21,730 research outputs found
Freeman Asia: AGU
Blog created by Min Hyuk (Daniel) Kim for the 2018 Freeman Asian Internship Progra
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
R Code and Output Supporting: Modeling individual variability in habitat selection and movement using integrated step-selection analyses
See the uploaded readme file.
Update 2025-04-25: Since initial publication, the mixedSSA R package referenced in this DRUM repository has been updated, and we have identified a mistake in one of the equations in the appendix. We have contacted the journal and submitted an erratum, and they have also requested that we update the associated supporting documents. Three files have been added to address this update (Update_delta_method.html, Update_delta_method.R, and helper_functions.R).This repository contains data and R code (along with associated output from running the code) supporting all results reported in: Chatterjee, Nilanjan; Wolfson, David; Kim, Dongmin; Vélez, Juliana; Freeman, Smith; Bacheler, Nathan; Shertzer, Kyle; Taylor, J.; Fieberg, John 2024. Modelling individual variability in habitat selection and movement using integrated step-selection analysis. Methods in Ecology and Evolution. The code demonstrates how to model the individual variation in habitat selection and movement parameters using integrated step-selection analysis.JF and NC were supported by National Aeronautics and Space Administration award 80NSSC21K1182 and JF received partial salary support from the Minnesota Agricultural Experimental Station.Chatterjee, Nilanjan; Wolfson, David; Kim, Dongmin; Velez, Juliana; Freeman, Smith; Bacheler, Nathan; Shertzer, Kyle; Taylor, Chris; Fieberg, John. (2024). R Code and Output Supporting: Modeling individual variability in habitat selection and movement using integrated step-selection analyses. Retrieved from the Data Repository for the University of Minnesota (DRUM), https://doi.org/10.13020/27hq-zx30
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
Hostile attribution bias in children and adolescents
Childhood aggression affects a significant number of children and represents the majority of referrals to child clinical services (Ford, Hamilton, Meltzer, & Goodman, 2007). There are substantial costs for the child, their family and society more generally if aggressive behaviour remains untreated (Shivram et al., 2009). Social-cognitive models of aggression have provided the theoretical framework for much of the research into childhood aggression over the past twenty years and formed the focus of clinical interventions (Crick & Dodge, 1994). A key finding from this research is that aggressive children have a tendency to attribute hostility to the intentions of others in ambiguous situations (Orobio de Castro, Veerman, Koops, Bosch and Monshouwer, 2002). The aim of literature review is to explore the factors that lead to the development of this bias. Limitations to extant literature and suggestions for future research are discussed.Although evidence from a number of studies demonstrates the effects of socialisation or peer contagion on children’s aggressive and anti-social behaviour (Prinstein & Dodge, 2008; Thornberry & Krohn, 1997), currently no studies have examined peer contagion effects on hostile attribution bias. The empirical paper describes a study investigating whether hostile attribution biases are contagious amongst adolescents in a community sample of boys and girls. Using a computerised ‘Chat-room’ experimental paradigm, contagion effects were demonstrated across two conditions (hostile and benign) with those exposed to hostile group norms showing greater contagion effects. Four possible moderators on the effects of peer contagion were explored; gender, dispositional levels of aggression, social anxiety and friendship style. The role of peers in the socialisation of hostile intent attribution styles and implications for preventative interventions are discussed
VCU Choral Concert, video disc one
Commonwealth Singers, Choral Arts Society, Vocal Chamber Ensemble
Erin Freeman, conductor
David Kim, pianist
Vox Concordia
Lisa Fusco, conductor
Friday, November 5, 2021 at 7 p.m.
Sonia Vlahcevic Concert Hall | W. E. Singleton Center for the Performing Arts
922 Park Avenue | Richmond, Va
VCU Choral Concert, disc one
Disc One of Two
Commonwealth Singers, Choral Arts Society, Vocal Chamber Ensemble
Erin Freeman, conductor
David Kim, pianist
Vox Concordia
Lisa Fusco, conductor
Friday, November 5, 2021 at 7 p.m.
Sonia Vlahcevic Concert Hall | W. E. Singleton Center for the Performing Arts
922 Park Avenue | Richmond, Va
VCU Choral Concert, video disc two
Commonwealth Singers, Choral Arts Society, Vocal Chamber Ensemble
Erin Freeman, conductor
David Kim, pianist
Vox Concordia
Lisa Fusco, conductor
Friday, November 5, 2021 at 7 p.m.
Sonia Vlahcevic Concert Hall | W. E. Singleton Center for the Performing Arts
922 Park Avenue | Richmond, Va
VCU Choral Concert, disc two
Disc Two of Two
Commonwealth Singers, Choral Arts Society, Vocal Chamber Ensemble
Erin Freeman, conductor
David Kim, pianist
Vox Concordia
Lisa Fusco, conductor
Friday, November 5, 2021 at 7 p.m.
Sonia Vlahcevic Concert Hall | W. E. Singleton Center for the Performing Arts
922 Park Avenue | Richmond, Va
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
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