46,719 research outputs found
Michigan State University freshman Brian Chu talks about his family, youth, academic life, professional and personal goals
Michigan State University freshman Brian Chu talks about his Chinese and Scot parents and his youth in Florida. Chu also talks about his high school experience and making the adjustment to college and having roommates in the dorm. He says that he would like to have a hotel management career like his father and hopes someday to also have a home and family of his own
The Localization Hypothesis and Machines
In a recent article in 'Artificial Life', Chu and Ho suggested that Rosen's central result about the simulability of living systems might be flawed. This argument was later declared ''null and void'' by Louie. In this article the validity of Louie's objections are examined
Blair School of Music : performance by guest alumni violinist Jonathan Chu
Jonathan Chu, violin ; Ilya Poletaev, piano and harpsichord.Sonata no. 4 in C minor for violin and harpsichord, BWV 1017 / J.S. Bach -- Sonata in F minor for violin and piano, op. 80 / Sergei Prokofiev -- Spiegel im Spiegel : for violin and piano / Arvo Pärt -- Impressions d'enfance pour violin et piano / Georges Enesco.Recorded Monday, March 12, 2007, 8:00 p.m., Turner Hall.Blair School of Musi
Five Phases Belief in Chu 楚: Sacrificing White Dogs to Save the Kingdom?
Humanities: 3rd Place (The Ohio State University Edward F. Hayes Graduate Research Forum)This paper is a corpus-based study on excavated bamboo-slip inscriptions from Chu state around 700 BCE. -300 BCE. It examines in detail a particular sacrifice made of white dogs and the historical and religious contexts for this ritual. The results show that this occult practice was performed as part of the five-god ritual system of Chu state. In the ritual Chu people singled out white dogs as appropriate sacrifice because in their belief, the energy flow from white dogs were able to destroy Chu state. The whole idea was based on the Five Phases theory, which served as a logical foundation for many cultural practices and social custom in early China.A one-year embargo was granted for this item
Notes on the Chu construction and Recursion
Introduction We consider two kinds of recursive equations in categories of the form Chu(K; x): type equations and value equations. Throughout it is assumed that K is monoidal closed, complete and co-complete. Type equations have the form A ¸ = F (A) where F is a given composition of some of a given set of functors over Chu(K; x) and we seek A, an object in Chu(K; x). This is of particular interest when we consider a Chu object A = (XA ; YA ; m) as a kind of event structure (think of XA as the set of events, and YA as the set of configurations). Value equations have the form a = f o a where, for some object x<F
Marina Han, violin and Heidi Chu, piano, May 8, 2015
This is the concert program of the Marina Han, violin and Heidi Chu, piano performance on Friday, May 8, 2015 at 8:00 p.m., at Concert Hall, 855 Commonwealth Avenue. Works performed were Violin Sonata No. 4 in A minor, Op. 23 by Ludwig van Beethoven, Recitativo and Scherzo, Op. 6 by Fritz Kreisler, Liebeslied by F. Kreisler, Schön Rosmarin by F. Kreisler, and Violin Sonata No. 1 in A major, Op. 13 by Gabriel Fauré. Digitization for Boston University Concert Programs was supported by the Boston University Humanities Library Endowed Fund
INTEGRATED ECOLOGICAL PLANNING IN SINGAPORE: NEOTIEWPIA ECO-VILLAGE IN BUSTLING METROPOLITAN
ABSTRACT :The Neotiewpia Eco-Village is located within the Lim Chu Kang district at the north of Singapore. The Eco-Village only comprised of 3.5 sq km. Meanwhile the area was
dominated by farms, chalets and Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve. In 2006, National University of Singapore, School of Design and Environment (SDE), MSc. Environmental Management and Nature Society of Singapore initiated an ecological planning exercise within the Neotiewpia site
to reduce the environmental impact from the development while providing Eco-friendly Tourism and R&D activities that feasible in the site. We did participate in the exercise and we tried explaining the ecological process, the limitation and potential development for integrated
ecological planning framework in Developing Countries like Indonesia, Brazil, etc with high ecological-values ecosystems. The Vision of Neotiewpia was “A Model Eco-Village that Respects its Natural Heritage, Builds Strong Community Links and Promotes Economic Development on Nature’s Premises." And Neotiewpia was successfully planned and designed with integrated ecological planning approach. It embraced the land evaluation and impact assessment. Further the plan was found feasible by the Singapore Government by earmarking the Lim Chu Kang and Kranji for Agri-tainment development in 2008 (although partially
implemented). The Neotiewpia or Lim Chu Kang area was found thriving with Green-Economy and Agro-Tourism. This integrated ecological planning could be translated to other areas in Developing Countries with agriculture potential and facing development pressures such as Neotiewpia. This concept would give alternate Green-Solution to the current economic crisis
Nabla algebras and Chu spaces
This paper is a study into some properties and applications of Moss’ coalgebraic or ‘cover’ modality ∇.First we present two axiomatizations of this operator, and we prove these axiomatizations to be sound and complete with respect to basic modal and positive modal logic, respectively. More precisely, we introduce the notions of a modal ∇-algebra and of a positive modal ∇-algebra. We establish a categorical isomorphism between the category of modal ∇-algebra and that of modal algebras, and similarly for positive modal ∇-algebras and positive modal algebras.We then turn to a presentation, in terms of relation lifting, of the Vietoris hyperspace in topology. The key ingredient is an F-lifting construction, for an arbitrary set functor F, on the category Chu of two-valued Chu spaces and Chu transforms, based on relation lifting.As a case study, we show how to realize the Vietoris construction on Stone spaces as a special instance of this Chu construction for the (finite) power set functor. Finally, we establish a tight connection with the axiomatization of the modal ∇-algebras.</p
Nabla algebras and Chu spaces
This paper is a study into some properties and applications of Moss’ coalgebraic or ‘cover’ modality ∇. First we present two axiomatizations of this operator, and we prove these axiomatizations to be sound and complete with respect to basic modal and positive modal logic, respectively. More precisely, we introduce the notions of a modal ∇-algebra and of a positive modal ∇-algebra. We establish a categorical isomorphism between the category of modal ∇-algebra and that of modal algebras, and similarly for positive modal ∇-algebras and positive modal algebras. We then turn to a presentation, in terms of relation lifting, of the Vietoris hyperspace in topology. The key ingredient is an F-lifting construction, for an arbitrary set functor F, on the category Chu of two-valued Chu spaces and Chu transforms, based on relation lifting. As a case study, we show how to realize the Vietoris construction on Stone spaces as a special instance of this Chu construction for the (finite) power set functor. Finally, we establish a tight connection with the axiomatization of the modal ∇-algebras
MTO2000 Speedi-db
Locuteurs dysphoniques enregistrés dans le service ORL du CHU de la Timone à Marseille entre 1995 et 200
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