32,482 research outputs found
Swimming with crocodiles : an interview with Kim Wilson
CITATION: Botha, L. with Lumerman, P. (2015). Swimming with crocodiles : an interview with Kim Wilson. Reflections from Practice Series No. 3 (B. Ganson, ed.). The Hague:
ACCESS Facility.Kim Wilson is an experienced engagement specialist, mediator, facilitator and alternative dispute
resolution practitioner. He has successfully conducted mediations for over 15 years, many involving
multiple parties and complex issues and interests. He is a specialist in social development strategy, and
designs and delivers engagement strategies and implementation plans. He is experienced in companyto-
community engagement, strategic negotiation and working with indigenous interests in Australia
and beyond. He also conducts workshops on company-to-community engagement and negotiation
Building Value-added Services for Institutional Repositories (IRs): Modeling the Rutgers Experience
Institutional repositories (IR) are largely unpopulated due to insufficient faculty experience in self-archiving (Kim, 2010), to inadequate marketing efforts to popularize the advantages of IRs (Jantz & Wilson, 2008), and to lack of faculty awareness regarding the unsustainable costs of traditional means of scholarly communication (Darnton, 2010). This paper explores a number of IR services at Rutgers that, collectively, add significant value to the university’s IR by facilitating scholarly communication and by preserving digital content.... Harnessing faculty self interest to these technological innovations is the surest mechanism for creating a bridge to the sustainable development of high quality research and a major factor in the success of institutional repositories.Submitted by Lynne Rudasill ([email protected]) on 2011-07-31T03:39:23Z
No. of bitstreams: 1
BuildingWilsonJantz.pdf: 608596 bytes, checksum: 5911bac2c3ee5a7ba964d1e83d1520cc (MD5)Made available in DSpace on 2011-07-31T03:39:23Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
BuildingWilsonJantz.pdf: 608596 bytes, checksum: 5911bac2c3ee5a7ba964d1e83d1520cc (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2011unpublishe
5d/6d Wilson loops from blowups
Abstract We generalize Nakajima-Yoshioka’s blowup formula to calculate the partition functions counting the spectrum of bound states to half-BPS Wilson loop operators in 5d (and 6d) supersymmetric field theories. The partition function in the presence of a Wilson loop operator on the Ω-background is factorized when put on the blowup ℂ ̂ 2 into two Wilson loop partition functions under the localization. This structure provides a set of blowup equations for Wilson loop operators. We explain how to formulate the blowup equations and solve them to compute the partition functions of Wilson loop operators. We test this idea by explicitly calculating the Wilson loop partition functions in various 5d/6d field theories and comparing them against known results and expected dualities
Justice Bertha Wilson One Woman's Difference
Cover Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part 1: Foundations -- 1 Bertha Wilson's Practice Years (1958-75): Establishing a Research Practice and Founding a Research Department in Canada -- 2 A Traditionalist's Property Jurisprudence -- 3 Power, Discretion, and Vulnerability: Justice Wilson and Fiduciary Duty in the Corporate/Commercial Context -- 4 A Few More Spokes to the Wheel: Reasonableness, Fairness, and Justice in Justice Bertha Wilson's Approach to Contract Law -- 5 Giving Emotions Their Due: Justice Bertha Wilson's Response to Intangible Loss in Contract -- Part 2: Controversy -- 6 Picking Up Where Justice Wilson Left Off: The Tort of Discrimination Revisited -- 7 Paradigms of Prostitution: Revisiting the Prostitution Reference -- 8 Contextualizing Criminal Defences: Exploring the Contribution of Justice Bertha Wilson -- 9 "Finally I Know Where I Am Going to Be From": Culture, Context, and Time in a Look Back at Racine v. Woods -- 10 Challenging Patriarchy or Embracing Liberal Norms? Justice Wilson's Child Custody and Access Decisions -- Part 3: Reflections -- 11 But Was She a Feminist Judge? -- 12 I Agree/Disagree for the Following Reasons: Convergence, Divergence, and Justice Wilson's "Modest Degree of Creativity" -- 13 A Way of Being in the World -- 14 Ideas and Transformation: A Reflection on Bertha Wilson's Contribution to Gender Equality in the Legal Profession -- 15 Taking a Stand on Equality: Bertha Wilson and the Evolution of Judicial Education in Canada -- 16 Bertha Wilson: "Silences" in a Woman's Life Story -- List of Contributors -- IndexDescription based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries
Author Correction: Evaluation of skin cancer resection guide using hyper‑realistic in‑vitro phantom fabricated by 3D printing
The original version of this Article contained an error in the spelling of the author Taehun Kim which was incorrectly given as Teahun Kim. The original Article has been corrected
DBLP-derived labeled data for author name disambiguation
This is a DBLP-derived labeled data originally created by Dr. C. Lee Giles at Penn State University and filtered for duplicate removal and error correction by Dr. Jinseok Kim at University of Michigan. For more details, see references below.1. Kim, Jinseok (2018). Evaluating author name disambiguation for digital libraries: a case of DBLP. Scientometrics. doi:10.1007/s11192-018-2824-5 2. Kim, Jinseok & Kim, Jenna (2018). The impact of imbalanced training data on machine learning for author name disambiguation. Scientometrics. doi: 10.1007/s11192-018-2865-9Each row refers to an author name instance with following feature information separated by tab.author name: full name string extracted from DBLPunique author id: labels assigned manually by Dr. C. Lee Giles's teampaper id: assigned by Dr. Jinseok Kimauthor list: names of authors in the byline of the paperyear: publication yearvenue: conference or journal namestitle: stopwords removed and stemmed by the Porter's stemmerIf you want to use this dataset, please consider to cite papers below.For the original dataset: Han, H., Giles, L., Zha, H., Li, C., & Tsioutsiouliklis, K. (2004). Two Supervised Learning Approaches for Name Disambiguation in Author Citations. JCDL 2004: Proceedings of the Fourth ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries, 296-305. doi:10.1145/996350.996419For the filtered dataset: 1. Kim, Jinseok (2018). Evaluating author name disambiguation for digital libraries: a case of DBLP. Scientometrics. doi:10.1007/s11192-018-2824-5 or2. Kim, Jinseok & Kim, Jenna (2018). The impact of imbalanced training data on machine learning for author name disambiguation. Scientometrics. doi: 10.1007/s11192-018-2865-9</div
Neuronal correlates of binocular rivalry in second-order patterns
It has been recently reported that there is binocular rivalry in second-order patterns with a dynamic carrier [Kim et al, 2006 Journal of Vision 6(6), VSS 07, abstract 47a]. To find neuronal correlates of second-order binocular rivalry, we measured BOLD signal changes in early visual cortex while subjects viewed uncorrelated dynamic random-dot fields whose contrasts were modulated at 1.5 cycles deg-1 sine-wave with orientation of ±45°. Subjects were required to press either right or left button for alternating percepts tilted rightward or leftward, respectively. We found that there is no difference of V1 activity in both hemispheres when either right or left response was made. However, there was a fluctuation of activity in V2 for alternating percepts. V2 activity increased with the right response and decreased with the left response in the left hemisphere, while the activity pattern was reversed in the right hemisphere. These results indicate that V2 area is a special site for second-order binocular processing as suggested in form and motion vision
Professor John Wilson with Senator Kim Carr and Professor Linda Kristjanson at the ATC launch, 2011
Deputy Dean of the Faculty of Engineering and Industrial Sciences Professor John Wilson (left) with Senator Kim Carr (left) and Vice-Chancellor Professor Linda Kristjanson (centre) at the Advanced Technologies Centre (ATC) launch. Positioned to showcase the university to the community, the ATC is Swinburne's new 'front door' on Burwood Road and, built at a cost of $140 million, represents the single largest investment in the university's 100-year history. Photograph appeared in the Media Centre Release: 'Kim Carr launches ATC' on 8 December 2011
Tanaidacea from Brazil. I. The family Tanaellidae Larsen & Wilson, 2002
Larsen, Kim, Araújo-Silva, Catarina De L., Coelho, Petrônio Alves (2009): Tanaidacea from Brazil. I. The family Tanaellidae Larsen & Wilson, 2002. Zootaxa 2141: 1-19, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18857
Discrimination of familiar and unfamiliar synthetic faces by North Americans and Koreans
A new class of synthetic-face stimuli has been recently introduced for studying visual face processing. Synthetic faces are extracted from digital photographs of individual faces and bandpass-filtered after converting into radial frequencies for the head shape. In face-discrimination experiments Wilson et al (2002, submitted), using synthetic-face cubes, found that discrimination thresholds for highly distinctive face cubes centred on a non-mean face were 1.45 times higher than for faces centred on the mean face. These results might give us a quantitative insight into 'the other-race effect'. To investigate further this problem, we measured the face-discrimination thresholds for non-North-American faces, in this case Korean faces with Korean subjects. We found that the increment thresholds for mean face cubes for three subjects averaged 4.4% in front view and 5.6% in side view. However, the thresholds rose to 6.1% and 7.8% for non-mean front and side face cubes, respectively. In good agreement with the previous study, these results indicate that we do have finer discrimination ability for familiar faces than for unfamiliar faces. We will switch North-American and Korean faces and test each with the other group to get a quantitative measure of the 'other-race effect'
- …
