Non-Representational Methodologies: Re
... adaptive algorithms are calling forth a new onto-logic of sociality or the social itself. We propose that this onto-logic, or what we refer to as the “datalogical,” is especially challenging to the discipline of sociology, which, as the study of social systems of human behavior, has provided a mod ...
... adaptive algorithms are calling forth a new onto-logic of sociality or the social itself. We propose that this onto-logic, or what we refer to as the “datalogical,” is especially challenging to the discipline of sociology, which, as the study of social systems of human behavior, has provided a mod ...
Prediction in Human Decision Making
... A B S T RAC T Human beings can determine optimal behaviors, which depends on the ability to make planned and adaptive decisions. Decision making is defined as the ability to choose between different alternatives. Purpose: this study, we have addressed the prediction aspect of human decision making f ...
... A B S T RAC T Human beings can determine optimal behaviors, which depends on the ability to make planned and adaptive decisions. Decision making is defined as the ability to choose between different alternatives. Purpose: this study, we have addressed the prediction aspect of human decision making f ...
Record Linkage Concepts
... • Once comparisons are made, a weight is calculated for each field comparison • A total weight (or “score”) is derived by summing these separate field comparisons across all fields being compared • Probabilistic weights are – Field-specific – Birth date versus Sex – Value-specific - “Jane” versus “J ...
... • Once comparisons are made, a weight is calculated for each field comparison • A total weight (or “score”) is derived by summing these separate field comparisons across all fields being compared • Probabilistic weights are – Field-specific – Birth date versus Sex – Value-specific - “Jane” versus “J ...
chapter1
... Spike-train statistics • If spikes are described as stochastic events, we call this a point process: P(t1,t2,…,tn)=p(t1,t2,…,tn)( t)n • The probability of a spike can in principle depend on the whole history: P(tn|t1,…,tn-1) • If the probability of a spike only depends on the time of the last spik ...
... Spike-train statistics • If spikes are described as stochastic events, we call this a point process: P(t1,t2,…,tn)=p(t1,t2,…,tn)( t)n • The probability of a spike can in principle depend on the whole history: P(tn|t1,…,tn-1) • If the probability of a spike only depends on the time of the last spik ...
THE HISTORICAL MEANING OF THE CRISIS OF INFORMATION
... The second aspect of the gap between theory and practice comes from the tendency of researchers to overgeneralise by extrapolating from limited material, which may therefore lead to contradictions between the conclusions of research and the real world situation. One example might be that a few class ...
... The second aspect of the gap between theory and practice comes from the tendency of researchers to overgeneralise by extrapolating from limited material, which may therefore lead to contradictions between the conclusions of research and the real world situation. One example might be that a few class ...
Harmonising and linking biomedical and clinical data across
... which the biobank is placed and to the ethical protocols of the organisations involved (http://www.hsern.eu).2,10 This makes it impossible to allow indiscriminate online access to actual data on VOIs. However, these privacy issues can be sidestepped in the initial phase of study design, if biobanks ...
... which the biobank is placed and to the ethical protocols of the organisations involved (http://www.hsern.eu).2,10 This makes it impossible to allow indiscriminate online access to actual data on VOIs. However, these privacy issues can be sidestepped in the initial phase of study design, if biobanks ...
ETHICAL DECISION MAKING DURING DISASTERS1
... suggests, only a few people would deem that to be immoral. And again as in the moral dilemma with the trolley car, there seems to be no objective difference between these two cases. Yet to most people they appear unquestionably morally different. As Joshua Greene suggests, the difference lies not i ...
... suggests, only a few people would deem that to be immoral. And again as in the moral dilemma with the trolley car, there seems to be no objective difference between these two cases. Yet to most people they appear unquestionably morally different. As Joshua Greene suggests, the difference lies not i ...
Module 1, Lecture 3 Presentation
... • Ethics assessment process helps to clarify the embedded ethical issues and integrate them with science (the facts) – Transparency of upheld values & prioritization ...
... • Ethics assessment process helps to clarify the embedded ethical issues and integrate them with science (the facts) – Transparency of upheld values & prioritization ...
Spatiotemporal Properties of Eye Position Signals
... crossed 20/s on the way back to zero. Data were removed from analysis if duration of saccade was shorter than 10 ms or longer than 200 ms, and if amplitude of the saccade was less than half of the magnitude of the target step. Traces of horizontal and vertical eye positions were reviewed with raste ...
... crossed 20/s on the way back to zero. Data were removed from analysis if duration of saccade was shorter than 10 ms or longer than 200 ms, and if amplitude of the saccade was less than half of the magnitude of the target step. Traces of horizontal and vertical eye positions were reviewed with raste ...
Now you see it: frontal eye field responses to invisible targets
... target. This difference in activity was slight (about 30% on average), but extremely consistent among the population of neurons. This suggests that even though both unperceived and perceived visual signals reach the FEF, the FEF could in principle distinguish the two. Stated more strongly, FEF neuro ...
... target. This difference in activity was slight (about 30% on average), but extremely consistent among the population of neurons. This suggests that even though both unperceived and perceived visual signals reach the FEF, the FEF could in principle distinguish the two. Stated more strongly, FEF neuro ...
- The University of Liverpool Repository
... showing the clear relationship between each other (Tan and Platts, 2004); the second is to create a whole view of the action plan, after knowing the different sequences in achieving the target, it can help managers to choose the suitable action. This tool was adopted by many companies to solve manuf ...
... showing the clear relationship between each other (Tan and Platts, 2004); the second is to create a whole view of the action plan, after knowing the different sequences in achieving the target, it can help managers to choose the suitable action. This tool was adopted by many companies to solve manuf ...
Framework for Modeling the Cognitive Process
... considered to be a function of space. This means that in this dimension signals must conceptually take on physical shape or form, varying anywhere from concrete to abstract at any point in time. The overall flow of signals in this dimension tends toward increasing abstraction. Representation of sign ...
... considered to be a function of space. This means that in this dimension signals must conceptually take on physical shape or form, varying anywhere from concrete to abstract at any point in time. The overall flow of signals in this dimension tends toward increasing abstraction. Representation of sign ...
Towards a hermeneutic method interpretive research
... outlines the ontological foundations of the hermeneutic method by conducting a phenomenological analysis of the nature of Being. Here, several concepts drawn from the related philosophies of Martin Heidegger and Hans Georg Gadamer are integrated into a conceptual model that helps illustrate the comp ...
... outlines the ontological foundations of the hermeneutic method by conducting a phenomenological analysis of the nature of Being. Here, several concepts drawn from the related philosophies of Martin Heidegger and Hans Georg Gadamer are integrated into a conceptual model that helps illustrate the comp ...
The Visual System of Dolphins 1
... The Visual System of Dolphins 1 A Review by James T. Fulton J.1 Introduction The visual system of the dolphin, particularly the bottle-nosed dolphin, Tursiops truncatus, has been observed extensively in the field from a behavioral aspect. However, from a physiological perspective, Pryor quoted one r ...
... The Visual System of Dolphins 1 A Review by James T. Fulton J.1 Introduction The visual system of the dolphin, particularly the bottle-nosed dolphin, Tursiops truncatus, has been observed extensively in the field from a behavioral aspect. However, from a physiological perspective, Pryor quoted one r ...
Neuronal activity in dorsomedial frontal cortex and prefrontal cortex
... changed dramatically to reflect the task that a monkey had been conditioned to perform. Notwithstanding more recent results (Tehovnik and Slocum 2000), the possibility that instrumental conditioning determines the response properties of cortical neurons remains an open issue, one with special import ...
... changed dramatically to reflect the task that a monkey had been conditioned to perform. Notwithstanding more recent results (Tehovnik and Slocum 2000), the possibility that instrumental conditioning determines the response properties of cortical neurons remains an open issue, one with special import ...
Public relations ethics in information management
... fixed and firm boundary between domestic and international spheres and changing our conceptions of the proper domain of domestic and international politics and law” (Jayasuriya, 1999, cited in Marsden, 2005, p. 20). Rafael Capurro understands and emphasizes the role of Intercultural Information Ethi ...
... fixed and firm boundary between domestic and international spheres and changing our conceptions of the proper domain of domestic and international politics and law” (Jayasuriya, 1999, cited in Marsden, 2005, p. 20). Rafael Capurro understands and emphasizes the role of Intercultural Information Ethi ...
eScience
... Geology and hydrology too has been using computational methods for a long time There are very interesting aspects in combining different methods • i.e. include biological systems in the models • Inverse mapping of seismic data ...
... Geology and hydrology too has been using computational methods for a long time There are very interesting aspects in combining different methods • i.e. include biological systems in the models • Inverse mapping of seismic data ...
CHAPTER 8 NOTES A
... connects the eye to the brain is too sensitive to reconstruct successfully. ...
... connects the eye to the brain is too sensitive to reconstruct successfully. ...
Eye movement control by the cerebral cortex
... The control of spatial memory in the human cerebral cortex was recently reviewed [32]. The memory-guided saccade paradigm is commonly used to study this function with eye movements. In this paradigm, the participant has to memorize the location of a target flashed in the peripheral visual field while ...
... The control of spatial memory in the human cerebral cortex was recently reviewed [32]. The memory-guided saccade paradigm is commonly used to study this function with eye movements. In this paradigm, the participant has to memorize the location of a target flashed in the peripheral visual field while ...
Adams et al
... individual differences in exploration behavior, an innate tendency to abandon the current behavioral strategy for another potentially more profitable one, might also be mediated in humans through genetic influences on catecholaminergic neuromodulatory systems [15]. In a remarkable illustration of th ...
... individual differences in exploration behavior, an innate tendency to abandon the current behavioral strategy for another potentially more profitable one, might also be mediated in humans through genetic influences on catecholaminergic neuromodulatory systems [15]. In a remarkable illustration of th ...
The Information Society- introduction to vol. 1
... Machlup emphasized that over-concentration on information and its delivery systems could deflect attention away from equitable availability and distribution of the benefits of information, and he warned against the temptation to ‘measure the unmeasurable’ (Machlup and Kronwinkler, 1975), counsel tha ...
... Machlup emphasized that over-concentration on information and its delivery systems could deflect attention away from equitable availability and distribution of the benefits of information, and he warned against the temptation to ‘measure the unmeasurable’ (Machlup and Kronwinkler, 1975), counsel tha ...
Visual Dysfunction in Brain Injury
... Retrospective study of 160 TBI patients (AOA Journal 2007) ...
... Retrospective study of 160 TBI patients (AOA Journal 2007) ...
HEAD III: Special Senses
... • Axons of photoreceptors pass on top or superficial to photoreceptor region • Axons congregate and leave retina at optic disc (blind spot) • Fovea centralis is in direct line with lens, where light is focused most directly, and has intense cone cell population (low light night vision best from side ...
... • Axons of photoreceptors pass on top or superficial to photoreceptor region • Axons congregate and leave retina at optic disc (blind spot) • Fovea centralis is in direct line with lens, where light is focused most directly, and has intense cone cell population (low light night vision best from side ...