3,494 research outputs found

    The Localization Hypothesis and Machines

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    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

    MTO2000 Speedi-db

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    Locuteurs dysphoniques enregistrés dans le service ORL du CHU de la Timone à Marseille entre 1995 et 200

    Halocarbons in the atmosphere of the industrial-related Pearl River Delta region of China

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    Author name used in this publication: Chu, K. W.Version of RecordPublishedVoR allowe

    Retour d’expérience, CHU de Rouen confronté à une attaque en 2019

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    International audienceIn this article, the author returns to the cyberattack against the Rouen University Hospital dating from 2019. It describes the measures that had to be put in place in order to respond to them and allow the proper functioning of the health system during this period of destabilization. For the author, a cyberattack is managed in six phases: 1. preparation for crisis management; 2. Identification of the cause and extent of the incident; 3. Compartmentalization and implementation of the action plan; 4. Remediation; 5. Restoration; 6. Feedback. For the author, the organization of the crisis unit is specific to each health institution but it is essential to train staff in the risks of a cyberattack.Dans cet article, l’auteur revient sur la cyberattaque à l’encontre du CHU de Rouen datant de 2019. Il décrit les mesures qui ont dû être mises en place afin de répondre à celles-ci et permettre le bon fonctionnement du système de santé durant cette période de déstabilisation. Pour l’auteur, une cyberattaque se gère en six phases : 1. la préparation de la gestion de crise ; 2. Identification de la cause et de l’étendue de l’incident ; 3. Le cloisonnement et la mise en place du plan d’action ; 4. La remédiation ; 5. La restauration ; 6. Le retour d’expérience. Pour l’auteur, l’organisation de la cellule de crise est propre à chaque établissement de santé mais il est indispensable de former le personnel aux risques d’une cyberattaque

    On the Changing Political Structure of the Chu State: From an Archaeological Viewpoint

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    The emergence of centralised power and polity has long been a crucial problem in historical studies of Eastern Zhou society, and the conclusions of researchers on whether such centralised power was achieved in the state of Chu 楚 have been divided. One reason for this disagreement is due to the differing state of source materials for the Spring and Autumn and Warring States periods, making it difficult to grasp continuity in historical phenomena. In this article, the author re-examines the changing structure of the Chu state based on archaeological evidence from bronze vessels excavated in large quantities in the middle Yangzi River region that enables us to perceive temporal changes throughout the whole Eastern Zhou period. On the basis of archaeological analysis, the author draws three major conclusions. 1) The structure of production and distribution of bronze vessels in the Chu state changed drastically from the late Spring and Autumn period to early Warring States period, and a centralised system emerged by the middle of the Warring States period. 2) In the Spring and Autumn period, the Chu state distributed bronze vessels to the neighbouring polities as a strategy of indirect control in a way similar to that of the Western Zhou dynasty, although this strategy changed to direct domination over the entire middle Yangzi River region. 3) The structure of cemeteries of upper-ranking aristocrats changed through the middle of 5ᵗʰ century BC due to the emerging middle classes, who later became the bureaucrats providing the basis of centralised polity established in the middle Warring States period. Based upon these analyses, the author concludes that the political structure of the Chu state was gradually centralised through 5th century BC, which challenges the traditional views on the centralisation of the Chu polity represented by the drastic and short-term reformation by Wu Qi 吳起. This result calls for reconsideration of the “reformations” (變法) of Eastern Zhou societies from multiple points of view including both historical texts and archaeological materials

    Espin dui chu sheng hou xiao shu xiao nao de Pujinshi xi bao de shu tu fa zhan zhi yan jiu

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    Lui, Nga Chu.Thesis M.Phil. Chinese University of Hong Kong 2014.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 84-92).Abstracts also in Chinese.Title from PDF title page (viewed on 12, December, 2016).Lui, Nga Chu

    A Refuge for Jae-in Doe: Fugues in the Key of English Major

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    A Refuge for Jae-in Doe: Fugues in the Key of English Major Author(s):Seo-Young Chu (see profile)Date:2017Subject(s):Feminism, Creative nonfiction, Asian American literature, Sonnets, Social justice, TraumaItem Type:EssayTag(s):#MeToo, Stanford, women in academia, early americanPermanent URL:http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/cp82-8f3

    First person – Chih-Wen Chu

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    ABSTRACT First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Journal of Cell Science, helping early-career researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Chih-Wen Chu is the first author on ‘The Ajuba family protein Wtip regulates actomyosin contractility during vertebrate neural tube closure’, published in Journal of Cell Science. Chih-Wen is an associate scientist in the lab of Sergei Sokol at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, USA, investigating apical constriction and planar cell polarity, with a focus on protein dynamics at the cell junctions.</jats:p

    A Note on the Title of San Lu Daifu, and the Rise and Decline of Chu Nobility

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    This article aims to explain the historical background of the Chu title of San Lü Daifu, held by the poet Qu Yuan when serving as an official in charge of the affairs of the three aristocratic clans of Zhao, Qu, and Jing. Through interpretations of inscriptions and manuscripts from the Warring States Period, the author suggests that the clan name of Zhao was derived from King Zhao of Chu, the name of Qu from King Wu of Chu, and that of Jing from King Ping of Chu. As for King Ping, an inscription on a bronze bell unearthed in Hubei in 1973 reveals that his posthumous name was originally Jing Ping, thus indicating the kinship with the Jing clan. Moreover, the author discusses certain historical events involving these three clans and the fate of the state of Chu, focusing on King Ping's notorious marriage to a daughter of the Qin ruler--a liaison which led to Chu first being occupied by the state of Wu, and subsequently rescued by Qin

    Phoebus 6, number 2: Chinese Painting under the Qianlong Emperor

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    tableOfContents: Preface p. 207 Figure, Fiction and Figment in Eighteenth­ century Chinese Painting by Richard Vinograd p. 209 Yuan Jiang: Image Maker by Alfreda Murck p. 228 Zheng Xie's Price List: Painting as a Source of Income in Yangzhou by Ginger Cheng-chi Hsu p.261 Jin Nong: The Eccentric Painter with a Wintry Heart by Marshall P. S. Wu p. 272 An Overview of Li Jian's Painting by Christina Chu p. 295 Eighteenth-century Foundations in Modern Chinese Painting by Chu-tsing Li p. 316 Epilog: Rubric and Art History - The Case of the Eight Eccentrics of Yangzhou by Ju-hsi Chou p.329 Notes p. 351 Glossary p. 381 Index p. 39
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