1,124 research outputs found

    Collective Improvisation: The Practice and Vision of Ingemar Lindh

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    Ingemar Lindh's research on the principles of collective improvisation and performance conceived as process announce an important development in the 20th-century tradition of the actor's work. After early studies with Étienne Decroux and working collaborations with Jerzy Grotowski, Eugenio Barba, and Yves Lebreton, Lindh founded the first laboratory theatre in Sweden in 1971, the Institutet för Scenkonst. His practice of collective improvisation is viewed in light of postdramatic concerns such as its resistance to fixed scores, directorial montage, and choreography as an organizing principle

    El pronunciamiento mexicano del siglo XIX : Hacia una nueva tipología

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    Tras la guerra de Independencia (1810-1821) estallaron más de 1 500 pronunciamientos entre el Plan de Iguala de 1821 y el Plan de Tuxtepec de 1876. En varios casos degeneraron en enfrentamientos de una violencia atroz como el saqueo del Parián en la ciudad de México de 1828. En otros resultaron en guerras civiles brutales (1832, 1854-1855, 1858-1860). En muchos casos, sin embargo, sus demandas fueron atendidas o sofocadas dependiendo de cuántos pronunciamientos de adhesión recibieron. Este artículo busca redefinir la práctica del pronunciamiento en México, haciendo hincapié en el protagonismo que tuvieron grupos e instituciones civiles al adoptar este medio legítimo, aunque no constitucional, para forzar cambios políticos tanto a nivel regional como nacional durante las primeras décadas nacionales.Peer reviewe

    Blind orogen: Integrated appraisal of multiple episodes of Mesoproterozoic deformation and reworking in the Fowler Domain, western Gawler Craton, Australia

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    The Fowler Domain in the western Gawler Craton in southern Australia is a poorly exposed region that can only presented be explored using a combination of information from drilling and potential field geophysics. Regional maps of the Total Magnetic Intensity (TMI) field of the Fowler Domain highlight an anastomosing system of terrain-scale shear zones that bound four crustal-scale tectonic blocks: from west to east, the Colona, Barton, Central and Nundroo blocks. Integrated thermobarometry and electron microprobe chemical dating of metamorphic monazites from drillholes in the Fowler Domain suggest that the Colona Block in the west underwent two mid-crustal amphibolite grade metamorphic events at ca. 1643 and 1600 Ma. The younger age corresponds to the timing of regional high-grade metamorphism in the Barton Block. Together, the age data suggest that the western Fowler Domain underwent a major tectonothermal event at ca. 1600 Ma. In contrast, regional lower crustal metamorphism in the Nundroo Block, which forms the eastern Fowler Domain, occurred at ca. 1545 Ma. In both the Barton and Nundroo Blocks, petrological relationships, mineral zoning, and pressure-temperature (P-T) modelling suggest the terrains cooled in the mid- to lower crust, rather than undergoing exhumation immediately following peak metamorphism. Age data from the geophysically defined shear zone systems that bound the blocks suggest that exhumation of these lower crustal domains occurred between ca. 1470 and 1450 Ma and was associated with transpressional reactivation of the terrain during the Coorabie Orogeny. A key finding of this study is that the tectonic evolution of the crustal blocks in the Fowler Domain was not in concert until at least 1500 Ma. Thus, the evolution of the individual blocks is unlikely to be related to the macroscopic character of the terrain defined by the regional-scale shear zone systems, which are one of the youngest tectonic imprints on the Fowler Domain. Coincident gravity and magnetic forward modelling of significant bounding faults suggests the shear zones form a steeply dipping transpressional array, consistent with the observed metamorphic field character of the different blocks. This study provides a demonstration of the integration of geophysical and petrological approaches to investigate the time-integrated tectonic evolution of poorly exposed basement terrains. © 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Jane L. Thomas, Nicholas G. Direen and Martin Han

    Cooperative Equilibria in Iterated Social Dilemmas

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    The implausibility of the extreme rationality assumptions of Nash equilibrium has been attested by numerous experimental studies with human players. In particular, the fundamental social dilemmas such as the Traveler’s dilemma, the Prisoner’s dilemma, and the Public Goods game demonstrate high rates of deviation from the unique Nash equilibrium, dependent on the game parameters or the environment in which the game is played. These results inspired several attempts to develop suitable solution concepts to more accurately explain human behaviour. In this line, the recently proposed notion of cooperative equilibrium, [5], [6], based on the idea that players have a natural attitude to cooperation, has shown promising results for single-shot games. In this paper, we extend this approach to iterated settings. Specifically, we define the Iterated Cooperative Equilibrium (ICE) and show it makes statistically precise predictions of population average behaviour in the aforementioned domains. Importantly, the definition of ICE does not involve any free parameters, and so it is fully predictive

    Coherent Assessments of Europe’s Marine Fishes Show Regional Divergence and Megafauna Loss

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    Full list of authors is as follows:Paul G. Fernandes, Gina M. Ralph, Ana Nieto, Mariana García Criado, Paraskevas Vasilakopoulos, Christos D. Maravelias, Robin M. Cook, Riley A. Pollom, Marcelo Kovačić, David Pollard, Edward D. Farrell, Ann-Britt Florin, Beth A. Polidoro, Julia M. Lawson, Pascal Lorance, Franz Uiblein, Matthew Craig, David J. Allen, Sarah L. Fowler, Rachel H. L. Walls, Mia T. Comeros-Raynal, Michael S. Harvey, Manuel Dureuil, Manuel Biscoito, Caroline Pollock, Sophy R. McCully Phillips, Jim R. Ellis, Constantinos Papaconstantinou, Alen Soldo, Çetin Keskin, Steen Wilhelm Knudsen, Luís Gil de Sola, Fabrizio Serena, Bruce B. Collette, Kjell Nedreaas, Emilie Stump, Barry C. Russell, Silvia Garcia, Pedro Afonso, Armelle B. J. Jung, Helena Alvarez, João Delgado, Nicholas K. Dulvy & Kent E. Carpenter

    3D Wavelet-Based Algorithms for the Compression of Geoscience Data

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    Geoscience applications generate large datasets; thus, compression is necessary to facilitate the storage and transmission of geoscience data. One focus is on the coding of hyperspectral imagery and the prominent JPEG2000 standard. Certain aspects of the encoder, such as rate-allocation between bands and spectral decorrelation, are not covered by the JPEG2000 standard. This thesis investigates the performance of several JPEG2000 encoding strategies. Additionally, a relatively low-complexity 3D embedded wavelet-based coder, 3D-tarp, is proposed for the compression of geoscience data. 3D-tarp employs an explicit estimate of the probability of coefficient significance to drive a nonadaptive arithmetic coder, resulting in a simple implementation suited to vectorized hardware acceleration. Finally, an embedded wavelet-based coder is proposed for the shapeaptive coding of ocean-temperature data. 3D binary set-splitting with kk-d trees, 3D-BISK, replaces the octree splitting structure of other shapeaptive coders with kk-d trees, a simpler set partitioning structure that is well-suited to shapeaptive coding

    Broad roads in a thin country - infrastructure concessions in Chile

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    To increase investment in infrastructure, in the early 1990s Chile's government introduced private capital into the transport infrastructure sector, covering roads and highways, bridges, tunnels, and airports. The chosen mechanism: a concession scheme through which private firms would finance and build a given project and then operate the infrastructure for a set of number of years, recovering their investment by collecting tolls from users. Among the lessons learned from the experience: 1) As much as possible, avoid concessioning roads for which there are convenient alternative freeways nearby. 2) Choose the right variable for awarding a concession. Avoid mechanisms that (by promoting large payments to the state or short-term concession periods) encourage high tolls, and if you choose to award a concession to the firm charging the lowest tolls, place a floor and ceiling on possible bids. The floor is to guarantee the concession's financial viability; the ceiling is to prevent inefficient traffic diversions. Ties at either end should be resolved by a second variable, such as the level of transfers between the state and the firm. 3) Allow downward toll flexibility so that the concessionaire can react to unexpectedly low traffic flows, especially for certain types of vehicles. 4) Pay special attention to the tendering mechanism and to the general incentive structure. There are limits to the pure least-present-value-of-revenue (LPVR) auction, but income guarantees do enhance liquidity. In fact, a minimum-income guarantee through an LPVR auction is an instrument for credit enhancement, not income support. Alternatively, some form of financial innovation should be encouraged to make debt service commitments more flexible. 5) If concessions are tendered by traditional methods and income guarantees will be given, cover only a fraction of the concessionaire's expected income stream, to reduce the state's financial exposure and to improve the incentives to the concessionaire. 6) Make the contracts as complete as possible but allow for later modifications or renegotiations, and include a well-designed dispute resolution mechanism.Banks&Banking Reform,Roads&Highways,Decentralization,International Terrorism&Counterterrorism,Public Sector Economics&Finance,Public Sector Economics&Finance,Roads&Highways,Airports and Air Services,Banks&Banking Reform,Toll Roads

    Scientometric analysis of synchronous references in the Physics Nobel lectures, 1981-1985 : a pilot study

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    Scientometric analysis of synchronous references in the nine Physics Nobel lectures by Nicolaas Bloembergen (1981), Arthur L. Schawlow (1981), Kai M. Siegbahn (1981), Kenneth G. Wilson (1982), Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar (1983), William A. Fowler (1983), Carlo Rubbia (1984), Simon van der Meer (1984), and Klaus von Klitzing (1985) indicated high variations: No. of Synchronous References ranged from 24 (Meer) to 283 (Siegbahn); Synchronous Self-References ranged from 5 (Rubbia) to 88 (Siegbahn); synchronous references to others ranged from 10 (Chandrasekhar) to 255 (Wilson); Synchronous Self-Reference Rates ranged from 6.66 % (Rubbia) to 65.51 % (Chandrasekhar); Single-Authored References ranged from 15 (Klitzing) to 160 (Wilson); Multi-Authored References ranged from 4 (Chandrasekhar) to 194 (Siegbahn); Collaboration Coefficient in the synchronous references ranged from 0.14 (Chandrasekhar) to 0.75 (Klitzing); and Recency (age of 50 % of the latest references) ranged from 2 (Klitzing) to 18 (Chandrasekhar) years. Seventy five per cent of the references belonged to journal articles. Highly referred journals were Astrophysical Journal, Physical Review B, Physical Review Letters, Arkiv Fuer Fysik, Surface Science, Physics Letters, and IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science. See: Scientometrics Vol. 61 No.1, pp.55-68

    Stochastic optimization of product-machine qualification in a semiconductor back-end facility

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    abstract: In order to process a product in a semiconductor back-end facility, a machine needs to be qualified, first by having product-specific software installed and then running test wafers through it to verify that the machine is capable of performing the process correctly. In general, not all machines are qualified to process all products due to the high machine qualification cost and tool set availability. The machine qualification decision affects future capacity allocation in the facility and subsequently affects daily production schedules. To balance the tradeoff between current machine qualification costs and future potential backorder costs due to not enough machines qualified with uncertain demand, a stochastic product–machine qualification optimization model is proposed in this article. The L-shaped method and acceleration techniques are proposed to solve the stochastic model. Computational results are provided to show the necessity of the stochastic model and the performance of different solution methods.This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published as Fu, Mengying, Askin, Ronald, Fowler, John, & Zhang, Muhong (2015). Stochastic optimization of product-machine qualification in a semiconductor back-end facility. IIE TRANSACTIONS, 47(7), 739-750. DOI: 10.1080/0740817X.2014.964887. Copyright Taylor & Francis, available online at: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/0740817X.2014.96488
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