197,500 research outputs found
Parentaliorum Illustrißimi Principis ac Domini, Dn. Johannis, Ducis Saxoniae, Landgravii Thuringiae, Marchionis Misniae, Felicissimae Recordationis, Oratio I. De Maioribus Defuncti Principis : Publice recitata Ienae, die XXII. Maii, A.O.R. MDCX.
A Wolfgango Heidero M. Ethices & Politices Profess. publicoIn: Heider, Wolfgang: Orationes Parentales Numero quinq[ue] De Vita Et Morte Illustrissimi ... Dn. Johannis, Ducis Saxoniae ... - 1616Signaturformel: A-z4, Aa-Ll
On the control of the Heider balance model*
The Heider social balance model describes the evolution of the relationships in a social network of humans or animals. This model is built upon the concept of balance of triads consisting of friendly or hostile edges representing the state of the network. In this differential model, a leader is introduced in order to control the system and to drive the social network to a desired relationship state. Further, the stability, the local controllability, and the optimal control through leadership of the Heider model are investigated. Results of numerical experiments demonstrate the ability of the proposed control strategy to drive the Heider balance model to friendship
De iure oppignorationum
quas ... pro summis in utroque iure honoribus consequendis publicè examinandas proponit Ioh. Andreas Heiderus Lindavia Acronianus, D. ... Iunii Ann. M DC LXI ...Datum hs. eingefügt: D. 22. IuniiEnthält 18 ThesenDiss. iur. Basel, 166
Hybrid balance theory: Heider balance under higher order interactions
Heider's Balance Theory in signed networks, which consists of friendship or
enmity relationships, is a model that relates the type of relationship between
two people to the third person. In this model, there is an assumption of the
independence of triadic relations, which means that the balance or imbalance of
one triangle does not affect another and the energy only depends on the number
of each type of triangle. There is evidence that in real network data, in
addition to third-order interactions (Heider Balance), higher-order
interactions also play a role. One step beyond the Heider Balance, the effect
of Quartic Balance has been studied by removing the assumption of triangular
independence. Application of quartic balance results in the influence of the
balanced or imbalanced state of neighboring triangles on each specific one.
Here, a question arises that how the Heider Balance is affected by the
existence of Quartic Balance (fourth-order). The phase diagram obtained from
the mean-field method shows there is a threshold for higher-order interaction
strength, below which a third-order interaction dominates and there are no
imbalance triangles in the network, and above this threshold, squares
effectively determine the balance state in which the imbalance triangles can
survive. The solution of the mean-field indicates that we have a first-order
phase transition in terms of random behavior of agents (temperature) which is
in accordance with the Monte Carlo simulation results.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Robert C. Heyder, Mancos, CO: an interview by Leighton M. Quarles, 10 February 2017
Transcript (82 pages) of an interview by Leighton M. Quarles with Robert C. Heider on February 10, 2017, in Mancos, Colorado
idSpace Tooling and Training for collaborative distributed product innovation
Rutjens, M., Bitter-Rijpkema, M., Grube, P. P., & Heider, T. (2009). idSpace Tooling and Training for collaborative distributed product innovation. Workshop during the e-Learning Baltic conference. June, 17-19, 2009, Rostock, Germany.Introduction to the European project idSpace.The work on this presentation has been sponsored by the idSpace STREP that is funded by the European Commission's 7th Framework Programme. Contract 216199 [http://www.idspace-project.org
Dr. Duane M. Jackson, Morehouse College, July 2011
This video is a conversation with Dr. Duane M. Jackson. Dr. Jackson talks about his paper, "Recall and the Serial Position Effect: The Role of Primacy and Recency on Accounting Students' Performance." Jackie Daniel, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer
No evidence that monkeys attribute mental states to animated shapes in the Heider–Simmel videos
Abstract Human Theory of Mind (ToM) is so automatic and pervasive that we spontaneously attribute mental states to animated abstract shapes, as evidenced by the classic Heider–Simmel findings. The extent to which this represents a fundamental characteristic of primate social cognition is debated. Prior research suggests that monkeys spontaneously predict behavior and attribute basic goals to conspecifics, but it remains unclear whether, like humans, they spontaneously ascribe mental states to animated shapes. Here, we address this question by analyzing rhesus monkeys’ viewing patterns of the classic Heider–Simmel animations. We hypothesized that if rhesus monkeys also spontaneously attribute mental states to animated shapes, then, like humans, they would have the longest fixation durations for theory of mind animations, medium duration fixation for goal-directed animations, and shortest fixations for animations with random motion. In contrast, if attributing mental states to animations is specific to humans and perhaps other apes, then we predict no differences in looking time across animation categories. Unlike humans, monkeys did not fixate longer on ToM videos. Critically, monkeys’ viewing patterns did not correlate with humans’ viewing patterns or intentionality ratings from previously published research. The only major difference in viewing patterns between animation categories tracked differences in low-level visual motion. Thus, monkeys do not view the classic Heider–Simmel animations like humans do and we found no evidence that they spontaneously attribute mental states to animated shapes
"Reflections on the subject of Emigration from Europe with a view to Settlement in the United States" By M. Carey.
"Reflections on the subject of Emigration from Europe with a view to Settlement in the United States: containing bried sketches of the moral and political character of those states.
By M. Carey, member of the American philosophical, and of the American Antiquarian Society, and author of The Olive Branch, Cindiciae Hibernicae, essays on banking, on political economy, and on internal improvement.
To which are now added the English editor's comments on the subject; together with Important Advice to Emigrants, and Cautions Against Impositions Practiced in the Outports
Short Report: A déjeté Levallois tool from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (Pakistan) and the role it plays in the chronology of the Pleistocene terraces of the Bannu Basin
This paper discusses the importance of the discovery of one déjeté Levallois tool from the surface
of a dark grey and black patinated gravel terrace located ca. 500 m south-west of the Neolithic site of
Sheri Khan Tarakai in the Bannu Basin (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan), and provides a detailed
geomorphological description of the area where it was found. The Neolithic site rests on a large gravelly
fan, at present terraced and dismembered by small seasonal streams. Scatters of black varnished pebbles,
at the top of a thick ochre silt of possible alluvial origin, cover its surface. Amongst the numerous
siliceous gravels forming the deposit, some are of a good quality chert, whose source can be found in
the Tertiary Sulaiman Formation. The typological characteristics of the tool, the chert employed for its
manufacture, its location and the presence of black patina on its cortex are all important elements that
contribute to the definition of the Pleistocene period during which pebble terraces formed. The tool
comes from a region where Middle Palaeolithic artefacts had never been found before, though the reanalysis of old collections would suggest their presence as far as the course of the Indus in Lower Sindh.
Moreover, its discovery contributes to the study of the south-eastern spread of the Middle Palaeolithic
Levallois technique, an important topic that still needs to be fully understoo
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