35Th International Symposium on Remote Sensing of Environment 2013
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Arxiv:2103.16929V1 [Cs.CL] 31 Mar 2021
Deep Neural Approaches to Relation Triplets Extraction: A Comprehensive Survey Tapas Nayaky, Navonil Majumder, Pawan Goyaly, Soujanya Poria y IIT Kharagpur, India Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore [email protected], fnavonil majumder,[email protected], [email protected] Abstract contain a large number of triplets, they remain incomplete. On the other hand, relation triplets Recently, with the advances made in contin- can be automatically distilled from the copious uous representation of words (word embed- amount of free text on the Web. This can be lever- dings) and deep neural architectures, many re- search works are published in the area of rela- aged for identifying missing links in the existing tion extraction and it is very difficult to keep KBs or build a KB from scratch without human track of so many papers. To help future re- intervention. search, we present a comprehensive review There are two distinct research paradigms of of the recently published research works in relation extraction: open information extraction relation extraction. We mostly focus on re- (Open IE) and supervised relation extraction. lation extraction using deep neural networks which have achieved state-of-the-art perfor- Banko et al.(2007), Christensen et al.(2011), Et- mance on publicly available datasets. In this zioni et al.(2011), and Mausam et al.(2012) use survey, we cover sentence-level relation ex- open information extraction (Open IE) to extract traction to document-level relation extraction, relation triplets from sentences where relations set pipeline-based approaches to joint extraction is open. Open IE systems like KnowItAll (Etzioni approaches, annotated datasets to distantly su- et al., 2004), TEXTRUNNER (Yates et al., 2007), pervised datasets along with few very recent REVERB (Etzioni et al., 2011), SRLIE (Chris- research directions such as zero-shot or few- shot relation extraction, noise mitigation in tensen et al., 2011), and OLLIE (Mausam et al., distantly supervised datasets. -
A Visualization Quality Evaluation Method for Multiple Sequence Alignments
2011 5th International Conference on Bioinformatics and Biomedical Engineering (iCBBE 2011) Wuhan, China 10 - 12 May 2011 Pages 1 - 867 IEEE Catalog Number: CFP1129C-PRT ISBN: 978-1-4244-5088-6 1/7 TABLE OF CONTENTS ALGORITHMS, MODELS, SOFTWARE AND TOOLS IN BIOINFORMATICS: A Visualization Quality Evaluation Method for Multiple Sequence Alignments ............................................................1 Hongbin Lee, Bo Wang, Xiaoming Wu, Yonggang Liu, Wei Gao, Huili Li, Xu Wang, Feng He A New Promoter Recognition Method Based On Features Optimal Selection.................................................................5 Lan Tao, Huakui Chen, Yanmeng Xu, Zexuan Zhu A Center Closeness Algorithm For The Analyses Of Gene Expression Data ...................................................................9 Huakun Wang, Lixin Feng, Zhou Ying, Zhang Xu, Zhenzhen Wang A Novel Method For Lysine Acetylation Sites Prediction ................................................................................................ 11 Yongchun Gao, Wei Chen Weighted Maximum Margin Criterion Method: Application To Proteomic Peptide Profile ....................................... 15 Xiao Li Yang, Qiong He, Si Ya Yang, Li Liu Ectopic Expression Of Tim-3 Induces Tumor-Specific Antitumor Immunity................................................................ 19 Osama A. O. Elhag, Xiaojing Hu, Weiying Zhang, Li Xiong, Yongze Yuan, Lingfeng Deng, Deli Liu, Yingle Liu, Hui Geng Small-World Network Properties Of Protein Complexes: Node Centrality And Community Structure -
A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture
A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture Edited by Antje Richter LEIDEN | BOSTON For use by the Author only | © 2015 Koninklijke Brill NV Contents Acknowledgements ix List of Illustrations xi Abbreviations xiii About the Contributors xiv Introduction: The Study of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture 1 Antje Richter PART 1 Material Aspects of Chinese Letter Writing Culture 1 Reconstructing the Postal Relay System of the Han Period 17 Y. Edmund Lien 2 Letters as Calligraphy Exemplars: The Long and Eventful Life of Yan Zhenqing’s (709–785) Imperial Commissioner Liu Letter 53 Amy McNair 3 Chinese Decorated Letter Papers 97 Suzanne E. Wright 4 Material and Symbolic Economies: Letters and Gifts in Early Medieval China 135 Xiaofei Tian PART 2 Contemplating the Genre 5 Letters in the Wen xuan 189 David R. Knechtges 6 Between Letter and Testament: Letters of Familial Admonition in Han and Six Dynasties China 239 Antje Richter For use by the Author only | © 2015 Koninklijke Brill NV vi Contents 7 The Space of Separation: The Early Medieval Tradition of Four-Syllable “Presentation and Response” Poetry 276 Zeb Raft 8 Letters and Memorials in the Early Third Century: The Case of Cao Zhi 307 Robert Joe Cutter 9 Liu Xie’s Institutional Mind: Letters, Administrative Documents, and Political Imagination in Fifth- and Sixth-Century China 331 Pablo Ariel Blitstein 10 Bureaucratic Influences on Letters in Middle Period China: Observations from Manuscript Letters and Literati Discourse 363 Lik Hang Tsui PART 3 Diversity of Content and Style section 1 Informal Letters 11 Private Letter Manuscripts from Early Imperial China 403 Enno Giele 12 Su Shi’s Informal Letters in Literature and Life 475 Ronald Egan 13 The Letter as Artifact of Sentiment and Legal Evidence 508 Janet Theiss 14 Infijinite Variations of Writing and Desire: Love Letters in China and Europe 546 Bonnie S. -
The Chinese People's Liberation Army at 75
THE LESSONS OF HISTORY: THE CHINESE PEOPLE’S LIBERATION ARMY AT 75 Edited by Laurie Burkitt Andrew Scobell Larry M. Wortzel July 2003 ***** The views expressed in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the Department of the Army, the Department of Defense, or the U.S. Government. This report is cleared for public release; distribution is unlimited. ***** Comments pertaining to this report are invited and should be forwarded to: Director, Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College, 122 Forbes Ave., Carlisle, PA 17013-5244. Copies of this report may be obtained from the Publications Office by calling (717) 245-4133, FAX (717) 245-3820, or via the Internet at [email protected] ***** Most 1993, 1994, and all later Strategic Studies Institute (SSI) monographs are available on the SSI Homepage for electronic dissemination. SSI’s Homepage address is: http:// www.carlisle.army.mil/ssi/index.html ***** The Strategic Studies Institute publishes a monthly e-mail news- letter to update the national security community on the research of our analysts, recent and forthcoming publications, and upcoming conferences sponsored by the Institute. Each newsletter also pro- vides a strategic commentary by one of our research analysts. If you are interested in receiving this newsletter, please let us know by e-mail at [email protected] or by calling (717) 245-3133. ISBN 1-58487-126-1 ii CONTENTS Foreword Ambassador James R. Lilley . v Part I: Overview. 1 1. Introduction: The Lesson Learned by China’s Soldiers Laurie Burkitt, Andrew Scobell, and Larry M. -
Mating-Induced Male Death and Pheromone Toxin-Regulated Androstasis
bioRxiv preprint first posted online Dec. 15, 2015; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/034181. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not peer-reviewed) is the author/funder. All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission. Shi, Runnels & Murphy – preprint version –www.biorxiv.org Mating-induced Male Death and Pheromone Toxin-regulated Androstasis Cheng Shi, Alexi M. Runnels, and Coleen T. Murphy* Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics and Dept. of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA *Correspondence to: [email protected] Abstract How mating affects male lifespan is poorly understood. Using single worm lifespan assays, we discovered that males live significantly shorter after mating in both androdioecious (male and hermaphroditic) and gonochoristic (male and female) Caenorhabditis. Germline-dependent shrinking, glycogen loss, and ectopic expression of vitellogenins contribute to male post-mating lifespan reduction, which is conserved between the sexes. In addition to mating-induced lifespan decrease, worms are subject to killing by male pheromone-dependent toxicity. C. elegans males are the most sensitive, whereas C. remanei are immune, suggesting that males in androdioecious and gonochoristic species utilize male pheromone differently as a toxin or a chemical messenger. Our study reveals two mechanisms involved in male lifespan regulation: germline-dependent shrinking and death is the result of an unavoidable cost of reproduction and is evolutionarily conserved, whereas male pheromone-mediated killing provides a novel mechanism to cull the male population and ensure a return to the self-reproduction mode in androdioecious species. Our work highlights the importance of understanding the shared vs. sex- and species- specific mechanisms that regulate lifespan. -
2019 IEEE International Conference on Signal Processing, Communications and Computing (ICSPCC 2019)
2019 IEEE International Conference on Signal Processing, Communications and Computing (ICSPCC 2019) Dalian, China 20 – 22 September 2019 IEEE Catalog Number: CFP1951P-POD ISBN: 978-1-7281-1709-6 Copyright © 2019 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. All Rights Reserved Copyright and Reprint Permissions: Abstracting is permitted with credit to the source. Libraries are permitted to photocopy beyond the limit of U.S. copyright law for private use of patrons those articles in this volume that carry a code at the bottom of the first page, provided the per-copy fee indicated in the code is paid through Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923. For other copying, reprint or republication permission, write to IEEE Copyrights Manager, IEEE Service Center, 445 Hoes Lane, Piscataway, NJ 08854. All rights reserved. *** This is a print representation of what appears in the IEEE Digital Library. Some format issues inherent in the e-media version may also appear in this print version. IEEE Catalog Number: CFP1951P-POD ISBN (Print-On-Demand): 978-1-7281-1709-6 ISBN (Online): 978-1-7281-1708-9 Additional Copies of This Publication Are Available From: Curran Associates, Inc 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 USA Phone: (845) 758-0400 Fax: (845) 758-2633 E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.proceedings.com TABLE OF CONTENTS 9001 - COINCIDENCE OF THE RAO TEST, WALD TEST AND GLRT FOR RADAR TARGET DETECTION IN GENERALIZED PARETO CLUTTER ................................................................................................1 Jian Xue ; Shuwen Xu ; Penglang Shui 9002 - A HYBRID PSO-GA ALGORITHM BASED DIRECTIONAL MODULATION TECHNIQUE ......................5 Feng Liu ; Ling Wang ; Jian Xie ; Wei Zhang 9011 - ADAPTIVE GLRT-, RAO- AND WALD-BASED CFAR DETECTORS FOR DISTRIBUTED TARGETS........................................................................................................................................................................... -
From the Conference Chair
2008 International Conference on Computer Science and Software Engineering (CSSE 2008) Wuhan, China 12 – 14 December 2008 Volume 1 Pages 1-621 IEEE Catalog Number: CFP08CSA-PRT ISBN: 978-1-4244-3902-7 TABLE OF CONTENTS ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE HMM-Based-Correlations in Infrared Remote-Image ....................................................................................1 Rui Yang, Bo Li A Fuzzy Interactive Approach for Decentralized Bilevel Programming Problem with a Common Decision Variable................................................................................................................................5 Guangmin Wang, Zhongping Wan The Research about Integration of Process Planning and Production Scheduling Based on Genetic Algorithm...............................................................................................................................................9 Wang Zhanjie, Tian Ju Water Quality Assessment Using Artificial Neural Network........................................................................13 Ma Huiqun, Liu Ling A Hybrid Multi-user Receiver Based on Parallel Interference Cancellation and Improved Genetic Algorithm.............................................................................................................................................16 Lili Lin Query-Focused Multi-document Summarization Using Keyword Extraction ............................................20 Liang Ma, Tingting He, Fang Li, Zhuomin Gui, Jinguang Chen Weak Biosignal Processing Using Adaptive Wavelet Neural -
Uniparental Genetic Analyses Reveal the Major Origin of Fujian Tanka from Ancient Indigenous Daic Populations
Wayne State University Human Biology Open Access Pre-Prints WSU Press 6-16-2020 Uniparental Genetic Analyses Reveal the Major Origin of Fujian Tanka from Ancient Indigenous Daic Populations Luo Xiao-Qin MOE Key Laboratory of Contemporary Anthropology and B&R International Joint Laboratory for Eurasian Anthropology, School of Life Sciences, Fudan University Du Pan-Xin MOE Key Laboratory of Contemporary Anthropology and B&R International Joint Laboratory for Eurasian Anthropology, School of Life Sciences Wang Ling-Xiang MOE Key Laboratory of Contemporary Anthropology and B&R International Joint Laboratory for Eurasian Anthropology, School of Life Sciences Zhou Bo-Yan MOE Key Laboratory of Contemporary Anthropology and B&R International Joint Laboratory for Eurasian Anthropology, School of Life Sciences Li Yu-Chun State Key Laboratory of Genetic Resources and Evolution/Key Laboratory of Healthy Aging Research of Yunnan Province, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/humbiol_preprints See next page for additional authors Recommended Citation Xiao-Qin, Luo; Pan-Xin, Du; Ling-Xiang, Wang; Bo-Yan, Zhou; Yu-Chun, Li; Hong-Xiang, Zheng; Lan-Hai, Wei; Jun-Jian, Liu; Chang, Sun; Hai-Liang, Meng; Jing-Ze, Tan; Wen-Jing, Su; Shao-Qing, Wen; and Hui, Li, "Uniparental Genetic Analyses Reveal the Major Origin of Fujian Tanka from Ancient Indigenous Daic Populations" (2020). Human Biology Open Access Pre-Prints. 170. https://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/humbiol_preprints/170 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the WSU Press at DigitalCommons@WayneState. It has been accepted for inclusion in Human Biology Open Access Pre-Prints by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@WayneState. -
Danqing Wang
Rights and Citizenship in Chinese Educational Discourse, 1895-1937, with Contemporary Reflections by Danqing Wang A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Theoretical, Cultural and International Studies in Education Department of Educational Policy Studies University of Alberta © Danqing Wang, 2014 Abstract Intellectual awakening from Confucian traditionalism to modern nationalism, along with social movements from subjecthood to citizenship, emerged in the late Qing dynasty and flourished in early Republican China. Accordingly, the practice of using education to nurture a modern citizenry came into existence. This study is an attempt to understand intellectual influences on the rise and development of citizenship education in China at the turn of the twentieth century through a historical inquiry into the works of leading intellectuals on rights and citizenship, as well as textual analysis of curricula and textbooks in relation to civic education. The evolution of the rights discourse and citizenship education in the late Qing dynasty and early Republican China reflects the ambitions and efforts on the part of intellectuals to create a modern China. This study shows that Chinese intellectuals and educators had gained as much sophisticated understanding of rights and civic education as their Western counterparts by the late 1930s. Tensions between nationalists and liberals over the ultimate goal of rights advocacy, whether to strengthen China among nations or to enhance individual liberty, dominated the rights discussion and affected the content of civic curriculum and textbooks. In contrast to the rights discourse in the late Qing dynasty that tended to associate subjects of rights with state/collectives, rights advocacy in the early Republic began to place greater emphasis on individual rights. -
China Mercury-Related Information Analysis Report
China Mercury-related Information Analysis Report China Chemicals Registration Center, State Environmental Protection Administration April 2005 1 Content ABSTRACT .............................................................................................................................................................3 PREFACE.................................................................................................................................................................5 CHINA MERCURY-RELATED INFORMATION ANALYSIS REPORT ............................................6 1 INDUSTRIES CONSUMING MERCURY FOR “INTENTIONAL USE”..............................................................6 1.1 Industries with detailed information ..............................................................................................6 GROSS PVC PRODUCTION....................................................................................................................................7 1.2 Products with limited information................................................................................................11 1.3 Industries/activities with information gap.................................................................................. 12 2 THE INDUSTRIES OF MERCURY RELEASE FROM UNINTENTIONAL USE ................................................13 2.1 Industries with detailed information ........................................................................................... 13 2.2 Industries with limited information ............................................................................................ -
Table of Contents (Print, Part 1)
CONTENTS - Continued PHYSICAL REVIEW A THIRD SERIES, VOLUME 97, NUMBER 3 MARCH 2018 ERRATA Erratum: Two-dimensional magneto-optical trap as a source for cold strontium atoms [Phys. Rev. A 96, 053415 (2017)] (2 pages) .............................................................................. 039901(E) Ingo Nosske, Luc Couturier, Fachao Hu, Canzhu Tan, Chang Qiao, Jan Blume, Y. H. Jiang, Peng Chen, and Matthias Weidemüller Erratum: Cryptographic quantum bound on nonlocality [Phys. Rev. A 95, 022108 (2017)] (1 page)................. 039902(E) Satoshi Ishizaka Erratum: Metrology of high-n Rydberg states of molecular hydrogen with ν/ν = 2×10−10 accuracy [Phys. Rev. A 97, 012501 (2018)] (1 page) ............................................................................... 039903(E) Maximilian Beyer, Nicolas Hölsch, Josef A. Agner, Johannes Deiglmayr, Hansjürg Schmutz, and Frédéric Merkt Erratum: Quantum imaging as an ancilla-assisted process tomography [Phys. Rev. A 94, 042102 (2016)] (2 pages) 039904(E) M. Ghalaii, M. Afsary, S. Alipour, and A. T. Rezakhani Publisher’s Note: Operational quasiprobabilities for continuous variables [Phys. Rev. A 96, 042121 (2017)] (1 page) ............................................................................................................ 039905(E) Jeongwoo Jae, Junghee Ryu, and Jinhyoung Lee Erratum: Kapitza stabilization of a repulsive Bose-Einstein condensate in an oscillating optical lattice [Phys. Rev. A 97, 023607 (2018)] (2 pages) .............................................................................. 039906(E) J. Martin, B. Georgeot, D. Guéry-Odelin, and D. L. Shepelyansky Erratum: Noise correlations of the ultracold Fermi gas in an optical lattice [Phys. Rev. A 77, 053602 (2008)] (1 page) ............................................................................................................ 039907(E) T. Paananen, T. K. Koponen, P. Törmä, and J.-P. Martikainen The editors and referees of PRA find these papers to be of particular interest, importance, or clarity. Please see our Announcement Phys. -
2005 International Conference on Wireless Communications, Networking and Mobile Computing
Proceedings 2005 International Conference on Wireless Communications, Networking and Mobile Computing http://www.whu. edu. cn/WCNM2005 September 23-26, 2005 Wuhan, China Sponsor Wuhan University, China Technical Co-Sponsors IEEE Communication Society IEEE Beijing Branch Chinese Institute of Electronics Virginia Tech. Host The International School of Software Engineering, Wuhan University IEEE Wuhan University COMMUNICATIONS I SOCIETY TIB/UB Hannover 89 126 162 522 Improved Concurrent Constant Modulus Algorithm and Soft Decision Directed Algorithm Based on Fractionally Spaced Equalization 619 Zhensu Lu, Mingqiu Han, Tongfeng Zhang, Juan Du, Shi Huang Partial Parallel Interference Cancellation for Multi-carrier DS-CDMA 623 Guoxiong Xu, Liangcai Gan RTS Threshold Self-tuning Algorithm Based on Delay Analysis on 802.11 DCF 627 Liang Zhang, Yantai Shu Apply FASTICA to Smart Antenna Technology in Wireless Communications Systems 631 Weihua Luo, Yunlian Sun Expanded Subspace Approaches for Multiuser Detection for CDMA Multipath Frequency Selective Fading Channels 635 H. Zhou, W.L. Woo, B.S. Sharif Subspace Based Blind Multiuser Detection for Asynchronous MC-CDMA Systems 639 Lili Lin Application of a Genetic Algorithm to Hopfield Network Multi-user Detection 644 Ying Zhang, Hongli Liu, Fei Kuang, Jia Chen Wavelet Transform and Genetic Algorithm Based Multiuser Detectors for Asynchronous CDMA 648 Lili Lin The Performance of STBC Coded MIMO-OFDM System Based on Turbo Product Codes 653 Yejun He, Guangxi Zhu, Bijun Zhang, Zhenming Zhang, Xia Li RBLIND