17,461 research outputs found
Author Correction: Evaluation of skin cancer resection guide using hyper‑realistic in‑vitro phantom fabricated by 3D printing
The original version of this Article contained an error in the spelling of the author Taehun Kim which was incorrectly given as Teahun Kim. The original Article has been corrected
Kelly, Dan; Kelly, Kim; Kelly, Scott discuss the tradition of hobby horses in Cape Broyle.
Dan, Kim, and Scott Kelly discuss the construction and use of hobby horses in their family and the community of Cape Broyle including their behaviour as well as mummering, and recitations and singing.Introductions from Kim Kelly, Scott Kelly, and Dan Kelly; 00:46 – Dan’s father as the keeper of the Hobby Horse; description of hobby horse and the clapping sound it would make; children being scared of the hobby horse; 2:45 – recitations and singing in Cape Broyle; mummering; 4:39 – construction of hobby horse; reaction to horse; hobby horse and mummering at Memorial University’s campus with international students; 6:10 – importance of January 6th; 7:18 – behaviour of the hobby horse; hobby horse keeper; 9:50 – background of the hobby horse in Cape Broyle; entertainment of mummering; 13:45 – gendered division in mummering; 14:55 – Kim Kelly puts on the hobby horse and Dan Kelly explains construction; 17:52 – Ennis sisters connection to Cape Broyle; 19:10 – Christmas concerts; 22:15 – [interruption by Kim and Scott’s mother]
Review of Other People\u27s English: Code-Meshing, Code-Switching, and African American Literacy. Vershawn Ashanti Young, Rusty Barrett, Y\u27Shanda Young-Rivera, and Kim Brian Lovejoy
Other People\u27s English: Code-Meshing, Code-Switching, and African American Literacy. Vershawn Ashanti Young, Rusty Barrett, Y\u27Shanda Young-Rivera, and Kim Brian Lovejo
Matinee chamber music series -Sonata for viola solo
Jorge Pena, viola; Melissa P. Barrett, violin; Jinwon Kim-Pena, cello.
Date: April 14, 1999https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/somr/1026/thumbnail.jp
DBLP-derived labeled data for author name disambiguation
This is a DBLP-derived labeled data originally created by Dr. C. Lee Giles at Penn State University and filtered for duplicate removal and error correction by Dr. Jinseok Kim at University of Michigan. For more details, see references below.1. Kim, Jinseok (2018). Evaluating author name disambiguation for digital libraries: a case of DBLP. Scientometrics. doi:10.1007/s11192-018-2824-5 2. Kim, Jinseok & Kim, Jenna (2018). The impact of imbalanced training data on machine learning for author name disambiguation. Scientometrics. doi: 10.1007/s11192-018-2865-9Each row refers to an author name instance with following feature information separated by tab.author name: full name string extracted from DBLPunique author id: labels assigned manually by Dr. C. Lee Giles's teampaper id: assigned by Dr. Jinseok Kimauthor list: names of authors in the byline of the paperyear: publication yearvenue: conference or journal namestitle: stopwords removed and stemmed by the Porter's stemmerIf you want to use this dataset, please consider to cite papers below.For the original dataset: Han, H., Giles, L., Zha, H., Li, C., & Tsioutsiouliklis, K. (2004). Two Supervised Learning Approaches for Name Disambiguation in Author Citations. JCDL 2004: Proceedings of the Fourth ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries, 296-305. doi:10.1145/996350.996419For the filtered dataset: 1. Kim, Jinseok (2018). Evaluating author name disambiguation for digital libraries: a case of DBLP. Scientometrics. doi:10.1007/s11192-018-2824-5 or2. Kim, Jinseok & Kim, Jenna (2018). The impact of imbalanced training data on machine learning for author name disambiguation. Scientometrics. doi: 10.1007/s11192-018-2865-9</div
Khoo Kay Kim, professor of Malaysian history : a biobibliometric study
Presents an analysis of the publication productivity, authorship pattern, channels of communication, journal preference and language preference of Professor Dato' Khoo Kay Kim, Professor of Malaysian History in the University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur. The results of this biobibliometric study indicate that he can be a role model for future Malaysian historians to emulate his various achievements especially in the field of history education
European and United States Counter-Terrorism Policies, the Rule of Law and Human Rights
On 15 March 2011 the Global Governance Programme at the EUI hosted a High-Level Policy Seminar (HLPS) on ""European and United States Counter-Terrorism Policies, the Rule of Law and Human Rights"". The first part of the event consisted of a transatlantic dialogue on legal issues in the fight against terrorism, with addresses by the Legal Adviser of the US Department of State, Harold Hongju Koh and the EU Counter-Terrorism Coordinator, Gilles de Kerchove. The second part of the HLPS consisted of focused discussions introduced by academics and clustered around four big themes: terrorist blacklisting, definitions of terrorism, detention, trial and the role of criminal law in the fight against terrorism, and finally the positions of the EU and the US in relation to counter-terrorism and the role of Islam. This joint policy paper is based on a selection of memoranda written mainly by academics to launch the debates in the second part of the HLPS. After the event the authors were given an opportunity to broaden and deepen their short memoranda, without necessarily remaining within the structure of four theme clusters. Even if the papers were expanded, they were to remain policy papers, rather than academic articles. As outcome, this joint policy paper consists of six papers by participants of the HLPS event. They reflect the aim of the HLPS to contribute to a dialogue on counter-terrorism issues in the United States and in Europe, the broad scope of the themes covered in the HLPS itself and, perhaps most importantly, an effort to address practical issues and dilemmas.• Introduction, Martin Scheinin.
• The United Nations and Terrorism – the 1267 Sanctions Regime Directed Against Al-Qaida, the Taliban and their Associates, Richard Barrett.
• EU Counter-Terrorism & the Rule of Law in a Post-‘War on Terror’ World, Cian C. Murphy.
• Some Challenges in European and (North) American Counter-Terrorism, Kent Roach.
• Defining the Target: Al Qaeda as a “Narrative” for a Rebel Youth Without a Cause, Olivier Roy.
• Best Practice in Counter-Terrorism, Martin Scheinin.
• Bringing Security Services under the Rule of Law in the Global Anti-Terror Campaign, Kim Lane Scheppele
Anxious, Dismal, Giddy, Aggressive: Seth Kim-Cohen interviewed by Mark Peter Wright for Ear Room.
A conversation with author Seth Kim-Cohen
Kim Gordon - no icon
As cofounder of legendary rock band Sonic Youth, best-selling author, and celebrated artist, Kim Gordon is one of the most singular and influential figures of the modern era. This personally curated scrapbook is an edgy and evocative portrait of Gordon s life, art, and style. Spanning from her childhood on Californian surf beaches in the 60s and 70s to New York s downtown art and music scene in the 80s and 90s where Sonic Youth was born. Through unpublished personal photographs, magazine and newspaper clippings, fashion editorials, and advertising campaigns, interspersed with Gordon s song lyrics, writings, artworks, private objects, and ephemera, this book demonstrates how Kim Gordon has been a role model for generations of women and me
Barrett Multiplication for Dilithium on Embedded Devices
We optimize the number-theoretic transforms (NTTs) in Dilithium — a digital signature scheme recently standardized by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) — on Cortex-M3 and 8-bit AVR. The core novelty is the exploration of micro-architectural insights for modular multiplications. Recent work [Becker, Hwang, Kannwischer, Yang and Yang, Volume 2022 (1), Transactions on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems, 2022] found a correspondence between Montgomery and Barrett multiplications by relating modular reductions to integer approximations and demonstrated that Barrett multiplication is more favorable than Montgomery multiplication by absorbing the subtraction to the low multiplication. We first point out the benefit of Barrett multiplication when long and high multiplication instructions are unavailable, unusable, or slow. We then generalize the notion of integer approximations and improve the emulation of high multiplications used in Barrett multiplication.
Compared to the state-of-the-art assembly-optimized implementations on Cortex-M3, our constant-time NTT/iNTT are 1.38−1.51 times faster and our variable-time NTT/iNTT are 1.10−1.21 times faster. On our 8-bit AVR, we outperform Montgomery-based C implementations of NTT/iNTT by 6.37−7.27 times by simply switching to the proposed Barrett-based implementation. We additionally implement Barrett-based NTT/iNTT in assembly and obtain 14.10− 14.42 times faster code.
For the overall scheme, we provide speed-optimized implementations for Dilithium parameter sets dilithium2 and dilithium3 on Cortex-M3, and stack-optimized implementations for all parameter sets on Cortex-M3 and 8-bit AVR. We briefly compare the performance of speed-optimized dilithium3. Compared to the state-of-the-art assembly implementation on Cortex-M3, our assembly implementation reduces the key generation, signature generation, and signature verification cycles by 2.30%, 23.29%, and 0.69%. In the 8-bit AVR environment, our Barrett-based C implementation reduces the key generation, signature generation, and signature verification cycles by 45.09%, 56.80%, and 50.40%, respectively, and our assembly-optimized implementation reduces the cycles of each operation by 48.85%, 61.70%, and 55.08%, respectively
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