2,570 research outputs found

    Development of TD Website and Repository

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    SEAFDEC, an Inter-Governmental Organization plays an important role in promotion of sustainable development of fisheries and aquaculture in the Southeast Asian Region for more than four decades. Cooperation with other regional and international organizations have been recognized through several important events such as Millennium Conference in 2001 and ASEAN-SEAFDEC Conference in 2011. Since 1990s, internet have been introduced worldwide, where information technology becomes important as a part of human life including education, economic, social and politicsand so on. Development of high speed internet creates a new communication system and support living style including works and activities such as public relations, multi-media production, publication etc., especially information dissemination and website which are technologies for communication between internal and external organization as well as in developing management system for efficiencies. The objective of this paper is to enhance SEAFDEC visibility by developing the information and dissemination system which developed new TD website in 2017. In this regards, TD established Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, Training Department Institutional Repository (STIR), which is the official digital repository of scholarly, research and technical information of the Department to download all information materials using open source software named the DSpace. In this paper, author considers the importance of information technology for introducing SEAFDEC/TD activities and improving access to SEAFDEC/TD technical/scientific articles was expressed via the website. In this regards, the author introduced for developing of the TD website and Repository to increase public relation and increase TD’s visibility as well as point out constrains of its development that requires the strengthening and cooperation within the Training Department of SEAFDEC

    On Rota-Baxter Nijenhuis TD algebra

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    There was a long standing problem of G. C. Rota regarding the classi- fication of all linear operators on associative algebras that satisfy algebraic identities. Initially, only very few of such operators were known, for example, the derivative operator, average operator, difference operator and Rota-Baxter operator. Recently, in a paper by L. Guo, W. Sit and R. Zhang, the authors revisited Rota’s problem by concentrating on two classes of operators; differ- ential type operators and Rota-Baxter type operators. One of the Rota-Baxter type operators they found is the Rota-Baxter Nijenhuis TD (RBNTD) oper- ator which puts together the terms of the well-known Rota-Baxter operator, Nijenhuis operator and Leroux’ TD operator. In this dissertation, we initiate a systematic study of the RBNTD operator, extending the previous works on the Rota-Baxter, Nijenhuis and TD operators. After giving basic properties and examples, we construct free commutative and then free (non-commutative) RBNTD algebras. We then use free RBNTD algebras to obtain an extension of the renowned dendriform algebra with five binary operations.Ph. D.Includes bibliographical referencesMonica AggarwalVita

    Large Time Step and DC Stable TD-EFIE Discretized with Implicit Runge-Kutta Methods

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    The time domain-electric field integral equation (TD-EFIE) and its differentiated version are widely used to simulate the transient scattering of a time dependent electromagnetic field by a perfect electric conductor (PEC). The time discretization of the TD-EFIE can be achieved by a space-time Galerkin approach or, as it is considered in this contribution, by a convolution quadrature using implicit Runge-Kutta methods. The solution is then computed using the marching-on-in-time (MOT) algorithm. The differentiated TD-EFIE has two problems: 1) the system matrix suffers from ill-conditioning when the time step increases (low frequency breakdown) and 2) it suffers from the DC instability, i.e., the formulation allows for the existence of spurious solenoidal currents that grow slowly in the solution. In this article, we show that 1) and 2) can be alleviated by leveraging quasi-Helmholtz projectors to separate the Helmholtz components of the induced current and rescale them independently. The efficacy of the approach is demonstrated by numerical examples including benchmarks and real-life applications.Numerical Analysi

    “Dear Author": A Transparent SoTL Peer Review

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    This epistolary article is written as an extended SoTL peer review. It contains two sections: my preparatory work as peer reviewer and my actual review. In the first section, I remind myself of the function and processes of the SoTL peer review, what the author expects from a SoTL peer reviewer, and how I see my role as a peer reviewer in SoTL. In the second section, I write my review, focusing on three common feedback areas in SoTL: how the author brings in existing scholarship, how the author describes their SoTL project, and how the author demonstrates its importance. My review concludes with some advice for navigating the potentially conflicting reviews that are not unusual in SoTL

    Performance of TD-DFT for Excited States of Open-Shell Transition Metal Compounds

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    Time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) has been very successful in accessing low-lying excited states of closed-shell systems. However, it is much less so for excited states of open-shell systems: unrestricted Kohn-Sham based TD-DFT (U-TD-DFT) often produces physically meaningless excited states due to heavy spin contaminations, whereas restricted Kohn-Sham based TD-DFT often misses those states of lower energies. A much better variant is the explicitly spin-adapted TD-DFT (X-TD-DFT) [J. Chem. Phys. 2011, 135, 194106] that can capture all the spin-adapted singly excited states yet without computational overhead over U-TD-DFT. While the superiority of X-TD-DFT over U-TD-DFT has been demonstrated for open-shell systems of main group elements, it remains to be seen if this is also the case for open-shell transition metal compounds. Taking as benchmark the results by MS-CASPT2 (multistate complete active space second-order perturbation theory) and ic-MRCISD (internally contracted multireference configuration interaction with singles and doubles), it is shown that X-TD-DFT is indeed superior to U-TD-DFT for the vertical excitation energies of ZnH, CdH, ScH2, YH2, YO, and NbO2. Admittedly, there exist a few cases where U-TD-DFT appears to be better than X-TD-DFT. However, this is due to a wrong reason: the underestimation (due to spin contamination) and the overestimation (due to either the exchange-correlation functional itself or the adiabatic approximation to the exchange-correlation kernel) happen to be compensated in the case of U-TD-DFT. As for [Cu(C6H6)(2)](2+), which goes beyond the capability of both MS-CASPT2 and ic-MRCISD, X-TD-DFT revises the U-TD-DFT assignment of the experimental spectrum.National Natural Science Foundation of China [21603134, 21673174, 21273011, 21290192]; Double First-class University Construction Project of Northwest UniversitySCI(E)ARTICLE203929-394212

    Developing countries and the Uruguay Round : negotiations on services

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    In the late 1980s many developing countries experienced something of a pardigm shift: governments began to pursue more market-oriented domestic policies. There was an increasing perception that liberalizing access to service markets was a potentially low-cost, effective method for improving the quality and efficiency of domestic service sectors. These unilateral policy developments increased the incentives for developing countries as a group to participate in a multilateral agreement to liberalize trade in services. The author explores the extent to which the initial negotiating positions of developing countries are reflected in the draft General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) that has emerged from the Uruguay Round negotiations. He investigates whether the unilateral policy changes implemented by many developing countries in the late 1980s had a discernible impact on the draft GATS for developing countries. Many developing countries are pursuing regulatory reform and liberalization. To what extent will signing the GATS help governments trying to make their service sectors more efficient? Is the result of the defensive negotiating strategy that was pursued consistent with the shift toward a policy of liberalizing service markets? This issue is of particular relevance insofar as recent liberalization-plus-privatization programs in developing countries were driven by external forces rather than domestic pressure (industry) groups - which might reduce the credibility of liberalization policies. Membership in a binding multilateral agreement could help bolster reform efforts by increasing the costs of backsliding.Trade and Services,Poverty Assessment,TF054105-DONOR FUNDED OPERATION ADMINISTRATION FEE INCOME AND EXPENSE ACCOUNT,Governance Indicators,Rules of Origin

    Pulsed Electromagnetic Field Signal Transfer Across a Thin Magneto-Dielectric Sheet

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    Closed-form time-domain (TD) analytical expressions describing the electromagnetic (EM) signal transfer between two vertical dipoles through a thin, highly contrasting layer with combined magneto-dielectric properties are derived via the Cagniard–DeHoop (CdH) technique with the TD saltus-type conditions. The TD EM-field coupling between the antennas in the absence of the layer is discussed, including its near-field asymptotic solution. It is demonstrated both analytically and numerically that under certain circumstances the combined sheet behaves virtually as a transparent sheet the transition across which inverts the polarity of the received signal.Accepted author manuscriptElectrical Engineering Educatio

    The application of TD(?) Learning to the Opening Games of 19x19 Go

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    You are granted permission for the non-commercial reproduction, distribution, display, and performance of this technical report in any format, BUT this permission is only for a period of 45 (forty-five) days from the most recent time that you verified that this technical report is still available from the original CITR web site; http://citr.auckland.ac.nz/techreports/ under terms that include this permission. All other rights are reserved by the author(s).This paper describes the results of applying Temporal Difference (TD) learning with a network to the opening game problems in Go. The main difference from other research is that this experiment applied TD learning to the fullsized (19x19) game of Go instead of a simple version (e.g., 9x9 game). We discuss and compare TD(?) learning for predicting an opening game's winning and for finding the best game among the prototypical professional opening games. We also tested the performance of TD(?)s by playing against each other and against the commercial Go programs. The empirical result for picking the best game is promising, but there is no guarantee that TD(?) will always pick the identical opening game independent of different values. The competition between two TD(?)s shows that TD(?) with a higher ? has better performance

    RDPP-TD: Reputation and Data Privacy-Preserving based Truth Discovery Scheme in Mobile Crowdsensing

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    Truth discovery (TD) plays an important role in Mobile Crowdsensing (MCS). However, existing TD methods, including privacy-preserving TD approaches, estimate the truth by weighting only the data submitted in the current round, which often results in low data quality. Moreover, there is a lack of effective TD methods that preserve both reputation and data privacy. To address these issues, a Reputation and Data Privacy-Preserving based Truth Discovery (RDPP-TD) scheme is proposed to obtain high-quality data for MCS. The RDPP-TD scheme consists of two key approaches: a Reputation-based Truth Discovery (RTD) approach, which integrates the weight of current-round data with workers' reputation values to estimate the truth, thereby achieving more accurate results, and a Reputation and Data Privacy-Preserving (RDPP) approach, which ensures privacy preservation for sensing data and reputation values. First, the RDPP approach, when seamlessly integrated with RTD, can effectively evaluate the reliability of workers and their sensing data in a privacy-preserving manner. Second, the RDPP scheme supports reputation-based worker recruitment and rewards, ensuring high-quality data collection while incentivizing workers to provide accurate information. Comprehensive theoretical analysis and extensive experiments based on real-world datasets demonstrate that the proposed RDPP-TD scheme provides strong privacy protection and improves data quality by up to 33.3%.This work was supported in part by the Joint Funds of the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant U24A20248. (*Corresponding author: Anfeng Liu).http://arxiv.org/abs/2505.0436

    In search of the sacred: a conceptual analysis of spirituality

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    A conceptual analysis of spirituality reveals "the sacred" to be fundamental to understanding spirituality, discusses the two notions of broad and specific spirituality, considers modes of human consciousness and functioning that make spiritual experience possible, and alerts experiential educators of the implications of venturing into spiritual experience and spiritual/religious education. (Contains 50 references.) (Author/TD
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