22,116 research outputs found

    Dispelling the Myths Behind First-author Citation Counts

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    We conducted a full-scale evaluative citation analysis study of scholars in the XML research field to explore just how different from each other author rankings resulting from different citation counting methods actually are, and to demonstrate the capability of emerging data and tools on the Web in supporting more realistic citation counting methods. Our results contest some common arguments for the continued use of first-author citation counts in the evaluation of scholars, such as high correlations between author rankings by first-author citation counts and other citation counting methods, and high costs of using more realistic citation counting methods that are not well-supported by the ISI databases. It is argued that increasingly available digital full text research papers make it possible for citation analysis studies to go beyond what the ISI databases have directly supported and to employ more sophisticated methods

    GO Barometer: meer wantrouwen en onvoldoende capaciteit binnen het vakgebied

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    De tweede editie van de GO Barometer is uit! De Stichting Kennis Gebiedsontwikkeling (SKG) brengt ook dit jaar de stand van zaken binnen het vakgebied van gebiedsontwikkeling in kaart. Gebiedsontwikkeling is een zaak van lange adem, dus er zijn veel overeenkomsten met 2022 – maar toch ook enkele opvallende verschillen. Vooral het stijgende onderlinge wantrouwen tussen partijen is opvallend. Daarnaast zet onvoldoende personele capaciteit de uitvoering van uitdagende ruimtelijke projecten verder onder druk.Urban Development ManagementPractice Chair Urban Area Developmen

    Cut-elimination, substitution and normalisation

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    Date of Acceptance: 01/2015We present a proof (of the main parts of which there is a formal version, checked with the Isabelle proof assistant) that, for a G3-style calculus covering all of intuitionistic zero-order logic, with an associated term calculus, and with a particular strongly normalising and confluent system of cut-reduction rules, every reduction step has, as its natural deduction translation, a sequence of zero or more reduction steps (detour reductions, permutation reductions or simplifications). This complements and (we believe) clarifies earlier work by (e.g.) Zucker and Pottinger on a question raised in 1971 by Kreisel.Peer reviewe

    Before I Let Go

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    Front Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Day One -- Midnight Flight -- A Land of Gold and Loneliness -- Stars and Stories -- Unpredictable -- Strangers, Traitors, Ghosts -- Framed Moments -- Loss -- Saints and Sourdough -- Doorways -- The Lonely Lake -- Memories of Infinity -- In the Company of Others -- Foreseen and Foretold -- Whispers in the Night -- Day Two -- Astronomical Twilight -- We Can Be Heroes -- Conversations -- The Choices We Make -- A New Lost -- Happily Sometimes -- Now Here's to You -- Planting Seeds -- To Those We Have Loved and Lost -- Pathways -- Abandon Hope -- Gifts -- Day Three -- Wholesome Lives and Hot Springs -- Birds with Broken Wings -- A Shrine of Blossoms -- Keeper of the Spa -- Writing on the Wall -- Nightmares -- The Way the World Changes -- Do You Understand Now? -- Fear Her -- Of the Dead, Nothing but Good -- No Need to Say Goodbye -- Scorn and Celebration -- Service, Interrupted -- Darkness Falls -- A Backback Full of Home -- The Smell of Smoke -- The Taste of Ashes -- Day Four -- Where Do We Go From Here? -- Polar Twilight -- Night Swimming -- Testimony -- A Cure for All Ills -- Fear about Town -- Empty Rooms, Lost Words -- Dear Diary -- History -- Allies -- Unexpected Friendship -- Northern Lights -- Day Five -- The Smell of Changing Weather -- Understanding Dawns -- Top of the Morning -- The Art of Living -- Stealing In -- The Art of Dying -- The Mist, the Woods, the Darkness -- Kyra vs. the Rest of the World -- Belonging -- Brushstrokes -- Let Me Tell You a Story -- Stolen Time -- The Way the World Ends -- Endless Night -- Endless Day -- Come to Steal Your Soul Away -- Saving the World -- Day Six -- Hero Days -- Homeward Bound -- All the Lives We Shared -- Author's Note -- Acknowledgments -- A Conversation with the Author -- About the Author -- Back CoverDescription based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries

    GO Barometer ’22: Integrale gebiedsontwikkeling vereist meer capaciteit en innovatie

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    Met de eerste editie van de GO Barometer bracht de SKG dit voorjaar in kaart wat de stand van zaken is in het vakgebied van gebiedsontwikkeling. In dit artikel bespreken we de vijf belangrijkste inzichten uit de barometer en de discussie daarover tijdens het SKG Jaarcongres eind maart.Urban Development ManagementPractice Chair Urban Area Developmen

    Distributive concerns when replacing a pay-as-you-go system with a fully funded system

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    The author uses a simulation model to quantify the impact on income distribution of having a neutral social security program that is fully funded replace a progressive social security program that redistributes income toward the poor but is financed by a pay-as-you-go method. He finds that if the original pay-as-you-go system is large enough to yield an income replacement rate of at least 40 percent for the middle class and 200 percent for the poor, then the proposed change helps the poor in the long run, so long as public debt does not increase by more than 40 percent of GDP during the transition. Such a reform allows an increase in the capital stock per worker, so in the long run the poor benefit more through higher real wages than they lose because progressive redistribution has ended. In the short run, however, a compensatory program is needed because the poor lose their subsidy before receiving the long-term benefit. In most cases, the 40 percent of GDP available from the increase in public debt is enough to finance a transfer program that compensates the poor in the"short"run (the first 50 years). The author concludes that concern about the welfare of the poor is unwarranted, in both the short and long runs, if the compensatory program is implemented.Environmental Economics&Policies,Economic Theory&Research,Safety Nets and Transfers,Services&Transfers to Poor,Rural Poverty Reduction

    A small remark on finite multiple zeta values and pp-adic multiple zeta values (Various aspects of multiple zeta values)

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    "Various aspects of multiple zeta values". July 23~26, 2013. edited by Kentaro Ihara. The papers presented in this volume of RIMS Kôkyûroku Bessatsu are in final form and refereed.We show a relation between finite multiple zeta values of depth 2 and p-adic multiple zeta values of depth 1

    Go it, Jerry

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    Two brothers go to war with their grandmother.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/kgbsides_uk/2357/thumbnail.jp

    Hell in Anime and Manga, From Go Nagai’s \u3ci\u3eDevilman\u3c/i\u3e, Kentaro Miura’s \u3ci\u3eBerserk\u3c/i\u3e, Hell Girl Project’s \u3ci\u3eHell Girl\u3c/i\u3e, the Works of Junji Ito and Everything in Between

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    This paper will explore the influence of Hell in Anime and Manga. The discussion will begin with Go Nagai’s Devilman then lead into other examples of anime/manga with the same theme. The focus will be on the titular character, Akira Fudo, his transformation, and the villains throughout the story. Then a larger discussion on Kentaro Miura’s Berserk and his interpretation of hell will be taken into account. From Griffith’s transformation to Femto, to the iconography of the monsters Guts battles. Then another popular anime franchise will be discussed: Hell Girl and its impact on modern media. The story of revenge and having a young Hell Girl by the name of Ai Enma, enact your revenge fantasies through the use of hellish imagery to torment the victim. Once that part wraps up, the discussion will then lead to Junji Ito’s works, his usage of hell within his art, manga, and much more

    The effect of semantic distance in yes/no and go/no-go semantic categorization tasks

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      The effect of semantic distance (Lund & Burgess, 1996) was examined in three semantic categorization experiments. Experiment 1, a yes/no task that required participants to make animal/nonanimal judgments by responding to both sets of stimuli (Forster & Shen, 1996), revealed no effect of semantic distance. Experiment 2, a go/no-go task that required participants to respond to only the experimental (i.e., nonanimal) items, revealed a large effect of semantic distance. In addition, response latencies were longer and error rates were lower to the experimental items in Experiment 2 than to those in Experiment 1. These findings were replicated in Experiment 3, in which semantic distance and task condition were manipulated within subjects. We conclude that these results are consistent with (1) the view that the go/no-go tasks elicited more extensive processing of the experimental items and (2) a connectionist account of semantic activation, whereby processing is facilitated by the presence of semantic neighbors. Reprinted by permission of the publisher.; The effect of semantic distance (Lund & Burgess, 1996) was examined in three semantic categorization experiments. Experiment 1, a yes/no task that required participants to make animal/nonanimal judgments by responding to both sets of stimuli (Forster & Shen, 1996), revealed no effect of semantic distance. Experiment 2, a go/no-go task that required participants to respond to only the experimental (i.e., nonanimal) items, revealed a large effect of semantic distance. In addition, response latencies were longer and error rates were lower to the experimental items in Experiment 2 than to those in Experiment 1. These findings were replicated in Experiment 3, in which semantic distance and task condition were manipulated within subjects. We conclude that these results are consistent with (1) the view that the go/no-go tasks elicited more extensive processing of the experimental items and (2) a connectionist account of semantic activation, whereby processing is facilitated by the presence of semantic neighbors.; The effect of semantic distance (Lund & Burgess, 1996) was examined in three semantic categorization experiments. Experiment 1, a yes/no task that required participants to make animal/nonanimal judgments by responding to both sets of stimuli (Forster & Shen, 1996), revealed no effect of semantic distance. Experiment 2, a go/no-go task that required participants to respond to only the experimental (i.e., nonanimal) items, revealed a large effect of semantic distance. In addition, response latencies were longer and error rates were lower to the experimental items in Experiment 2 than to those in Experiment 1. These findings were replicated in Experiment 3, in which semantic distance and task condition were manipulated within subjects. We conclude that these results are consistent with (1) the view that the go/no-go tasks elicited more extensive processing of the experimental items and (2) a connectionist account of semantic activation, whereby processing is facilitated by the presence of semantic neighbors.; The effect of semantic distance (Lund & Burgess, 1996) was examined in three semantic categorization experiments. Experiment 1, a yes/no task that required participants to make animal/nonanimal judgments by responding to both sets of stimuli (Forster & Shen, 1996), revealed no effect of semantic distance. Experiment 2, a go/no-go task that required participants to respond to only the experimental (i.e., nonanimal) items, revealed a large effect of semantic distance. In addition, response latencies were longer and error rates were lower to the experimental items in Experiment 2 than to those in Experiment 1. These findings were replicated in Experiment 3, in which semantic distance and task condition were manipulated within subjects. We conclude that these results are consistent with (1) the view that the go/no-go tasks elicited more extensive processing of the experimental items and (2) a connectionist account of semantic activation, whereby processing is facilitat d by the presence of semantic neighbors
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