7,154 research outputs found

    Using Topological Data Analysis (TDA) and Persistent Homology to Analyse the Stock Markets in Singapore and Taiwan

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    Data sets and Python scripts for paper published by T.-W. Yen and S. A. Cheong in Frontiers in Physics for a special issue "From Physics to Econophysics back to Physics: Methods and Insights"

    Data supporting: "Symmetry Breaking in Particle-Forming Diblock/Homopolymer Blends"

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    Input and output files for self-consistent field theory calculations compatible with Polymer Self-Consistent Field (PSCF)Cheong, Guo Kang; Bates, Frank S; Dorfman, Kevin D. (2020). Data supporting: "Symmetry Breaking in Particle-Forming Diblock/Homopolymer Blends". Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://doi.org/10.13020/xfwb-9k72

    KARYA SASTRA NJOO CHEONG SENG

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    Peranakan Chinese in Indonesia is a generation of Chinese who have assimilated with the natives. This mixing occurs because most of the Chinese in Indonesia is an oil or mining workers who are not married. Literature Peranakan Malay language appeared in the 1800s and 1900s. Peranakan Chinese literary writer unknown to the public, namely Njoo Cheong Seng. The literary form of the novel Seng Cheong Njoo have titles like Crazy Typhoon, which is Human Sampurna Sampurna and Asep Hio of Malino. Literary works such as short stories Njoo Cheong Seng mostly published in Star Weekly magazine. Keywords: Peranakan Chinese, Literature and Njoo Cheong Sen

    On a special class of wiretap channels

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    Bibliography: leaf 12.NSF Grants GK-33250 and Eng-10173, AFOSR Contract F44620-73-C-0065, Grant ONR/N0014-75-C-1183 and NSF/ENC-76-24447.by S. K. Leung-Yan-Cheong

    On some aspects of random walks for modelling mobility in a communication network

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    Bibliography: leaf 16.Grant ONR/N00014-75-C-1183.S. K. Leung-Yan-Cheong, E. R. Barnes

    Chan, Chee Cheong, [No Service Number]

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/376598Surname: CHAN Given Name(s) or Initials: CHEE CHEONG Military Service Number or Last Known Location: No Service Number Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 48697189586 Item: [2016.0049.08903] "Chan, Chee Cheong, [No Service Number]

    The Impact of Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) on Business in the Republic of Korea

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    The Republic of Korea (hereafter Korea) continues to promote an open-trade system via the conclusion of free trade agreements (FTAs), arguing that Korean enterprises will obtain considerable business opportunities under the FTAs the government has implemented. However, the FTAs that are currently being implemented in Korea are said to be beneficial only to some enterprises. This study presents new evidence from a survey conducted from July–August 2008 on 120 Korean firms. The paper explores critical questions regarding the utilization of FTAs, their perceived costs and benefits, perceptions of multiple rules of origin (ROOs), and policy and institutional support mechanisms for FTAs. One of the key findings is that most of the currently implemented FTAs in Korea were concluded with small- and medium-sized developing countries. Moreover, within these FTAs, the range of preferential tariffs is not very broad in scope; as such, only one out of five enterprises was found to be utilizing them. However, since the conclusion of FTAs with the United States and the European Union, Korean businesses have become very interested in utilizing those respective FTAs. The government should make efforts for early implementation of these FTAs. In the FTAs concluded by Korea, ROOs are strict and complicated. In future FTAs, a more neutral and lenient form of ROOs should be adopted.free trade agreement korea; korea fta impact; korea fta trade business

    Separating and shattering long line segments

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    A line l is called a separator for a set S of objects in the plane if l avoids all the objects and partitions S into two non-empty subsets, lying on both sides of l. A set L of Lines is said to shatter S if each line of L is a separator for S, and every two objects of S are separated by at least one line of L. We give a simple randomized algorithm to construct the set of ail separators for a given set S of n line segments in expected time O(n log n), provided the ratio between the diameter of S and the length of the shortest line segment is bounded by a constant. We also give a randomized algorithm to determine a set of lines shattering S, whose expected running time is O(n log n), improving (for this setting) the (deterministic) O(n(2) log n) time algorithm of Freimer, Mitchell and Piatko. (C) 1997 Published by Elsevier Science B.V.Work on paper by the second author has been supported by the Netherlands' Organization for Scientific Research (NWO), by Pohang University of Science and Technology Grant 96F004, 1996, and partially by the nondirected research fund of the Korean Ministry of Education

    Fantasizing Chinese/Indonesian Hero: Njoo Cheong Seng and the Gagaklodra Series

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    Fantasizing Chinese/ Indonesian Hero : Njoo Cheong Seng and the gagaklodra Series. This article examines the popular fantasy series, Gagaklodra, created by Njoo Cheong Seng in the late period of colonial Indonesia. As one of the earliest original works of crime and detective genre in Indonesia, conceived by an exceptionally cosmopolitan author of Chinese heritage, the Gagaklodra series is remarkably hybrid in terms of concept and content. It takes after both indigenous folklore and European cloak-and-dagger stories, anchored by a Javanese-Chinese protagonist. Written over the span of twenty-two years and three political regimes, the episodes of Gagaklodra not only capture the rapidly changing historical landscape between the 1930s and the 1940s, but also communicate a more inclusive outlook with regard to national belonging for the nation that was about to be born.Fantasmer le héros chinois/ indonésien : Njoo Cheong Seng et la série gagaklodra. Cet article examine la série fantastique populaire intitulée Gagaklodra créée par Njoo Cheong Seng en Indonésie vers la fin de la période coloniale. Figurant parmi les premiers textes originaux du genre policier en Indonésie, conçue par un auteur héritier de culture chinoise exceptionnellement cosmopolite, la série Gagaklodra présente un caractère hybride remarquable en termes de concept et de contenu. Elle emprunte à la fois au folklore autochtone et aux histoires de cape et d’épée européennes, incarnée par un protagoniste javano-chinois. Écrits en l’espace de vingt-deux ans durant lesquels vont se succéder trois régimes politiques, les épisodes de Gagaklodra rendent non seulement compte du changement rapide du paysage politique entre les années 1930 et les années 1940, mais révèlent aussi une perspective plus globale au regard de l’appartenance nationale pour une nation en gestation.Chandra Elizabeth. Fantasizing Chinese/Indonesian Hero: Njoo Cheong Seng and the Gagaklodra Series. In: Archipel, volume 82, 2011. pp. 83-113
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