7,968 research outputs found
il re della commedia di Taiwan: intervista con Kevin Chu
Translated into Italian from "Taiwan's King of Comedy: An Interview with Kevin Chu" originally written in EnglishThis excerpt from a November 2010 interview with Taiwanese filmmaker Kevin Chu (Chu Yen-ping/Zhu Yanping) features first-person point of view from one of the most prolific commercial feature film directors of Taiwan. Chu’s repertoire consists of more than one hundred mainstream titles, the majority of them comedies. Since his directorial debut "The Clown" (Xiao Cho), a 1980 sleeper hit that launched the superstardom of legendary comedian Hsu Pu-liao (Xu Buliao, 1951-1985), Chu has continuously dominated Taiwan’s box-office for more than three decades. Celebrated as Taiwan’s king of comedy, Chu’s entertaining pictures have been embraced by the mass Chinese-language audiences in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Southeast Asia, and in mainland China
Taiwan’s King of Comedy: Interview with Kevin Chu
This excerpt from a November 2010 interview with Taiwanese filmmaker Kevin Chu (Chu Yen-ping/Zhu Yanping) features first-person point of view from one of the most prolific commercial feature film directors of Taiwan. Chu’s repertoire consists of more than one hundred mainstream titles, the majority of them comedies. Since his directorial debut "The Clown" (Xiao Cho), a 1980 sleeper hit that launched the superstardom of legendary comedian Hsu Pu-liao (Xu Buliao, 1951-1985), Chu has continuously dominated Taiwan’s box-office for more than three decades. Celebrated as Taiwan’s king of comedy, Chu’s entertaining pictures have been embraced by the mass Chinese-language audiences in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Southeast Asia, and in mainland China
Conflicts faced by Rachel Chu in Kevin Kwan's Crazy Rich Asians
In this study, the researcher analyzes a novel by Kevin Kwan,Crazy Rich Asians. The researcher focuses on conflicts faced by Rachel Chu as the main character in Crazy Rich Asians. This study also analyzes how the conflicts can be solved in the novel. This study applies a descriptive method. It uses new criticism as a theory to help analyzing the intrinsic element, that is conflict,which appeared in the novel and experienced by Rachel Chu as the main character. There are two kinds of conflicts those are internal and external conflict. The result shows the kinds of conflicts faced by Rachel Chu, both internal and external conflict. In internal conflict, Rachel struggles with her own decision, while in external conflict, Rachel has a conflict with her boyfriend, mother, boyfriend’s family, and boyfriend’s friends. In the end, the researcher explained how all of the conflicts could be solved because of her boyfriend’s help
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
Visualizing Lifestyle and Fashion Behavior in Kevin Kwan’s Novel Crazy Rich Asians, Represented in the Film by Jon M. Chu
This study compares the novel Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan (2013) and the film adaptation of the same title, Crazy Rich Asians, by director Jon M. Chu (2018). Using the adaptation theory by Linda Hutcheon, this thesis examines how Jon M. Chu describes lifestyle and fashion behavior by looking at the three points of social stratification proposed by Max Weber. This research was carried out using a qualitative method. We argue that the lifestyle of upper-class people and fashion behavior in the novel are illuminated luxuriously on the screen. The atmosphere in the film of the lifestyle and fashion behavior strengthens the arrogant manners of the elite class. The novel’s social dynamics and romantic drama have been exposed with a strong ambiance for the cinematic experience for the audience.
 
Lifestyle and Fashion Behavior of the Upper Class in Kevin Kwan's Novel Crazy Rich Asians Represented on the Screen by Jon M. Chu JON M. CHU
This research is a study that compares two different works, which are the novel entitled Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan (2013) and the film adaptation with the same title Crazy Rich Asians by director Jon M. Chu (2018). By using the adaptation theory by Linda Hutcheon, this thesis aims to examine how Jon M. Chu describes the lifestyle and fashion behavior of the characters, which the majority of the character are the upper class people, by looking at the three points of social stratification proposed by Max Weber, which are class, social and power. This research was carried out using a qualitative method, where the results of this research showed that there were several important differences in describing the lifestyle and fashion behavior of the characters between the novel and the film Crazy Rich Asians and grouping them into the three points of social stratification proposed by Max Weber. I argue that the lifestyle of upper-class people and fashion behavior in the novel are illuminated luxuriously on the screen. The atmosphere in the film of the lifestyle and fashion behavior strengthens the arrogant manners of high society. The novel’s social dynamics and romantic drama have been exposed with a strong ambiance for the cinematic experience for the audience
Integrating technological innovations with advances in vocational interest research: Development of a career guidance chatbot prototype
Submission original under an indefinite embargo labeled 'Open Access'. The submission was exported from vireo on 2025-02-04 without embargo termsThe student, Chu Chu, accepted the attached license on 2024-07-09 at 16:01.The student, Chu Chu, submitted this Dissertation for approval on 2024-07-09 at 16:26.This Dissertation was approved for publication on 2024-07-10 at 16:24.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #21020 on 2025-02-04 at 21:04:47Under the background of job market turmoil and rapid advancements in technology, there is an increasing need for career guidance amongst U.S. workers. This dissertation advances the field of vocational interest measurement in the context of career counseling by building three sets of tools that are designed to work together for assessing person-occupation (P-O) fit through chat-based text data. Study 1 presents the Comprehensive Assessment of Basic Interests—O*NET (CABIN-NET), a survey instrument connecting basic interests with ONET’s occupational knowledge variables for assessing P-O fit. Study 2 Part 1 details the design of the Career Guidance Chatbot (CGC-bot), an AI-powered conversational agent that collects diverse, valuable work preference information from users. Lastly, Study 2 Part 2 leverages Natural Language Processing (NLP) & Machine Learning (ML) techniques for building twenty machines that effectively predict basic interest scores from users’ chat history with the CGC-bot. Subsequently, these machine-predicted scores were connected to the O*NET data through the CABIN-NET framework, ultimately offering suitable O*NET occupation suggestions. Therefore, this dissertation provides innovative and useful tools for people who need efficient yet detailed career guidance. Furthermore, this work sets the benchmark for future research that aims to measure vocational interest with non-traditional data types, and it paved paths for numerous research fronts for advancing interest measurement in the new era
Roussoellaceae, a new pleosporalean family to accommodate the genera Neoroussoella gen. nov., Roussoella and Roussoellopsis
Liu, Jian-Kui, Phookamsak, Rungtiwa, Dai, Dong-Qin, Tanaka, Kazuaki, Jones, Gareth, Xu, Jian-Chu, Chukeatirote, Ekachai, Hyde, Kevin D. (2014): Roussoellaceae, a new pleosporalean family to accommodate the genera Neoroussoella gen. nov., Roussoella and Roussoellopsis. Phytotaxa 181 (1): 1-33, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.181.1.1, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.181.1.
Repression upon Rachel Chu’s in Kevin Kwan’s Crazy Rich Asians
This study is about repression perceived by Rachel Chu, the main character in Kevin Kwan’s Crazy Rich Asians. The goal of this research is to describe repression in the light of the psychoanalytic defense mechanism repression. The researcher uses two data sources, namely the main data, which is Kevin Kwan Crazy Rich Asians novel published in 2013, and the supporting data, comprising books, websites, dictionaries, newspapers, and a number of novel-related articles. This research is a qualitative one; that is, the researcher adopts Sigmund Freud’s concept of defense mechanism especially repression to evaluate the data. The evaluation presents Rachel Chu’s state of id, ego, and superego in response to the situations surrounding her. The defense mechanism repression results in Rachel Chu’s persistence against stereotypes she cannot take, and also the impact of the repression on herself, or the people around her.Keywords: defense mechanism; repressions; education background; social statu
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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