD
Association Between Applications Scores and Positive Onsite Interviews of Pharmacy Residency Applicants
Application to pharmacy residency programs has become increasingly competitive over the past several years. Although successful candidates must excel in the various stages of the application process, preparing written applications and securing onsite interviews are early and arguably the most difficult steps. Residency programs vary in the criteria used for offering onsite interviews. The majority of insight into this topic comes from surveys of residency program directors, but corresponding analyses of interview offers have been minimal..
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