1,721,088 research outputs found
Stefano Bruni, Le ceramiche corinzie ed etrusco-corinzie, (Gravisca, 2) 2009
Van Wonterghem Frank. Stefano Bruni, Le ceramiche corinzie ed etrusco-corinzie, (Gravisca, 2) 2009. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 80, 2011. pp. 588-589
Stefano Bruni, I Lastroni a Scala, 1986. (Materiali del Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Tarquinia, IX Archaeologica, 65)
Hus Alain. Stefano Bruni, I Lastroni a Scala, 1986. (Materiali del Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Tarquinia, IX Archaeologica, 65). In: Revue des Études Anciennes. Tome 90, 1988, n°3-4. p. 465
Stefano Bruni, I Lastroni a Scala, 1986. (Materiali del Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Tarquinia, IX Archaeologica, 65)
Hus Alain. Stefano Bruni, I Lastroni a Scala, 1986. (Materiali del Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Tarquinia, IX Archaeologica, 65). In: Revue des Études Anciennes. Tome 90, 1988, n°3-4. p. 465
Giampiero Pianu, Ceramiche etrusche sovradipinte Stefano Bruni, I lastroni a scala Fiorenzo Catalli, Le monete Birgitte Ginge, Ceramiche etrusche a figure nere
Balty Jean-Charles. Giampiero Pianu, Ceramiche etrusche sovradipinte Stefano Bruni, I lastroni a scala Fiorenzo Catalli, Le monete Birgitte Ginge, Ceramiche etrusche a figure nere. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 59, 1990. pp. 606-608
AI for Rail Infrastructure and Maintenance
With contributions from experts from around the world, this handbook aims to systemize the exist-ing experience and knowledge that can be used to the development of more efficient and controlled railway systems. As a result, this handbook showcases the modern methods, methodologies and frameworks for the development of DT and AI architectures and apparatus in the area of the exist-ing railway systems and transport engineering tasks. The chapters cover such varied and specialized topics as the processes related to the transformation of a physical twin into a digital twin; the appli-cation of data-driven and physics-based simulation approaches in the development of digital twins; asset management application tasks with the implementation of DT and AI; and the experimental and field applications of the DT and AI concepts and technologies in railway transport system design and predictive maintenance tasks. Handbook on Digital Twin and Artificial Intelligence Techniques for Rail Application..
Rilievi vulcenti dell'orientalizzante recente
Stefano Bruni, Rilievi vulcenti dell'orientalizzante recente, p. 245-282.
Nel quadro della scultura a rilievo dell'Etruria méridionale di età tardo-orientalizzante un aspetto di rilievo è quello di alcuni monumenti vulcenti che presentano caratteristiche affatto peculiari. Si tratta di un gruppo di monumenti assai ristretto ma eterogeneo dal punto di vista tipologico, che mostrano analogie e somiglianze con manifestazioni artistico-artigianali di altri centri, e di Tarquinia in particolare. La loro problematica risulta cosi un aspetto particolare di un fenomeno di ben più vaste proporzioni, di cui il caso della ceramica etrusco-corinzia costituisce per il momento quello più compiutamente delineato e che i monumenti presi in esame, proprio per la loro monumentalità e il loro impegno, possono contribuire a definire.
(v. retro) In appendice vengono poi presentati alcuni dati di archivio relativi ad uno dei monumenti esaminati, che forniscono nuovi elementi da un lato per la storia del Museo archeologico di Firenze e dall'altro per gli ultimi esiti della Raccolta Campanari di Tuscania.Bruni Stefano. Rilievi vulcenti dell'orientalizzante recente. In: Mélanges de l'École française de Rome. Antiquité, tome 100, n°1. 1988. pp. 245-282
Medieval Archaeology and Excavations
Through the study of material culture, archaeology can provide fundamental insights for reconstructing the past. In the last twenty years, the discipline has developed theoretical approaches focusing on materiality and unique applications of quantitative and computational methodologies. As Giorgio Buccellati has suggested, archaeology can be considered intrinsically digital not only “in the sense that it turns digital once the data have been entered and processed, but, more radically, in the sense that it is by its very nature digital, in its genesis and its structure.” This observation is based on the fact that archaeology has a digital way of reasoning that moves in a bottom-up, inductive way, building its understanding from fragments of that past rather than starting from the whole and breaking it down. In other words, vast masses of non-contiguous individual elements reveal the hidden connectivity between them, in what Hodder has called “entanglement”. Archaeology is tied to excavation, which results in a destructive and non-repeatable practice that allows the archaeologist to gather sources directly in order to understand their entangled relations among humans and non-humans. Indeed, archaeology’s strength resides in its capacity to bridge the static nature of the archaeological record and the dynamism of the past, trying to interpret the stories preserved within the earth and allow the many voices from the past to be heard. In the past, archaeology was considered a method for gaining essential information from material culture about urban, technological, and economic aspects of earlier societies. Today it has become evident that archaeology not only gives us information on those who are not documented in the written sources but also allows for an analysis of society from anthropological, political, ideological, and social points of view. Above all, archaeology provides insights into the relationships between humans, things, and the environment in any period.
Archaeology brings a different understanding of the past with respect to written sources, which stems from materiality. The relationship between written sources and archaeology has been the subject of long debate, often dividing archaeologists between those who do not rely on texts (generally pre- protohistory archaeologists) and those that are text-aided. Early medieval archaeology relies less on textual sources than that of the late medieval period, for which there are many available written documents. This has created a close relationship between medieval archaeology and written documentation in which textual evidence is used to support archaeological data and that data is understood as a confirmation of what was written. Archaeology, however, may contradict written documents or unveil information and perspectives that the textual sources obfuscate but it always works in a dialogue with different sources. The field of archaeology in particular uses a type of source, material culture, to a degree not seen in other disciplines and this is why archaeological questions related to materiality must be foregrounded. Only with a sound understanding of material evidence can archaeology interact with written sources. This is the only way for archaeology to produce original insights into the past.
Archaeology provides an enormous amount of information about the past, describing the natural and anthropological environment and explaining the interactions, including social and political ones, of humans with the world around them. Archaeology has transformed the space in which humans and non-humans interacted from a passive container to an active one. This has been a crucial change and proof that archaeological research is an autonomous discipline. Consequently, this essay describes medieval Pisa’s material culture, making it speak for itself in dialogue with the written sources as the first step for a more thorough understanding of medieval Pisa through the lens of materiality.
Finally, it is essential to highlight two variables that archaeological research must address continuously: sampling and complexity. Sampling is affected by the impossibility of collecting every single trace of the past, both because of the nature of archaeological recording and the randomness of its conservation and discovery. In fact, archaeological data is only part of a whole that we will never have the possibility of knowing in full but one that we may attempt to understand in general terms. Regarding the second variable, the complexity of research depends on the origins of the archaeological source and the methodology applied to the gathering and documentation of the archaeological record. This complexity is also influenced by the progressive evolution of the discipline, the lack of standardization, and the overall increase of archaeological data and the archaeologists producing data
Nel cuore della Tuscia. Monumenti rupestri di età etrusco-romana fra i Monti Cimini e la Valle del Tevere (VT)
L'articolo esamina la diffusione, tipologia, cronologia e funzione di una seria di monumenti rupestri nel Viterbese in gran parte già di età romana ma in parte di tradizione etrusca.The article examines the distribution, typology, chronology and function of various rock monuments in the Viterbo area mainly from the Roman period but partly in Etruscan tradition
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
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