13,050 research outputs found

    Reinventing Urban Public Space from the Perspective of Female

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    As society advances, many women in urban areas still feel insecure and fearful when using parks, squares, and car parks despite recognising women’s rights and freedom of access to public spaces in many countries. In addition, the lack of equal opportunities and encouragement for girls in outdoor activities leads to their absence and self-limitation in public spaces. These realities highlight the inadequacy of most urban public spaces in meeting women’s psychological and behavioural needs and require more attention and improvement from architects and urban planners. This paper examines the development and evolution of the morphology of urban public space from a female perspective, using typomorphology, environmental behaviour, and psychology approaches. It aims to classify and integrate typomorphology according to women’s psychological and behavioural preferences and to explore the links between typomorphology and politics, society, economy, and women’s psychology and behaviour. The study aims to provide comprehensive data for urban design and strategies so that redesigned urban public spaces can adequately meet the needs of women of different ages, sexual orientations, races, classes, and identities. Such spaces will be more inclusive, friendly, attractive, and comfortable, providing theoretical guidance for global urban public spaces’ future

    The mitochondrial genomes of ladybird beetles and implications for evolution and phylogeny

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    Song, Nan, Li, Xinxin, Yin, Xinming, Li, Xinghao, Xi, Yuqiang (2020): The mitochondrial genomes of ladybird beetles and implications for evolution and phylogeny. International Journal of Biological Macromolecules 147: 1193-1203, DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2019.10.08

    Author Identification from Song Lyrics

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    Machine Learning (ML) tools have been used extensively in a wide variety of domains recently. Due the enormous amount of data being produced, machine learning techniques are being heavily used to make sense of data & derive meaningful results. Using machine learning tools, we can turn the data into knowledge. Music is one of the truest forms of art. Bangladesh has a great history of music with a great tradition of song writing over centuries. Authorship attribution is the way of identifying the author from a linguistic corpus. This paper demonstrates a guideline to identify the author of a Bengali song from the lyrics of that song using machine learning. This research work presents the first work on machine learning approach for author attribution from the lyrics of a song. Here six methods of machine learning are used for the author identification and high accuracies have been achieved from these methods. It is observed that Naïve Bayes method provides higher accuracy in comparison with the other methods

    Song

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    Author attribution from Rudolph, 240. Printed on yellow paper with black ink. Set to the tune of "Happy land of Canaan". First line "You Rebels come along and listen to my song"

    Strategies to overcome multidrug resistance induced by KRAS-G12C inhibition

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    Xinxin Song1, Zhuan Zhou1, Ammar Elmezayen2, Runliu Wu1, Chunhua Yu1, John D. Minna3, Kenneth D. Westover2, Herbert J. Zeh1, Guido Kroemer4-6, Rui Kang1, and Daolin Tang1* 1Department of Surgery, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390, USA 2Departments of Biochemistry and Radiation Oncology, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390, USA 3Hamon Center for Therapeutic Oncology Research, Department of Pharmacology, Department of Internal Medicine, Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390, USA 4Centre de Recherche des Cordeliers, Equipe labellisée par la Ligue contre le cancer, Université de Paris, Sorbonne Université, INSERM U1138, Institut Universitaire de France, Paris, France 5Metabolomics and Cell Biology Platforms, Gustave Roussy Cancer Campus, Villejuif, France 6Pôle de Biologie, Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou, AP-HP, Paris, Franc

    The Singer or the Song? Developments in Performers' Rights from the Perspective of a Cultural Economist

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    Over the last century, performers gradually acquired statutory protection of their economic and moral rights. These rights are not copyright in the legal sense but neighboring rights and until recently, they were mainly remuneration rights that are collectively administered. With the WPPT (WIPO Performers and Phonograms Treaty), performers now have individual exclusive rights for digital performances; this leads to the question: what has motivated this change – is it a change in the perception of the value of performer or a change brought about by the changing technology of copying or, indeed, a change that reflects different economic costs and benefits? The paper discusses the role of copyright law as an incentive to performers and asks if the economic role of the performer is so different from that of the author. The conclusion is that a complex interaction of the legal regulations, economic conditions and institutional arrangements for administering these new rights will determine the outcome

    Freemasons\u27 Song

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    Song concerning pride in Freemasonryhttps://egrove.olemiss.edu/kgbsides_uk/1560/thumbnail.jp

    Northumberland Election Song

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    A song for a political candidate.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/kgbsides_uk/1899/thumbnail.jp

    Song of Haymakers

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    A song about working in the hayfields during summer.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/kgbsides_uk/1628/thumbnail.jp
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