3,894 research outputs found
Neogeography and GIS, it's not one or the other
Neogeography
Andrew Turner – Founder of Mapufacture, author of 'Introduction to Neogeography'GIS Day 2007 @ KU is sponsored by:
* KU Department of Geography
* State of Kansas Data Access and Support Center (DASC)
* KU Libraries GIS and Scholar Services
* KU Transportation Research Institute
* KU Institute for Policy & Social Research
* Western Air Maps, Inc.
* Coca-Cola
* Kansas Biological Survey
* KU Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS)
* Kansas View Consortiu
Mapping the News: How Journalists use GIS
Abstract is speaker biography.David Herzog is an assistant professor at the Missouri School of Journalism, where he teaches computer-assisted reporting and serves as the academic adviser to the National Institute for Computer-Assisted Reporting. Before joining the faculty in January 2002, he was an investigative reporter for the Providence Journal in Rhode Island and editor for computer-assisted reporting at The Morning Call in Allentown, Pa. He is author of the book "Mapping the News: Case Studies in GIS and Journalism" (ESRI Press).* KU Department of Geography
* Kansas Biological Survey
* State of Kansas Data Access and Support Center (DASC)
* KU Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS)
* KU Transportation Research Institute
* KU Biodiversity Institute
* KU Institute for Policy & Social Research
* Kansas View Consortium
* Western Air Maps
* KU Libraries
* The Coca-Cola Compan
A two-parameter wind speed algorithm for Ku-band altimeters
Globally distributed crossovers of altimeter and scatterometer observations clearly demonstrate that ocean altimeter backscatter correlates with both the near-surface wind speed and the sea state. Satellite data from TOPEX/Poseidon and NSCAT are used to develop an empirical altimeter wind speed model that attenuates the sea-state signature and improves upon the present operational altimeter wind model. The inversion is defined using a multilayer perceptron neural network with altimeter-derived backscatter and significant wave height as inputs. Comparisons between this new model and past single input routines indicates that the rms wind error is reduced by 10%–15% in tandem with the lowering of wind error residuals dependent on the sea state. Both model intercomparison and validation of the new routine are detailed, including the use of large independent data compilations that include the SeaWinds and ERS scatterometers, ECMWF wind fields, and buoy measurements. The model provides consistent improvement against these varied sources with a wind-independent bias below 0.3 m s?1. The continuous form of the defined function, along with the global data used in its derivation, suggest an algorithm suitable for operational application to Ku-band altimeters. Further model improvement through wave height inclusion is limited due to an inherent multivaluedness between any single realization of the altimeter measurement pair [?o, HS] and observed near-surface winds. This ambiguity indicates that HS is a limited proxy for variable gravity wave properties that impact upon altimeter backscatter
Campus Open Access Funds: Experiences of the KU “One University” Open Access Author Fund
INTRODUCTION: In the summer of 2012, librarians from the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses of the University of Kansas (KU) proposed the creation of a KU “One University” Open Access Fund (OA Author Fund) to support open access publishing for its faculty, students, and staff. KU is a major public research and teaching institution of 28,000 students and 2,600 faculty on five campuses (Lawrence, Kansas City, Overland Park, Wichita, and Salina) (http://ku.edu/about), and has been a leader in open access initiatives for many years. A working group of librarians came together to create and implement a pilot project to explore the administration and impact of an open access publishing fund on KU authors, and the fund was launched in October 2012.
DESCRIPTION OF PROJECT: This report documents the group’s experience in developing eligibility criteria and administering the OA Fund. Here we provide insight into our efforts implementing the project, funding results, and plans for continuation. We share the results of the first two years of the OA Author Fund pilot and the lessons learned about open access fund administration.
NEXT STEPS: At the close of the pilot in May 2014, the OA fund review team solicited feedback from a faculty advisory group regarding grant recipients, allocation of funds by discipline, and the application process. Based on our findings, we revised eligibility criteria to create a more equitable funding opportunity for the second pilot. The fund was re-launched using these new criteria in Fall of 2014
SparrKULee: A Speech-evoked Auditory Response Repository of the KU Leuven, containing EEG of 85 participants
The following author contributed equally to this dataset: Accou, Bernd; Bollens, Lies.
For easy access to the data, we recommend using the instruction/access via our hosting server.
Researchers investigating the neural mechanisms underlying speech perception often employ electroencephalography (EEG)
to record brain activity while participants listen to spoken language. The high temporal resolution of EEG enables the study of
neural responses to fast and dynamic speech signals. Previous studies have successfully extracted speech characteristics
from EEG data and, conversely, predicted EEG activity from speech features.
Machine learning techniques are generally employed to construct encoding and decoding models, which necessitate a
substantial amount of data.
We present SparrKULee: A Speech-evoked Auditory Repository of EEG, measured at KU Leuven,
comprising 64-channel EEG recordings from 85 young individuals with normal hearing, each of whom listened to 90-150
minutes of natural speech. This dataset is more extensive than any currently available dataset in terms of both the number of
participants and the amount of data per participant. It is suitable for training larger machine learning models. We evaluate the
dataset using linear and state-of-the-art non-linear models in a speech encoding/decoding and match/mismatch paradigm,
providing benchmark scores for future research.
Our github repository contains the necessary code to perform preprocessing steps needed to obtain the files in the derivatives folder, as well as extra code to show the technical validation of our dataset and tools to download the dataset more easily.
This link provides a download of the whole dataset in one big zip file ( > 100GB) .
For a download of the dataset using already zipped files, split up into smaller chunks, click here.
Due to privacy concerns, there are some restricted files in the dataset. Users requesting access should send a mail to [email protected] , stating what they want to use the data for. Access will be granted to non-commercial users, complying to the CC-BY-NC-4.0 licenc
Data for paper: Handling Communication Challenges at the ED Entry: A Linguistic Ethnographic Study in a Belgian Hospital
This is the dataset used for the paper Handling Communication Challenges at the ED Entry: A Linguistic Ethnographic Study in a Belgian Hospital. The dataset consists of transcriptions of 11 semi-structured interviews with healthcare professionals who work at the ED entry. These data aren't made publicly available because of their sensitive content and ethical regulations. Access can be requested through the author, after explicit approval of EC Research UZ/KU Leuven
Data for paper: Patient-Centered Communication in A Diverse General Practice Setting: A Multi-Perspective Case Study
This is the dataset used for the paper Patient-Centered Communication in A Diverse General Practice Setting: A Multi-Perspective Case Study. The dataset consists of the transcriptions of the two discussed cases in the paper and the open recall interviews with the treating doctor and the intercultural mediator. These data aren't made publicly available because of their sensitive content and ethical regulations. Acces can be requested through the author, after explicit approval of EC Research UZ/KU Leuven
Campus Roosenberg: Study- and congresscenter for the KU Leuven
The Roosenberg Abbey in the Flanders village of Waasmunster needs to get a new function. The new owner of the building is the Catholic University of Leuven (KU Leuven), who envisions a campus on the site (Campus Roosenberg). The campus that the KU Leuven envisions should be a study- and congresscenter focused on the domain of reflection and should be a breeding ground for new education forms
More on the origin of the preposition 'ku'/'to'
Beside forms derived from proto-Slavonic kъ, there are also other ones and among them ku/to testified in Polish, Slovak, Czech, Lower-Lusatian, and Old-Russian. Because in Old-Church-Slavonic only kъ occurs, it is widely known that ku is an explained in different ways innovation in relation to kъ. The author is the only linguist who thinks that chronological relation between these two forms is opposite that is kъ derived from ku as the result of what the author terms irregular phonetic development caused by frequency. In order to support the opinion the author sets forth an argument that one cannot maintain that ku was derived by adding the preposition u/at to k, because if one adds po/on to przez/across, then poprzez and not przezpo will be derived. Consequently, if u had been added to k, then uk and not ku would have been derived
A qualitative examination of the motivations behind participating in KU basketball camping
There are many rituals which sport fans partake in during or around a game that they are attending, and many of these take shape as ancillary events, such as tailgating. At the University of Kansas (KU), there is an ancillary event called KU basketball camping which is a ritual that allows students to obtain the best seats in the student section. Students who participate in camping spend time “camped out” in Allen Fieldhouse throughout the entire basketball season in order to be awarded seats in the front or heart of the student section. Being as there is minimal research on why fans participate in these ritualistic events, the purpose of this study was to uncover the motivations of KU basketball campers. To gather a deep interpretation of the overarching motivations of campers, the author conducted qualitative, semi-structured interviews with students who were participating in KU basketball camping. The results of these interviews discovered the most prevalent motivations to participate in camping to be the game itself, upholding tradition, and their identification with the team. The finding of upholding tradition as a motivation to participate in KU basketball camping was the most novel and deserves the most future consideration, especially in other sport ritualistic behavior contexts. This contribution to the literature also had practical contributions, primarily in sport marketing. This study is useful as motivations for sport fans to participate in rituals has been sparsely examined, and it compliments past research which has found the benefits of ritualistic behavior in sport. This study is impactful, especially as the study of ritualistic behavior involving sport is in its infancy
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