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When conducting overviews of reviews, investigators must measure and describe the extent to which included systematic reviews (SRs) contain the same primary studies. The corrected covered area (CCA) quantifies overlap by counting primary studies included across a set of SRs. In this article, we introduce a modification to the CCA, the weighted CCA (wCCA), which accounts for differences in information contributed by primary studies. The wCCA adjusts the original CCA by weighting studies based on the square roots of their sample sizes. By weighting primary studies according to their precision, wCCA provides a useful and complementary representation of overlap in evidence syntheses .
This chapter draws on empirical research that demonstrates that utility model protection can address differential capture or appropriability needs for a firm’s portfolio of inventions in terms of time and cost. We propose that a “zone of appropriability preference” exists when utility models and standard patents overlap, and this zone provides important opportunities to firms with global intellectual property portfolios. Using the European Patent Office’s PATSTAT patent data and a novel experimental construct that tracks inventions that are pursued as a utility model instead of a standard patent, we demonstrate that firms appear to seek utility model protection when their overall appropriability needs differ by region. We make the case that a firm may choose standard patent protection in one region and utility model protection in another, even though standard patent protection is available in both settings
This chapter addresses an inevitable question: How are later books of the Republic, and specifically Book 4, related to Book 1? It contends that justice as conceived in Book 1 is “external,” concerned with how one entity regards and treats another, and so is at odds with the novel definition of justice in Book 4, according to which it is “internal,” a matter of what happens within a single entity, whether a city or a soul. It is argued that in Book 4, Socrates, having been tasked with persuading Glaucon and Adeimantus that there is profit in being just, identifies a reward for being just, namely, the harmonious internal state of city and soul. Although he briefly calls this healthy and therefore desirable condition “justice,” he more frequently and aptly identifies it as “moderation.” This chapter makes the case that it is the account of justice found in Book 1 that more closely reflects Socrates’ (or Plato’s) understanding of it.
This chapter provides an in-depth analysis of the resources Southeast Asian and Caribbean speakers of English use to claim or hold a turn at talk. Four larger strategy groups are described and compared: latches and overlaps, phonetic resources, lexical resources, and syntactic strategies. The chapter describes how these are realised by the individual speaker groups and compares this to previous research on Inner Circle Englishes. It can be shown that speaker groups essentially have access to the same set of resources but exhibit different preferences with respect to which strategies they prefer for organising turn-taking in conversational interaction.
The main components of a lidar receiver include the telescope, a field stop, a collimating lens, an optical filter, a field lens, and a detector. These elements are discussed sequentially. Incidence angle and temperature effects on filter response are quantified, and techniques for filter tuning are described. Common spectral shapes of interference filters are given along with their equivalent rectangular widths. Filter aging effects are described, with examples. Polarization sensitivity in receivers is discussed, along with a review of common lidar polarization analyzers. An actual lidar receiver design is described as an example. The shape of the geometrical function (also called the crossover or overlap function) is shown, and a review of geometric optics is given. Engineering the geometrical function is then discussed at length, with many diagrams. Formulas for finding the start and end of crossover are derived, and a graphical technique is introduced for visualizing the results. A two-receiver method for monitoring much of the geometrical function is illustrated with an example. Finally, comments on methods for achieving lidar transmitter–receiver alignment are presented.
The neurocognition of multimodal interaction – the embedded, embodied, predictive processing of vocal and non-vocal communicative behaviour – has developed into an important subfield of cognitive science. It leaves a glaring lacuna, however, namely the dearth of a precise investigation of the meanings of the verbal and non-verbal communication signals that constitute multimodal interaction. Cognitively construable dialogue semantics provides a detailed and context-aware notion of meaning, and thereby contributes content-based identity conditions needed for distinguishing syntactically or form-based defined multimodal constituents. We exemplify this by means of two novel empirical examples: dissociated uses of negative polarity utterances and head shaking, and attentional clarification requests addressing speaker/hearer roles. On this view, interlocutors are described as co-active agents, thereby motivating a replacement of sequential turn organisation as a basic organising principle with notions of leading and accompanying voices. The Multimodal Serialisation Hypothesis is formulated: multimodal natural language processing is driven in part by a notion of vertical relevance – relevance of utterances occurring simultaneously – which we suggest supervenes on sequential (‘horizontal’) relevance – relevance of utterances succeeding each other temporally.
The distribution of regeneration makes it possible to assess whether populations of tree species will maintain or change their distributions. For Neotropical dry forests there is little information on the potential changes in the distribution of tree species. Here, we evaluate the potential distributions of adults and seedlings of eight timber tree species of the Piedmont Forest of north-western Argentina by recording the presence of seedlings and adults in plots and modelling with MaxEnt software using three bioclimatic variables. The potential distribution areas of seedlings and adults and the percentage of overlap of seedlings with respect to adults were calculated. The potential distribution for adults was 694 457 ± 62 535 ha, and this figure was 656 564 ± 194 769 ha for seedlings. The potential distribution of seedlings of Calycophyllum multiflorum covered the smallest area (184 496 ha) and had the least overlap with the adults (18%). The difference in the overlap of the potential distribution areas between adults and seedlings suggests that there could be changes in the future distribution of this tree species and C. multiflorum should therefore be the focus of conservation strategies so that the species can follow its bioclimatic niche as the climate changes.
Research has shown the relationship between borderline personality disorder (BPD) and complex posttraumatic stress disorder (cPTSD), pointing out the overlapping nature and expression of both conditions. In order to understand their differences and similarities, we present a case of a 22-years-old patient with a history of repeated sexual trauma throughout all her adolescence, whose diagnose was changed from BPD to cPTSD after she was admitted in an acute inpatient mental health unit.
Objectives
To gather the similarities between borderline personality disorder and complex posttraumatic stress disorder.
Methods
A narrative review of the literature through the presentation of a case. Articles were chosen based on its clinical relevance.
Results
cPTSD merges the clinical features and symptoms of PTSD with affect dysregulation, negative self-perception, unstable relationships and somatization, also present in BPD. Furthermore, BPD is known to frequently have a traumatic etiology.
Conclusions
It is not always simple to draw a clear line between cPTSD and BPD conditions. However, each diagnosis may have a different impact on patient understanding and treatment.
The chapter is concerned with regularities that occur in texts, in particular repetitions and symmetries. They have a strong influence on the efficiency of algorithms. The central topic is the notion of repetition of factors: squares, cubes, maximal periodicities or runs, and overlaps. Problems deal with discovering or counting of repetitions. The related algorithms are usually short but tricky. Especially problems about runs are non-trivial but show the unexpected power of combinatorics of Lyndon words. Repetitions in labeled trees are also considered. Besides repetitions some problems deal with symmetrical words (palindromes) and anti-power words.
The main objective of the present investigation was to analyze the relationship between self-reported schizotypal and borderline personality traits in a sample of 759 college students (M = 19.63 years; SD = 2.03). For this purpose, the Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire-Brief (SPQB; Raine and Benishay, 1995) and Borderline Personality Questionnaire (BPQ; Poreh et al., 2006) were administered. The results showed that schizotypal and borderline features are partially related at subclinical level. The exploratory factor analysis conducted on the subscales revealed a three-factor solution comprised of the following factors: Identity/Interpersonal, Lack of Control and Schizotypal. The canonical correlation analysis showed that schizotypal features and borderline personality traits shared 34.8 % of the variance. The data highlight the overlap between schizotypal and borderline personality traits in nonclinical young adults. Future studies should continue to examine the relationship and the degree of overlap between these traits in community samples.
The sources of food and the width and overlap of the food niches of Bombus atratus and Bombus morio were determined by field observations and analysis of the pollen loads carried to the colonies by worker bees. The two species together utilized 50 flower species of which 26 were used by both. Solatium paniculatum (Solanaceae) and Psidium guajava (Myrtaceae) were the most frequently visited plants.
The food niche width and niche evenness for both species were similar. The correlation between niche width and niche evenness was non-significant showing that evenness does not depend on niche width. In addition, there was no correlation between niche width and overlap, i.e. overlap varied independently of niche width. A high overlap of food sources utilized by the two species was observed in September, October and November. This may be explained in one of two ways: (a) if B. atratus and B. morio compete for resources, competition would be more intense during those three months; (b) the convergency of both species to the same plant species (Solatium paniculatum and Psidium guajava) would only result in more intensive competition if resources were limiting. However, at that period of the year resources are abundant, therefore although the values of overlap were high, competition need not have occurred.
A reverse iterated function system is defined as a family of expansive maps {T1,T2,…,Tm} on a uniformly discrete set . An invariant set is defined to be a nonempty set satisfying F=⋃ j=1mTj(F). A computation method for the dimension of the invariant set is given and some questions asked by Strichartz are answered.
We introduce a class of stochastic processes in discrete time with finite state space by means of a simple matrix product. We show that this class coincides with that of the hidden Markov chains and provides a compact framework for it. We study a measure obtained by a projection on the real line of the uniform measure on the Sierpinski gasket, finding that the dimension of this measure fits with the Shannon entropy of an associated hidden Markov chain.
The C++// language (pronounced C++parallel) was designed and implemented with the aim of importingreusability into parallel and concurrentprogramming, in the framework of a mimd model.From a reduced set of rather simple primitives,comprehensive and versatile libraries are defined.In the absence of any syntactical extension,the C++// user writes standard C++ code.The libraries are themselvesextensible by the final users, making C++// an open system. Two specific techniques to improve performances ofa distributed object language such as C++// arethen presented: Shared-on-Read and Overlapping of Communicationand Computation.The appliance of those techniques is guided by the programmer ata very high-level of abstraction, so the additional work to yieldthose good performance improvements is kept to the minimum.
This article provides an empirically grounded account
of what happens when more persons than one talk at once
in conversation. It undertakes to specify when such occurrences
are problematic for the participants, and for the organization
of interaction; what the features of such overlapping talk
are; and what constraints an account of overlapping talk
should meet. It describes the practices employed by participants
to deal with such simultaneous talk, and how they form
an organization of practices which is related to the turn-taking
organization previously described by Sacks et al. 1974.
This “overlap resolution device” constitutes
a previously unexplicated component of that turn-taking
organization, and one that provides solutions to underspecified
features of the previous account.
Random digits are collected one at a time until a pattern with given digits is obtained. Blom (1982) and others have determined the mean waiting time for such a pattern. It is proved that when a given pattern has larger mean waiting time than another pattern, then the waiting time for the former is stochastically larger than that for the latter. An application is given to a coin-tossing game.
Random digits are collected one at a time until a given k -digit sequence is obtained, or, more generally, until one of several k -digit sequences is obtained. In the former case, a recursive formula is given, which determines the distribution of the waiting time until the sequence is obtained and leads to an expression for the probability generating function. In the latter case, the mean waiting time is given until one of the given sequences is obtained, or, more generally, until a fixed number of sequences have been obtained, either different sequences or not necessarily different ones. Several results are known before, but the methods of proof seem to be new.
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