3,267 research outputs found

    ¡…pero hace obra: Una aproximación a los intentos de transformación urbana de Lima

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    La proximidad del Bicentenario del Perú es el contexto ideal para una reflexión sobre Lima. Este articulo presenta con brevedad la ruta del proyecto de investigación para la Facultad de Arquitectura – UCAL. Circunscrito al periodo republicano, identifica tres momentos claves para el crecimiento de la ciudad, debido a la participación activa de los gobernantes de turno a través de intervenciones urbanas que priorizaron la construcción de obras desde una lógica de proyecto, en lugar de una previa planificación metódica. Así pues, la superposición de niveles de gobierno y la ausencia de planificación han marcado la cultura política urbanística de Lima

    Database Theory, Yuri, and Me

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    Yuri Gurevich made many varied and deep contributions to logic for computer science. Logic provides also the theoretical foundation of database systems. Hence, it is almost unavoidable that Gurevich made some great contributions to database theory. We discuss some of these contributions, and, along the way, present some personal anecdotes connected to Yuri and the author. We also describe the honorary doctorate awarded to Gurevich by Hasselt University (then called Limburgs Universitair Centrum) in 1998

    Metáforas. Yuri Cárdenas

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    La imaginación es poderosa. Contemplar la ciudad desde una perspectiva abstracta , al mismo estilo de los modernistas brasileros, es un ejercicio que resulta retador para un joven estudiante en la ciudad de Lima. Ver y dar sentido a pequeñas formas urbanas que se convierten en metáforas visuales de un recorrido que ordena mentalmente el caos en el que se encuentran inmersas

    YURI KOUZNETSOV AND POLAND

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    This article analyses a translation of one of Adam Mickiewicz’s Sonnets from the Crimea made by Yuri Kouznetsov, a famous Russian poet. It is not incidental that some Polish toponyms coincide with personal names mentioned in Kouznetsov’s poetry. The author of the article examines the system of symbols that Kouznetsov resorts to in his texts concerning either Polish themes or stories. It is concluded that in one of his philosophical verses Kouznetsov proclaimed Polish and German culture to have messianic value

    Yuri Apollonovich Ptashkovsky (1948—2015)

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    Yuri Apollonovich Ptashkovsky (Юрий Аполлонович Пташковский, in Russian) was born on April 4, 1948, in Khmelnytskyi, Ukraine, and spent most of his life there. He studied at the Khmelnytskyi Electromechanical College, specializing as an electrical technician. He later worked as head of the cinema-photo laboratory of the Khmelnytskyi Municipal Palace of Culture and also led the Children’s Photography Club. Despite his technical education, Yuri’s devotion to nature and studies of nature were evident from his early years. From young age, he passionately observed and investigated insects, especially beetles. Yuri started his own private beetle collection at the age of fourteen. He carefully mounted the specimens for his collection and identified them using available entomological literature. By 1978, his collection amounted to about 1,500 species of beetles. ...Yuri came to Israel on October 28, 1998, joining his eldest son, who was already living in Kibbutz Malkiyya. Yuri settled in Qiryat Hayyim, one of the northern suburbs of Haifa, where he remained for the rest of his life. He worked as a geodesist for the Jewish National Fund (KKL) until his retirement in 2013. From his very first steps in the country, Yuri became fascinated by the incredible diversity of the local beetle fauna, and immediately began collecting insects. Many of his field trips were in and around Qiryat Hayyim, in surrounding fields, and in marine dunes, although he also collected in other parts of the country, particularly in the Upper Galilee, Golan Heights, and on Mount Hermon. Working as a geodesist for KKL, he traveled regularly across northern Israel and was able to assemble a valuable collection of beetles and to photograph them in their natural environment. When the number of his photographed species exceeded 1,000, Yuri came up with the idea of making an illustrated atlas of Israeli Coleoptera.In 2009, after eight years of intensive work the atlas—the first of its kind—was published. The first edition was in Russian and Hebrew, with only a few printed copies. The second edition of 50 copies was published in 2013 in English, with Russian and Hebrew names of some beetle taxa. The atlas is illustrated with 1,800 color images of 1,655 beetle species, some of them taken by the author and some borrowed from various sources. Some of the taxa are briefly described, others are only mentioned by name and by distribution; identification guidelines and sketches are provided for some species and genera. The books were published at Yuri’s own expense. Over the last few years, Yuri began to work on a third edition of his atlas, but his untimely death has interrupted this admirable endeavor. Yuri passed away unexpectedly, from a stroke, on February 9, 2015. He is survived by his wife Galina, two sons and a daughter.   Cite as: Friedman, A.-L.-L. & Novikova, A.V. 2016. Yuri Apollonovich Ptashkovsky (1948—2015). Israel Journal of Entomology 46: 137–140. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.22110

    Letter from Yuri to Mr. Bengston, October 12, 1942

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    Post-WWII, Pollock maintains various correspondence with folks from the Fresno Assembly Center, as well as other correspondence with the Pentagon.Walter E. Pollock was the head of the service division at the Fresno Assembly Center. He was deeply affected by his time working at the center and was working on a memoir of his experiences there, but unfortunately passed away before it could be completed. The collection contains his research and draft chapters

    Letter from Yuri to Mr. Bengston, September 30, 1942

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    Post-WWII, Pollock maintains various correspondence with folks from the Fresno Assembly Center, as well as other correspondence with the Pentagon.Walter E. Pollock was the head of the service division at the Fresno Assembly Center. He was deeply affected by his time working at the center and was working on a memoir of his experiences there, but unfortunately passed away before it could be completed. The collection contains his research and draft chapters

    Desafíos y oportunidades para el desarrollo de la investigación por parte de estudiantes de Odontología

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    Independiente del número de estudiantes involucrados en la investigación, durante sus estudios universitarios, los desafı́os para realizar investigación hacen que muy pocos escojan la carrera de investigador a futuro. Objetivo: Analizar los desafı́os y oportunidades que perciben los estudiantes de Odontologı́a al momento de desarrollar una investigación cientı́fica. Métodos: Estudio transversal que incluyó a 112 estudiantes tesistas que culminaron su trabajo de fin de grado en la Facultad de Odontologı́a (Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos. Lima-Perú). Se midió la percepción de los desafı́os y oportunidad al culminar su estudio a través de una escala que valoró las categorı́as de: instalaciones e infraestructura como apoyo, apoyo interpersonal y relaciones de la institución, escribir un informe y publicar los resultados de investigación, entre otras. Se analizaron las puntuaciones a través de promedios y un análisis de comparación. Resultados: La puntuación general fue de 2,45 ± 0,34, siendo las dimensiones “análisis de datos” (3,17 ± 0,41) y “experiencia de investigación general” (3,26 ± 0,39) las que presentaron un mayor promedio. Los varones presentaron mayores puntuaciones generales (2,43 ± 0,31), existiendo diferencias signiicativas en las dimensiones “diseño y selección de la investigación” (p = 0,001). Conclusión: Los desafı́os y oportunidades para la investigación se encuentran por debajo del promedio, los principales desafı́os se encontraron relacionados al apoyo institucional, la presen cia de laboratorios adecuados y un inadecuado diseño curricular para el fomento de la investigación; las principales oportunidades se encontraron en el análisis de datos y la experiencia investigativa en general

    Yuri Apollonovich Ptashkovsky (1948—2015)

    No full text
    Yuri Apollonovich Ptashkovsky (Юрий Аполлонович Пташковский, in Rus­sian) was born on April 4, 1948, in Khmelnytskyi, Ukraine, and spent most of his life there. He studied at the Khmelnytskyi Electromechanical College, specializing as an elec­trical technician. He later worked as head of the cinema-photo laboratory of the Khmelnytskyi Municipal Palace of Culture and also led the Children’s Pho­tography Club. Despite his technical education, Yuri’s devotion to nature and studies of nature were evident from his early years. From young age, he passionately observed and investigated insects, especially beetles. Yuri started his own private beetle collection at the age of fourteen. He carefully mounted the specimens for his collection and identified them using available entomological literature. By 1978, his collection amounted to about 1,500 species of beetles. ... Yuri came to Israel on October 28, 1998, joining his eldest son, who was al­ready living in Kibbutz Malkiyya. Yuri settled in Qiryat Hayyim, one of the nor­thern suburbs of Haifa, where he remained for the rest of his life. He worked as a geodesist for the Jewish National Fund (KKL) until his retirement in 2013. From his very first steps in the country, Yuri became fascinated by the incredible diversity of the local beetle fauna, and immediately began collecting insects. Many of his field trips were in and around Qiryat Hayyim, in surrounding fields, and in marine dunes, although he also collected in other parts of the country, particularly in the Upper Galilee, Golan Heights, and on Mount Hermon. Working as a geodesist for KKL, he traveled regularly across northern Israel and was able to assemble a va­luable collection of beetles and to photograph them in their natural environment. When the number of his photographed species exceeded 1,000, Yuri came up with the idea of making an illustrated atlas of Israeli Coleoptera. In 2009, after eight years of intensive work the atlas—the first of its kind—was published. The first edition was in Russian and Hebrew, with only a few printed copies. The second edition of 50 copies was published in 2013 in English, with Russian and Hebrew names of some beetle taxa. The atlas is illustrated with 1,800 color images of 1,655 beetle species, some of them taken by the author and some borrowed from various sources. Some of the taxa are briefly described, others are only mentioned by name and by distribution; identification guidelines and sketches are provided for some species and genera. The books were published at Yuri’s own expense. Over the last few years, Yuri began to work on a third edition of his atlas, but his untimely death has interrupted this admirable endeavor. Yuri passed away unexpectedly, from a stroke, on February 9, 2015. He is sur­vived by his wife Galina, two sons and a daughter. ..

    A Guiding Vector-Field algorithm for path-following control of nonholonomic mobile robots

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    In this paper, we propose an algorithm for path-following control of the nonholonomic mobile robot based on the idea of the guiding vector field (GVF). The desired path may be an arbitrary smooth curve in its implicit form, that is, a level set of a predefined smooth function. Using this function and the robot's kinematic model, we design a GVF, whose integral curves converge to the trajectory. A nonlinear motion controller is then proposed, which steers the robot along such an integral curve, bringing it to the desired path. We establish global convergence conditions for our algorithm and demonstrate its applicability and performance by experiments with wheeled robots.Accepted Author ManuscriptTeam Tamas Keviczk
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