180,036 research outputs found
Inteligencia Artificial
Relato de César Mira para la revista Sci-FdI.
Finalista del premio BYTE.Depto. de Sistemas Informáticos y ComputaciónFac. de InformáticaTRUEpu
MiRA - mixed reality agents
In recent years, an increasing number of Mixed Reality (MR) applications have been developed using agent technology—both for the underlying software and as an interface metaphor. However, no unifying field or theory currently exists that can act as a common frame of reference for these varied works. As a result, much duplication of research is evidenced in the literature. This paper seeks to fill this important gap by outlining ‘‘for the first time’’ a formal field of research that has hitherto gone unacknowledged, namely the field of Mixed Reality Agents (MiRAs), which are defined as agents embodied in a Mixed Reality environment. Based on this definition, a taxonomy is offered that classifies MiRAs along three axes: agency, based on the weak and strong notions outlined by Wooldridge and Jennings (1995); corporeal presence, which describes the degree of virtual or physical representation (body) of a MiRA; and interactive capacity, which characterises its ability to sense and act on the virtual and physical environment. Furthermore, this paper offers the first comprehensive survey of the state-of-the-art of MiRA research and places each project within the proposed taxonomy. Finally, common trends and future directions for MiRA research are discussed. By defining Mixed Reality Agents as a formal field, establishing a common taxonomy, and retrospectively placing existing MiRA projects within it, future researchers can effectively position their research within this landscape, thereby avoiding duplication and fostering reuse and interoperability.Science Foundation Irelandau,ti,ke,SB-09/09/201
Proceedings of Mira 99 : evaluating interactive information retrieval
Proceedings of the MIRA-99 conferenc
Nannoliths content of MIRA-CP1 core, Portugal
Sixteen calcareous nannoplankton taxa and didemnid ascidian spicules were identified throughout MIRA-CP1 core (see Alday et al. 2006 for further details). On the basis of calcareous nannofossil (calcareous nannoplankton and ascidian spicules) assemblages, defined in terms of presence, species abundance, diversity and dominance, the MIRA-CP1 core (ca. 25 m thick) was spreviously divided into five different nannofossil zones 6 (NNZ).
NNZ3 (16 m to 4.05 m) is characterized by high and persistent record on nannoliths. This zone can be further divided in two subzones: NNZ3A (16 m to 11.06 m), characterized by the relative dominance of Gephyrocapsa oceanica, Gephyrocapsa muellerae, Umbilicosphaera sibogae, Syracosphaera histrica-pulchra, Coronosphaera mediterranea and a dominance cycle of Coccolithus pelagicus braarudi and Calcidiscus leptoporus; and NNZ3B (11.06 m to 4.05 m), characterized by the relative dominance of Helicosphaera carteri, Braarudosphaera bigelowii together with ascidian spicules and a second dominance cycle of C. pelagicus braarudi and Calcidiscus leptoporu
Catocala mira Grote 1918
Catocala mira syn. dana Cassino, syn. n. Catocala mira var. dana Cassino, 1918a: 54 Catocala mira ssp. dana; McDunnough 1938: 118 Catocala mira ssp. dana; Franclemont and Todd 1983: 129 Type material. Catocala mira var. dana: the original description states a “ Holotype ♁ in the collection of the author.” Th ere is a female at the USNM [Type No. 44533, examined] with a Cassino type label and appropriate locality data, and because Cassino often missexed his material, we consider this female to be his holotype. The name dana has in the past been treated as a subspecies of C. mira Grote, 1876, probably based on small sample sizes and limited knowledge of geographic variation in this species. We have examined large numbers of C. mira from throughout North America, and find the name dana to be neither distinctive nor geographically definable. Type Locality: Springfield, Texas, [USA].Published as part of Gall, Lawrence & Hawks, David, 2010, Systematics of moths in the genus Catocala (Lepidoptera, Erebidae) IV. Nomenclatorial stabilization of the Nearctic fauna, with a revised synonymic check list, pp. 37-83 in ZooKeys 39 (39) on pages 48-49, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.39.425, http://zenodo.org/record/57663
La structure de bifurcations boîtes-emboîtées. Ses conséquences
Mira C. La structure de bifurcations boîtes-emboîtées. Ses conséquences. In: Bulletin de la Classe des sciences, tome 71, 1985. pp. 92-126
Mira varietas lectionum
Con l’espressione mira varietas lectionum si suole indicare, già a partire dalla filologia del Settecento, la straordinaria ricchezza di varianti nella tradizione di un testo antico; se da un lato l’aggettivo mirus tradisce un certo stupore e quasi un fastidio per l’eccessivo proliferare delle lezioni, dall’altro acquisisce il senso positivo dello straordinario guadagno di conoscenze che ne ricaviamo. La miscellanea, nata dalla volontà di restituire al testo e alla sua storia questa ricchezza culturale, raccoglie contributi incentrati sull’idea di una filologia concepita quale studio della tradizione, fortemente devota al valore della ricostruzione concreta e minuta come mezzo che illumini frammenti del passato e stimoli a rinnovare sempre le nostre credenze. Il volume comprende dodici saggi che spaziano dalla tradizione diretta, con particolare attenzione ai codici bizantini quali testimoni del lavoro esegetico ed ecdotico dei dotti nel corso del tempo, a quella indiretta, fino all’analisi letteraria, volta a sondare le possibilità interpretative della lettura dei testi antichi in prospettiva intertestuale.
In open access sul sito della BUP - Basilicata University Press.From the 17th century philology, the formula mira varietas lectionum refers to the extraordinary quantity of readings in the tradition of ancient texts; the adjective mirus expresses both the excessive proliferation of readings and, in a more positive sense, the paramount acquisition of knowledge about history and transmission of texts. The study of the mira varietas is a fundamental instrument for editing texts, tracing their circulation in antiquity, inquiring their fortune and reception and finally considering how they are reinterpreted in the modern scholarship.
The miscellany, devoted to this methodological approach, collects works focused on the idea of philology stands primarly as critical and attentive study of the textual tradition which aims to shed light on the past and stimulate the progress of our knowledge. The volume includes twelve essays covering all areas of philological studies: direct tradition, with particular attention to Byzantine manuscripts as testimonia of exegetical and ecdotic works of ancient philologists, indirect transmission, and literary analysis aimed at exploring new possible interpretations of ancient texts according to an intertextual approach
Distance to MIRA analysis.
(a) Overview of distance to MIRA analysis: A distance matrix was constructed between all clones in a repertoire and those that mapped to the Adaptive MIRA database, and the distance to the closest MIRA clone was identified. (b) Distance to class I MIRA distribution of TRBV11-2 clones in the repertoires of children with mild COVID-19 or MIS-C. (c) Distance to class II MIRA distribution of TRBV11-2 clones in the repertoires of children with mild COVID-19 or MIS-C.</p
Premessa [a Mira varietas lectionum]
From the 17th century philology, the formula mira varietas lectionum refers to the extraordinary quantity of readings in the tradition of ancient texts; the adjective mirus expresses both the excessive proliferation of readings and, in a more positive sense, the paramount acquisition of knowledge about history and transmission of texts. The study of the mira varietas is a fundamental instrument for editing texts, tracing their circulation in antiquity, inquiring their fortune and reception and finally considering how they are reinterpreted in the modern scholarship.
In open access sul sito della BUP - Basilicata University Press
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