1,035 research outputs found
Towards Safety and Sustainability: Designing Local Recommendations for Post-pandemic World
Extended Version of The Paper:
Towards_Safety_and_Sustainability_Extended.pdf
Dataset Information:
List of files
Customer_Choice_Survey.csv
NYC_Google.csv
NYC_Yelp.csv
SF_Google.csv
SF_Yelp.csv
Field Details in Each File
"Customer_Choice_Survey.csv": Local recommendations received on Google Local (Google Maps) for different customer locations in New York and San Francisco.
Each respondent was first asked some basic details.
Then 7 rounds of ranking questions were asked.
In each round, they were given a list of 10 restaurants with random combinations of rating, distance and cuisine. They were asked to rank top 5 one-by-one out of those 10 provided. This becomes evident from the question titles provided the file.
"NYC_Google.csv" and "SF_Google.csv": Local recommendations received on Yelp for different customer locations in New York and San Francisco.
"customer_location": location of the customer where she gets recommendation
"rank": rank of the restaurant in the recommended list
"id": restaurant's id internal to google
"latitude": latitude of restaurant's geographic coordinates
"longitude": longitude of restaurant's geographic coordinates
"name": name of the resturant
"price_level": cheap/costly level
"rating": average rating of the restaurant
"rating_count": number of ratings collected for the restaurant
"address": address of the restaurant
"NYC_Yelp.csv" and "SF_Yelp.csv"
"customer_location": location of the customer where she gets recommendation
"rank": rank of the restaurant in the recommended list
"id": restaurant's id internal to yelp
"latitude": latitude of restaurant's geographic coordinates
"longitude": longitude of restaurant's geographic coordinates
"name": name of the resturant
"rating": average rating of the restaurant
"rating_count": number of ratings collected for the restaurant
"address": address of the restaurant
"url": link to the restaurant's yelp page
Link to Code Repository:
Pandemic-Aware Local Recommendation
Citation Information:
Please cite the following paper if you use this dataset.
"Towards Sustainability and Safety: Designing Local Recommendations for Post-pandemic World"
Gourab K Patro, Abhijnan Chakraborty, Ashmi Banerjee, Niloy Ganguly.
In proceedings of Fourteenth ACM Conference on Recommender Systems (RecSys-2020), Virtual Event, Brazil.
You can also use the following bibtex.
@inproceedings{10.1145/3383313.3412251,
author = {Patro, Gourab K and Chakraborty, Abhijnan and Banerjee, Ashmi and Ganguly, Niloy},
title = {Towards Safety and Sustainability: Designing Local Recommendations for Post-Pandemic World},
year = {2020},
isbn = {9781450375832},
publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3383313.3412251},
doi = {10.1145/3383313.3412251},
booktitle = {Fourteenth ACM Conference on Recommender Systems},
pages = {358–367},
numpages = {10},
keywords = {COVID-19, Local Recommendation, Google Local, Yelp, Safety, Social Distancing, Sustainability, Bipartite Matching},
location = {Virtual Event, Brazil},
series = {RecSys '20}
Conversational Recommender Systems Using Generative Models (Gen-CRS): Literature Review
<h2>Description</h2>
<p>This dataset contains a curated list of 49 research papers focused on Conversational Recommender Systems using Generative Models (Gen-CRS). The collection covers publications from 2018 to 2025 and reflects the rapid evolution of generative approaches in conversational recommendation scenarios.</p>
<p><br>The dataset was compiled in the context of the literature review “<a href="https://www.researchgate.net/publication/398319946_Conversational_Recommender_Systems_Using_Generative_Models_Gen-CRS_A_Literature_Review" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Conversational Recommender Systems Using Generative Models (Gen-CRS): A Literature Review</a>” and the tutorial “<a href="https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3705328.3748010" target="_blank" rel="noopener">A Tutorial on Recent Advances in Generative Conversational Recommender Systems</a>”, presented at the <a href="https://recsys.acm.org/recsys25/tutorials/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">ACM RecSys conference 2025</a>. It serves as the bibliographic foundation for both contributions and is intended to support transparency, reproducibility, and further research in this area.</p>
<p>Each entry in the dataset corresponds to a single paper relevant to Gen-CRS, and the selection process, collection methodology, and inclusion criteria are provided in the accompanying literature review paper.</p>
<h2>Dataset Structure</h2>
<p>The dataset is organized in a tabular format, where each row corresponds to a single publication included in the literature collection. Rows contain the essential bibliographic metadata required to identify and retrieve the original paper.</p>
<h3>The dataset includes the following columns:</h3>
<ul>
<li><strong>Paper title:</strong> Full title of the publication</li>
<li><strong>Author(s):</strong> Names of all authors as reported in the original paper</li>
<li><strong>Year:</strong> Year in which the paper was published</li>
<li><strong>Published at:</strong> Conference, workshop, journal, or other venue where the work appeared</li>
<li><strong>Reference Link/DOI:</strong> Persistent link to access the published document (e.g., DOI, publisher URL, or preprint reference)</li>
</ul>
A Stacked Segmented Adaptive Power Amplifier in 22nm FD-SOI
This work was supported by Soitec. (Corresponding author: Aritra Banerjee.
Author Exchange
Anthropologist Mukulika Banerjee and political scientist Sushmita Pati have a conversation about their recently published books set in rural Bengal and Delhi’s urban villages, respectively. They situate their analyses of the intersections between democracy, capitalism, urbanization, and globalization in events, relations, and cultures of the everyday. Their exchange offers important insights for how political subjectivities and social ties are differently constituted or, to use Banerjee’s term, “cultivated” in these two settings. The two books offer a fine-grained view of how active citizenship in rural and urban India is refracted through distinct social and institutional structures. India is home to some of the world’s largest cities while more than 900 million people continue to live in the countryside. Its democratic future is therefore inextricably tied to the evolution of political behavior and political economy in both contexts, and, as Banerjee and Pati’s joint response indicates, to how urban and rural dynamics shape each other through (but not only through) migrants and their networks.
Contents:
Review of Mukulika Banerjee’s \u27Cultivating Democracy: Politics and Citizenship in Agrarian India\u27 by Sushmita Pati
Response from Mukulika Banerjee
Review of Sushmita Pati’s \u27Properties of Rent: Community, Capital and Politics in Globalising Delhi\u27 by Mukulika Banerjee
Response from Sushmita Pati
Joint Commentary from Banerjee and Pat
Banerjee_QSurvey_RawDataSet_PPC
Raw dataset for questionnaire survey study (kinesiology taping_cancer care continuum)Author: Gourav Banerjee et alJournal: Progress in Palliative Care</div
FEMININE VISIBILITY IN A MYTHOLOGICAL CONTEXT OF CHITRA BANERJEE DIVAKARUNI’S THE PALACE OF ILLUSIONS
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni an Indo-American author, works as a professor of English in the University of Houston. She is also a co-founder and former president of a helpline for South Asian women. She involves herself eagerly as a volunteer at women’s center at Berkeley and assists battered women through the organization. MAITRI, the organization was begun in 1991 by her with the help of a group of friends. Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni an expatriate writer, pictures Indian womanhood how they are treated by men in their lives. An explicit attempt to retell the epic in novel form is Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s The Palace of Illusions which will be analyzed in the following. The present paper analyzes how women is treated by male as a lifeless thing in the novel. This study is an attempt to illustrate how revisionist mythmaking is a feminist endeavor to revalue the experiences of women in patriarchy and redefine women from feminist perspectives.
 
Data for: Virtual Nondestructive Evaluation of Anisotropic Plates by Implementing Symmetry Informed Sequential Mapping of Anisotropic Green’s function (SISMAG)
No data should be used without permission from the corresponding the author. With permission, data can be used for only non-commercial purposes
Nobel Laureate Abhijit Vinayak Banerjee: A Scientometric Portrait, 1987-2019
Nobel Memorial Prize in economics is selected by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and first awarded in the domain in 1969; the latest in 2019 was awarded to the Indian-born American economist Prof. Abhijit Vinayak Banerjee along with Esther Duflo and Michael Kremer. The present study attempted to measure and analyse the research publications of Prof. Banerjee during 1987 to 2019 based on the data available in Google Scholar database. A total of 333 documents published during this period in which 35.74 percent were published as journal articles. Till 2004 the mean relative growth rate of his publications was 0.237 and doubling time was 3.29 whereas from 2005 to 2019 the relative growth rate decreased to 0.077 and the time for doubling increased to 10.20. Esther Duflo was the most prolific co-author of the publications of Prof. Banerjee with 120 documents shared out of 333 by them. The collaboration rate of all publications was 0.89 identifies most of his publications written in collaboration. The journal he used for most of his research to publish was mainly USA based. He has produced numbers of publications which received huge citations, and during May, 2020 the h-index counted 87 according to Goggle Scholar citation counts
Author Retrospective for Semantical Interprocedural Parallelization: An Overview of the PIPS Project
International audienceThe PIPS project was started in 1988 to investigate the automatic detection of medium- and large-grain parallelism in scienti c programs thanks to summarization techniques based on convex array regions. By 1992 the PIPS system had reached its original goals, but it has morphed into a comprehensive, open-source platform still in use today. What were the key scienti c and engineering decisions that made this possible in spite of some inevitable shortcomings
Scaling properties of compressible polytropic turbulence
An exact relation has been derived for homogeneous polytropic turbulence in terms of the two-point fluctuations. Unlike isothermal turbulence, the fluctuating sound speed appears to be a key factor in determining the scaling properties of polytropic turbulence. Three Mach numbers (current, gradient and turbulent Mach number) are defined to characterize the isotropic scaling. At subsonic scale, the Kolmogorov-like -5/3 energy spectrum for ⇢1/3v (obtained for isothermal turbulence) is modified by polytropic contribution. For supersonic turbulence, the source terms must be taken into account which further complicates the scaling and spectral properties. For highly supersonic case, the source terms, however, can be shown to be nearly equal to the source terms in isothermal turbulence thereby leading to a partial simplification. These theoretical results are extremely important for understanding the role of turbulence in the star-formation mechanism in polytropic clouds
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