34,734 research outputs found

    The political role of the people's liberation army 1949-1973

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    This thesis is to study the political role of the People's Liberation Army from the approach of structure and function. The framework of the thesis consists of three major parts, first, the influence of Chinese traditional political culture on, and the formation of, the political role of the PL A; second, the influence of domestic political struggles and external military conflicts on the development of the political role of the PLA; and the third, the analysis of the transition of the PLA's political role from the structure and personnel arrangements of the CCPCC Within the above-mentioned three scopes, this thesis make a thorough discussion on the following: (1) The relationship between the structure of the PRC and the formation of the PLA's political role; (2) How has ideology influenced the army's political role; (3) What is Mao's viewpoint and his influence on the development of the army's political role; (4) What is the link between the army and the party, and how has this developed; (6) What accounts for the expansion of the PLA's political functions; (7) What is the influence of political factional struggles on the PLA's political role; (8) Is it political institution or military institution that controls the recruitment of the military elite; (9) What are the disparities between the military elite in handling international conflicts and what are their political considerations; (10) What is the Party's position in the army; (11) How have the Party’s important meetings and personnel arrangements influenced the rise and fall of the PLA's political role

    Thesis documents of Ting-Hsuan Lu

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    The full information of candidate genes through screening

    Appendix_B_final – Supplemental material for Out-of-Pocket Spending for Thumb Carpometacarpal Arthritis: Capitation Matters

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    Supplemental material, Appendix_B_final for Out-of-Pocket Spending for Thumb Carpometacarpal Arthritis: Capitation Matters by Jessica I. Billig, Yu-Ting Lu, Brian P. Kelley, Kevin C. Chung and Erika D. Sears in HAND</p

    Appendix_A_final – Supplemental material for Out-of-Pocket Spending for Thumb Carpometacarpal Arthritis: Capitation Matters

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    Supplemental material, Appendix_A_final for Out-of-Pocket Spending for Thumb Carpometacarpal Arthritis: Capitation Matters by Jessica I. Billig, Yu-Ting Lu, Brian P. Kelley, Kevin C. Chung and Erika D. Sears in HAND</p

    The phase transition in Chung-Lu graphs

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    In 2002, Chung and Lu introduced a version of the Erdos-Renyi model which an edge between ii and jj is present with probability p(i,j)p(i,j). They applied this model to compute the diameter of power-law random graphs, with yielded easier proofs than those for the configuration model. In 2007 their model was brought and integrated under the umbrella of Bolobas, Janson, and Riordan's inhomogeneous random graphs. However, the properties of the Chung-Lu model were never fully explored. In this paper, we fill the gap by giving a result for the cluster sizes in the subcritical regime and the fraction of vertices in the giant component in the supercritical phase

    Central limit theorem for the principal eigenvalue and eigenvector of Chung-Lu random graphs

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    A Chung–Lu random graph is an inhomogeneous Erdős–Rényi random graph in which vertices are assigned average degrees, and pairs of vertices are connected by an edge with a probability that is proportional to the product of their average degrees, independently for different edges. We derive a central limit theorem for the principal eigenvalue and the components of the principal eigenvector of the adjacency matrix of a Chung–Lu random graph. Our derivation requires certain assumptions on the average degrees that guarantee connectivity, sparsity and bounded inhomogeneity of the graph.</p
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