528 research outputs found
Societal need for multifunctional flood defenses: Introduction
Prof.dr.ir. Matthijs Kok is Professor of Flood Risk at the Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences at TU Delft; he was Program leader of the ‘Integral and Sustainable Design of Multifunctional Flood Defenses’ research program, funded by the Dutch Science and Technology Foundation STW. Presently, he is Program leader of the STW-Perspectief research program ‘All RISK’, which will study the implementation of new risk standards in the Dutch national flood protection program (2017-2022). Hydraulic Structures and Flood Ris
The role of a Disability Case Manager in return-to-work: experiences from patients, healthcare professionals and employers
The role of a Disability Case Manager in return-to-work: experiences from patients, healthcare professionals and employers
Disability Case Managers in the rehabilitation teams: a necessary member for a successful return to work process?
Correction to: CT angiography vs echocardiography for detection of cardiac thrombi in ischemic stroke: a systematic review and meta-analysis (Journal of Neurology, (2020), 267, 6, (1793-1801), 10.1007/s00415-020-09766-8)
The original version of this article unfortunately contained a mistake. In the author list, the first and last names of two authors, S. Matthijs Boekholdt and R. Nils Planken, were tagged incorrectly. Therefore, author names are abbreviated wrongly in Springerlink. The first and last names should be as follows: First name: S. Matthijs Last name: Boekholdt First name: R. Nils Last name: Planken
"What drives ability peer effects?" Replication Datasets
Data repository for replication datasets of "What drives ability peer effects?", Max Coveney and Matthijs Oosterveen, European Economic Review.The archived datasets contain all variables that were available to the researchers and allows for complete replication. Separate datasets are used for the different types of analyses (student level, student-course level, student-pair level). The student and group IDs are anonymized to prevent identification of individuals. Access to the data can be granted by submitting a research request to the corresponding author ([email protected]).The full paper can be found at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroecorev.2021.103763</div
Corrigendum to “The right hemisphere is dominant in organization of visual search—A study in stroke patients” [Behav. Brain Res. 304 (2016) 71–79]((S0166432816300626)(10.1016/j.bbr.2016.02.004))
The authors regret as the name of the second author was published incorrectly. The correct surname is ‘Biesbroek’ and the correct first names are “J. Matthijs”. The authors would like to apologise for any inconvenience caused
Jeremiah 28:8–9 and the Oracles against the Nations
This article focuses on Jer 28:8–9, a text commonly considered as proof for the existence of “prophecies against the nations” as a distinct kind of prophecy in the late monarchic era. The author, however, argues that Jer 28 does not testify to a subgenre of prophecy, but rather to the appearance of foreign nations in prophetic oracles in general, in which they figure as “the enemy” who will be trampled down. According to this understanding, it is not Jeremiah, but Hananiah who prophesies “war” – for Babylonia. And it is Jeremiah who prophesies “peace” – again for Babylonia. In 28:1–14*, which belongs to the earliest narrative traditions relating to Jeremiah, the prophet Jeremiah is depicted as announcing Babylonia’s good fortune, thereby implying that Judah’s survival depends on submission. During a much later, redactional stage, Babylonia’s ruination became part of the preaching ascribed to Jeremiah. It is in this redactional sphere that we can situate the Oracles concerning the Nations. Accordingly, they constitute a literary development, not a subclass of oral prophecy
Bootstrapping LPs in Value Iteration for Multi-Objective and Partially Observable MDPs
Iteratively solving a set of linear programs (LPs) is a common strategy for solving various decision-making problems in Artificial Intelligence, such as planning in multi-objective or partially observable Markov Decision Processes (MDPs). A prevalent feature is that the solutions to these LPs become increasingly similar as the solving algorithm converges, because the solution computed by the algorithm approaches the fixed point of a Bellman backup operator. In this paper, we propose to speed up the solving process of these LPs by bootstrapping based on similar LPs solved previously. We use these LPs to initialize a subset of relevant LP constraints, before iteratively generating the remaining constraints. The resulting algorithm is the first to consider such information sharing across iterations. We evaluate our approach on planning in Multi-Objective MDPs (MOMDPs) and Partially Observable MDPs (POMDPs), showing that it solves fewer LPs than the state of the art, which leads to a significant speed-up. Moreover, for MOMDPs we show that our method scales better in both the number of states and the number of objectives, which is vital for multi-objective planning.Algorithmic
"What drives ability peer effects?" Replication Datasets
Data repository for replication datasets of "What drives ability peer effects?", Max Coveney and Matthijs Oosterveen, European Economic Review. The archived datasets contain all variables that were available to the researchers and allows for complete replication. Separate datasets are used for the different types of analyses (student level, student-course level, student-pair level). The student and group IDs are anonymized to prevent identification of individuals. Access to the data can be granted by submitting a research request to the corresponding author ([email protected]). The full paper can be found at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroecorev.2021.10376
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