Curriculum Vitae

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Curriculum Vitae Curriculum Vitae Phone: 86-023-68251992 Fax: 86-023-68251196 Email: [email protected] Daijun Song Associate Professor College of Animal Science and Technology, Southwest University 2 Tiansheng Road, Beibei,Chongqing 400715, P.R. China Education B.S., Animal Husbandry, Southwest Agricultural University, China, 1989. M.S., Animal Production, Northwest Agricultural University, China, 1992. Ph.D., Animal Nutrition, Sichuan Agricultural University, China, 2000. Research Fields: 1. Poultry and Ruminant Nutrition and Feeding Techniques 2. Digestive Physiology of Poultry and Ruminants Employment History 2000.7-Present Associate Professor, College of Animal Science and Technology, Southwest University 1994.6-1996.9 Lecturer, College of Animal Science and Technology, Southwest Agricultural University 1992.7-1994.6 Assistant researcher, College of Animal Science and Technology, Southwest Agricultural University Research Project (as project sponsor ) 1.Research on Nutrient Requirements and Dynamical Model for Animal.11th Five-Year Plan period National Key Technologies R&D Program of P.R.China attack plan project (2001BA604A03, 2001-2005). 2. Research on the Effect of Nutrition Level on Alleviating Heat Stress of Lean Type Pig in the 1 Subtropical Zone. National Funds for Natural Science Chongqing Municipal, P.R.China (2006-2008). 3. Research on the Digestive Physiology of Dazu Black Goat. Key Technology R&D Program of Chongqing Municipal, P.R.China (2011-2014). Selected Publications (*:corresponding author) 1. YANG You, YUAN Zhilin, DONG Guozhong, WEI Xueliang, SONG Daijun*. The Effect of Two Dietary Levels of Fatty Acid Calcium and Chromium Nicotinate on Performance, Physiological and Serum Biochemical Indexes of Heat-stress Diary Cows.Chinese Journal of Animal Nutrition, 2012, 24 (1) :145-151 (In Chinese with English abstract) 2. GUO Zhiqiang, SONG Daijun*, YU Yongxiong, XIE Xiaohong, YI Jun, ZHANG Jiahua, LEI Min. Research on Nutrition Evaluation of Yumu No.1 Alfalfa in Rabbit. Acta Prataculturae Sinica, 2011,6(3): 122 -127 (In Chinese with English abstract) 3. TANG Zhiru, SONG Daijun, DONG Guozhong, SUN Zhihong, LI Zhouquan . Functional Amino Acids Enhance Growth and Health of Pregnant and Lactating Sows, and Neonatal Piglets: a Review. Chinese Journal of Animal Nutrition, 2011, 23(11) : 1898-1905 (In Chinese with English abstract) 4. YUAN Zhilin, ZHANG Ling, SONG Daijun*, PENG Xiangwei, XIE Jun. The Comparison of Effect of Diet Supplemented Roche, Basf and VTR Phytase Enzyme on Performance and Phosphorus Deposition of Starter Meat Ducks. Journal of Southwest China Normal University (Natural Science Edition), 2009,34(3):127-131(In Chinese with English abstract) 5. SONG Daijun, HUANG Manqiu, LV Jingzhi, YANG you, ZHANG Jiahua. Safety Evaluation on Meat and Bone Meal in China. Chinese Journal of Animal Science, 2009,10(18):17-21 6. SONG Daijun,LEI Ningli,YAO Junhu,YANG Jing,LV Jingzhi,ZHU Tianhe,KANG Kaiping, ZHANG Jiahua. Effects of Dietary Menthionine and Lysine Level on Performance in the Midanaphase Stage of Laying Hens. Journal of Southwest University (Natural Science Edition),2008,30(12):45-50 (In Chinese with English abstract) 7. SONG Daijun, ZHANG Jiahua, YANG You, QIAO Yanfang, TIAN Maochun .Effect of Weaning Age on Mucosal Morphology in Small Intestine of Goat Kids. Chinese Journal of Animal Nutrition, 2007,19 (4) :344-349 (In Chinese with English abstract) 8. CHENG Yuanfang, SONG Daijun*, ZENG Youquan, ZHANG Jiahua. Studies on the Mechanism of Herb Additive on Alleviating Heat Stress of Growing Pigs. Chinese Journal of 2 Animal Nutrition, 2006,18 (1) :43-48 (In Chinese with English abstract) 9. SONG Daijun, FANG Lichao, DONG Guozhong, ZHANG Jiahua. Effects of Dietary Energy and Protein Levels on Histology of Muscle in Broilers. Acta Veterinaria et Zootechnica Sinica,2002 ,33 (6) ,551-554 (In Chinese with English abstract) 10. YAO Junhu, WANG Kangning, SONG Daijun. Effects of feeding on the contents of Plasma Free Amino Acids in Broiler Chicken.Acta Univ Agric Boreali-occidentalis Sinica, 1999,27:95-101. (In Chinese with English abstract) Puplish works: Feed Science(In Chinese,textbook for college students). Feed Additive Science(In Chinese,textbook for college students). Biometrics and Experiment Design (In Chinese,textbook for college students). 3.
Recommended publications
  • Ispec2020 Program
    Energy Transition and Energy Internet 9. Technical Program 9.1 Registration and Welcome Reception (Sunday, November 22) Time Schedule Room 10:00-20:00 Registration Hotel Lobby 18:00-20:00 Buffet Dinner Provence Western Restaurant 9.2 Technical Sessions (Monday, November 23) Opening Ceremony Chair: Shujun Lu, Deputy President of CSEE Place: Lily Hall A Time: 09:00-9:30, Monday, November 23 Welcome Speakers: Yinbiao Shu President of Chinese Society for Electrical Engineering Frank Lambert President of IEEE PES Haijian Hu President of State Grid Sichuan Electric Power Company Liangyin Chu Vice President of Sichuan University Ning Hua Senior Director, Asia Pacific Business Operations, IEEE November 23-25, 2020 32 IEEE Sustainable Power & Energy Conference Keynote Session 1 Chair: Chongqing Kang, Director of Electrical Engineering Tsinghua University President of Sichuan Energy Internet Research Institute TsingHua University Place: Lily Hall A Time: 09:30-12:00, Monday, November 23 09:30-09:55 KS-01 Several Key Scientific Issues of Polymer Nanocomposites—High Energy Storage Density Electrolytic Condensers Qingquan Lei Academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering Professor of Harbin University of Science and Technology 09:55-10:20 KS-02 Integration of Renewables and Grid Reliability Chanan Singh Member of the National Academy of Engineering, IEEE Fellow CSEE foreign association Texas A&M University, USA 10:20-10:45 KS-03 Challenges and Countermeasures of CSG System Characteristics Evolution under Power Electronics Dominated Transmission Grid and High Renewable Energy Penetration Chao Hong Senior Technical Expert of China Southern Power Grid Co., Ltd. Director of Systems Research Institute of SEPRI 10:45-11:10 KS-04 Fast Renewable Resource Control in Future Power Systems Joe H.
    [Show full text]
  • Etts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02138 April 2020, Revised March 2021
    NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES PERSISTENCE DESPITE REVOLUTIONS Alberto F. Alesina Marlon Seror David Y. Yang Yang You Weihong Zeng Working Paper 27053 http://www.nber.org/papers/w27053 NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH 1050 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02138 April 2020, Revised March 2021 Alberto has poured his passion and creativity into this project, all the way until the very morning of his passing. We cherish and are immensely grateful for the joyful, but unfortunately short, experience of working together with Alberto. Helpful and much appreciated suggestions and comments were provided by Maxim Boycko, Raj Chetty, Melissa Dell, John Friedman, Paola Giuliano, Ed Glaeser, Claudia Goldin, Sergei Guriev, Larry Katz, Gerard Padroí Miquel, Elias Papaioannou, Nancy Qian, Andrei Shleifer, and participants at many seminars and conferences. We also benefited from outstanding research assistance from Andrew Kao, Yanzhao Liu, Jiabao Song, Angela Yu, Tanggang Yuan and a dedicated data entry team in digitizing the County Gazetteer data, and from Jeanne de Montalembert in digitizing additional 1930s survey data. Seror gratefully acknowledges support from the LABEX OSE – ouvrir la Science Économique. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research. NBER working papers are circulated for discussion and comment purposes. They have not been peer- reviewed or been subject to the review by the NBER Board of Directors that accompanies official NBER publications. © 2020 by Alberto F. Alesina, Marlon Seror, David Y. Yang, Yang You, and Weihong Zeng. All rights reserved. Short sections of text, not to exceed two paragraphs, may be quoted without explicit permission provided that full credit, including © notice, is given to the source.
    [Show full text]
  • Language Unification, Labor and Ideology*
    * Language Unification, Labor and Ideology Yang You Harvard University Last Updated: March 2018 Abstract By exploring an instance of nationwide language education reform—the Chinese Pinyin Act of 1958-1960—we estimate the effects of language unification using a difference-in-difference approach by interacting a birth cohort exposure dummy with the linguistic distances between local languages and Putonghua—modern standardized Mandarin. This paper presents five main findings: (1) learning Putonghua results in modest short-term negative effects, but long-term positive effects on educational attainment; (2) learning Putonghua increases rural households’ non-agricultural employment; (3) sharing a common language empowers workers to migrate across provinces and language regions; and (4) using a unified language fosters patriotism, a stronger national identity, a more positive subjective evaluation of China, and even more distrust in people of another nationality. One plausible channel is that the common language builds national identity by expanding exposure to audio-based media (e.g., radio, cell phone, and the internet); and (5) the post-reform population shows more skepticism about democracy, a better subjective evaluation of governance, and greater support for government intervention over economic liberalism. These changes in ideology and social preferences are consistent with the political doctrine of the Communist Party of China. Keywords: Language, Education, Labor market, Ideology, Social Preference JEL Code: I25, I26, L82, N45, O15, Z13 * We thank Michael Kremer for outstanding guidance and support. We are grateful to Alberto Alesina, Philipp Ager, Benjamin Enke, Richard Freeman, Edward Glaeser, Lawrence Katz, Nathan Nunn, Andrei Shleifer, Stefanie Stantcheva, Jack Willis, Noam Yuchtman and seminar participants at the Harvard Development Economics lunch seminar, the Economic History lunch seminar, the Public/Labor lunch seminar, the China Economy Seminar and The Econometric Society Asian Meeting 2017, for their comments and helpful discussions.
    [Show full text]
  • General Li Jing'in Askerî Düşüncesi Ve Doğu Göktürk Kağanlığı'nın Çöküşü
    Hacettepe Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Tarih Anabilim Dalı GENERAL LI JING’İN ASKERÎ DÜŞÜNCESİ VE DOĞU GÖKTÜRK KAĞANLIĞI’NIN ÇÖKÜŞÜ Hayrettin İhsan ERKOÇ Doktora Tezi Ankara, 2015 GENERAL LI JING’İN ASKERÎ DÜŞÜNCESİ VE DOĞU GÖKTÜRK KAĞANLIĞI’NIN ÇÖKÜŞÜ Hayrettin İhsan ERKOÇ Hacettepe Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Tarih Anabilim Dalı Doktora Tezi Ankara, 2015 iii TEŞEKKÜR Doktora tez çalışmam boyunca çalışmamı yakından takip ederek her türlü yardımı ve desteği sağlayan tez danışmanım Doç. Dr. Erkin Ekrem’e, yine tez çalışmam boyunca değerli katkılarıyla ve önerileriyle tezimi zenginleştiren Prof. Dr. Ali Merthan Dündar’a ve Prof. Dr. Yunus Koç’a, tez savunma sınavımda kıymetli düşünceleriyle tezime katkıda bulunan Prof. Dr. Saadettin Yağmur Gömeç’e ve Prof. Dr. Mehmet Özden’e teşekkürlerimi sunarım. Çalışmakta olduğum Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart Üniversitesi Fen- Edebiyat Fakültesi Tarih Bölümü’nün tüm akademik personeline doktora tez çalışmam boyunca bana çeşitli kolaylıklar sağladıkları için teşekkür ederim. Ayrıca hayatımın en büyük maddî-manevî destekçileri olan babama ve anneme de en derin şükranlarımı sunmayı bir borç bilirim. iv ÖZET ERKOÇ, Hayrettin İhsan. General Li Jing’in Askerî Düşüncesi ve Doğu Göktürk Kağanlığı’nın Çöküşü, Doktora Tezi, Ankara, 2015. Göktürk Kağanlığı 552’de kurulduktan sonra 583 yılında ikiye bölünmüştür. Doğu Göktürk Kağanlığı da 627’den itibaren yaşadığı bir dizi felaketin ardından 630 yılında Çin’deki Tang 唐 Hanedanı tarafından yıkılmıştır. Kağanlığın yıkılmasının ekolojik, ekonomik ve siyasî sebepleri vardır. Yaşanan sert kışlar ve askerî masraflar yüzünden ekonomi bozulmuş, ağır vergilendirmeler yüzünden kağanlığa bağlı konar-göçer boylar ayaklanmışlardır. Göktürk hükümdarı İllig Ḳaġan’ın (Xie-li Ke-han 頡利可汗) devlet yönetiminde Soğdlular ve Çinliler gibi yabancılara daha ağırlık vermesi, kağanlığın kurucu unsuru olan Göktürk beylerinin tepkisini çekmiştir.
    [Show full text]
  • Omen Watching, Mantic Observation, Aeromancy, and Learning to 'See': the Rise and Messy Multiplicity of Zhanhou 占候 in L
    EASTM 50 (2019): 67-131 Omen Watching, Mantic Observation, Aeromancy, and Learning to ‘See’: The Rise and Messy Multiplicity of Zhanhou 占候 in Late Han and Medieval China* Stephan N. Kory [Stephan N. Kory is Assistant Professor of Chinese at the University of Florida, where he teaches literary Chinese and ancient and medieval Chinese literature and culture in the Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures. He has a Ph.D. in Chinese Language and Culture from Indiana University and an MA in Chinese Language and Literature from the University of Colorado. Author of a number of articles and book reviews in scholarly journals, much of his current research focuses on interstices between medieval Chinese religion and literature, particularly as they are manifested in narrative and technical records of mantic and medical practices and practitioners. Contact: [email protected]] * * * Abstract: This article investigates the early history of a Chinese mantic practice unattested before the late first century CE known as zhanhou 占候 (lit., omen watching; divination through observation; divination of atmo- spheric or meteorological conditions). While early occurrences of the term primarily present it as a learned form of divination used to forecast human fortune through the interpretation of anomalous emanations of qi 氣 in heaven-and-earth (e.g., wind; clouds; rain; rainbows), zhanhou is also variously classified as an astrological, Five Agents, or military technique; and variously identified as a hemerological, medical, and contemplative- visualization practice by the end of the Tang. I not only contend that zhanhou’s inherent polysemy and its multiple identities helped broaden and perpetuate its transmission during the first millennium of the * Acknowledgements: I would like to thank Michael Stanley-Baker and Pierce Salguero for organizing the 2014 Penn State Abington College Symposium on Science and Religion in China that inspired this article, as well as all of the participants who helped shape early versions of it.
    [Show full text]
  • The Yangzhou Storytelling of Rogue Pi Wu
    The Yangzhou Storytelling of Rogue Pi Wu A Case Study of Yang Mingkun and His Repertoire LIU LIU 劉 琉 Faculty of Arts and Social Science The University of Sydney A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy The Yangzhou Storytelling of Rogue Pi Wu Abstract Yangzhou pinghua is a genre of Chinese chantefables. It is a living tradition with a history of more than 300 years and is listed as China’s intangible cultural heritage. The present research project is designed primarily as a case study of the Yangzhou pinghua performance of Rogue Pi Wu by Yang Mingkun, the ninth-generation heir of the Pu School of Pi Wu. This study combines methods borrowed from anthropological, linguistic, and literary fields to examine the history and performance of the Yangzhou pinghua repertoire of Rogue Pi Wu. Through observing both the performance tradition of the Pu School and the repertoire of Rogue Pi Wu performed by Yang, this study finds that the Yangzhou dialect acts as a special channel through which Yang communicates with his audiences in a most effective and intimate way. This study also finds that Yang develops a powerful narrative strategy by skilfully integrating oral narrative with written narrative into a coherent whole. Based on these findings, among others, I argue that Yang acheives a special aesthetic effect for his version of Rogue Pi Wu by creatively preserving and developing the Pu School of Pi Wu. ii / 251 The Yangzhou Storytelling of Rogue Pi Wu Table of Contents Abstract ................................................................................................................................... ii List of Tables .........................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Relations Between the Tang Dynasty and the Gök Turks and Did It Lead to Turkish Western Migration? Qihan Long Royal Holloway University of London
    2019 International Conference on Cultural Studies, Tourism and Social Sciences (CSTSS 2019) The Relations between the Tang Dynasty and the Gök Turks and Did It Lead to Turkish Western Migration? Qihan Long Royal Holloway University of London Keywords: history, turkish western migration, Chinese dynasty. Abstract. By the early seventh century, the Göktürks had become the biggest threat to the Celestial Dynasty (China ) since the days of the Xiongnu empire. According to the Old Book of Tang, the primary document of the Tang dynasty, “the Göktürks held a large standing army over one million soldiers. The strength of northern barbarian was unprecedented”. The Göktürks had become a threat to China since the previous dynasties. Before the Tang dynasty was established, the Göktürks, just like the Roman empire once did, was split into two parts: the eastern Göktürks and the western Göktürks; however, both parts of the Göktürks were still strong enough to threaten the newly established Chinese dynasty. When Emperor Gaozu started the uprising, the Tang dynasty made an alliance with the Göktürks. In 630, the lands of the eastern Göktürks were annexed by the Tang dynasty. Just decades later, the western Göktürks fell under Tang attack. The Tang dynasty established protectorates in the land of former Göktürks empire. The battles and relationship between the Turks and Tang dynasty will be explored in order to understand how the once powerful Turkic empire collapsed both internally and externally and why the Turks eventually migrated westward. It will be argued that the Tang empire’s military conquest of Göktürks eventually led to the Turkic westward migration.
    [Show full text]
  • Scavenging Effects of Echinacea Purpurea Extract and Active Ingredient Against Peroxynitrite
    2009 3rd International Conference on Bioinformatics and Biomedical Engineering (iCBBE 2009) Beijing, China 11 – 13 June 2009 Pages 1-605 IEEE Catalog Number: CFP0929C-PRT ISBN: 978-1-4244-2901-1 Copyright © 2009 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronic 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 publication is a representation of what appears in the IEEE Digital Libraries. Some format issues inherent in the e-media version may also appear in this print version. IEEE Catalog Number: CFP0929C-PRT ISBN 13: 978-1-4244-2901-1 Library of Congress No.: 2008935829 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] TABLE OF CONTENTS Scavenging Effects of Echinacea purpurea Extract and Active Ingredient Against Peroxynitrite...........................................................1 Yun-Jing Luo, Jing-Lin Pan, Yan-Shu Pan, Ru Gang Zhong Spatial
    [Show full text]
  • COAL CONFERENCE University of Pittsburgh · Swanson School of Engineering FINAL TECHNICAL PROGRAM Clean Coal-Based Energy/Fuels and the Environment
    Thirty-Fifth Annual INTERNATIONAL PITTSBURGH COAL CONFERENCE University of Pittsburgh · Swanson School of Engineering FINAL TECHNICAL PROGRAM Clean Coal-based Energy/Fuels and the Environment October 15-18, 2018 New Century Grand Hotel Xuzhou Hosted by: The conference acknowledges the support of Co-hosted by: K. C. Wong Education Foundation, Hong Kong WELCOME! On behalf of the Conference Advisory Board, Conference Committees, and the University of Pittsburgh we welcome you to the Thirty-Fifth Annual International Pittsburgh Coal Conference, which will be held October 15-18, 2018 at the New Century Grand Hotel Xuzhou, Xuzhou, Jiangsu Province, P. R. China, The Conference is hosted by China University of Mining Technology (CUMT) and University of Pittsburgh (PITT). The theme of this year’s conference “Clean Coal-based Energy/Fuels and the Environment” covers wide spectrum of important topics on energy and environmental issues and technologies, which are directly related to coal extraction and utilization and its byproducts. Over 350 technical papers and posters will be presented at the conference. The Poster Sessions will be held on Tuesday, October 16, 2017 from 17:15 to 20:30. For detailed information about the technical sessions, please turn to page 6 in the Technical Program. This year’s invited Plenary Speakers include: Prof. LI Yang, Chinese Academy of Engineering, China; Mr. Zhai Hong, Shanxi Yangquan Coal Industry (Group) Co., Ltd. China; Prof. GE Shirong, China University of Mining and Technology, China; Ms. Diane Madden, DOE-NETL, USA; Dr. LI Quansheng, Office for 2030 Project, China Energy Group, China; Dr. LI Wei, Yankuang Group Co., Ltd., China; Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • A Narratological Analysis of Shi Ji
    University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2016 Building Blocks of Chinese Historiography: A Narratological Analysis of Shi Ji Lei Yang University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the Asian History Commons, and the Asian Studies Commons Recommended Citation Yang, Lei, "Building Blocks of Chinese Historiography: A Narratological Analysis of Shi Ji" (2016). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 2113. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/2113 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/2113 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Building Blocks of Chinese Historiography: A Narratological Analysis of Shi Ji Abstract In Shi ji studies, scholars from both the East and West have predominantly taken one particular approach: the psychological reading of its author, Sima Qian. Since the author suffered penal castration when he was writing the Shi ji, this approach has been summarized as “the theory of conveying one’s frustration.” Many scholars, modern and pre-modern alike, have inferred the author’s feelings and emotions from his biographical experiences and have interpreted the text accordingly. This narrow interpretation constrains our understanding by exclusively focusing on the author’s personal pains and purposes. Such analysis thus commits the intentional fallacy, which mistakenly equates the author with the text, unjustifiably simplifying the complicated interpretive process. I explore the features of the text itself, shifting the focus of research from the author’s intention to the effects produced by its narrative devices, which have determinative influence over the interpretive process but have long been overlooked.
    [Show full text]
  • Autonomy-Oriented Computing (AOC): the Nature and Implications of a Paradigm for Self-Organized Computing
    Proceedings Fourth International Conference on Natural Computation ICNC 2008 18-20 October 2008 Jinan, China Sponsored by International Natural Computation and Knowledge Discovery Association (INCKDA) Organized by Shandong University Edited by Maozu Guo, Liang Zhao, and Lipo Wang Los Alamitos, California Washington • Tokyo TABLE OF CONTENTS KEYNOTE LECTURE Autonomy-Oriented Computing (AOC): The Nature and Implications of a Paradigm for Self-Organized Computing.................................................................................................................................1 Jiming Liu EVOLUTIONARY LEARNING A Hybrid Genetic Algorithm for Simultaneous Feature Selection and Rule Learning ..............................10 Zhichun Wang, Minqiang Li A Novel Evolutionary Algorithm for Numeric Optimization........................................................................15 He Rui, Zhang Guangwei, Niu Jianwei A Parallel Biclustering Algorithm for Gene Expressing Data.......................................................................20 Wei Liu, Ling Chen, Hongyu Qu, Ling Qin A Self-Adaptive Mutation-Particle Swarm Optimization Algorithm...........................................................25 Zhengwei Li, Guojun Tan A Solution to Select Multicast Service Nodes of Hierarchical Overlay Multicast Tree Based on Immune Evolution .......................................................................................................................................30 Deqiang Cheng, Jin Lu, Jiansheng Qian An Evolutionary-Based
    [Show full text]
  • Index 4-Horse Chariot, 7 8-Degree Span, 177 8-Trigram Order, 522–23, 529 14-Clan Origin, 308 14-Nation Mi-Bing, 24, 56, 181 36
    Index 4-horse chariot, 7 admonished king-father Zhou-ling-wang, 33 8-degree span, 177 admonition, father Zi-yu2’s, 16 8-trigram order, 522–23, 529 adopted minister Duan’gan Peng’s advice, 14-clan origin, 308 191 14-nation Mi-bing, 24, 56, 181 adultery, 10, 21, 28, 30, 66, 96, 134, 138, 36-person mission, 568 254, 321–22, 388, 397, 422–23, 454, 64-hexagram orders, 522–23 544 1000-chariot status, 232 king’s, 50 1000-li distance campaign, 456 lord’s, 52 60,000-character book, 206 adulthood coronation, 375 100,000-character book, 546 advocating Confucianism, 542 advocating thrift people, 541 A aeons, 178, 482 Abakan Rivers, 448 aeon-scale, 570–71 abduct, 113, 125, 302–3, 325, 394, 446, 557 aetheling, 13, 33, 86, 99, 106 abducted ministers Luan Shu, 30 crown, 106, 251 abducting Qin King, 324 aetheling’s words, 33 abduct Lu Lord Dinggong, 113 aetheling title, 30 abilities, 15, 36, 84, 326, 557 Aetheling Wang-zi-Chao, 122 aboriginals, 334 expelled Zhou, 100, 106 aborted campaign, first, 393 supported Zhou, 98–99, 101 abridging, 7, 147 Aetheling Zi-chao, 105 academy, 165, 238, 487 attacked Zhou, 100 former Zhou dynasty’s, 556 late, 124 academy doctorate, 545 making Zhou, 98 accusation, wrong, 258 supported junior Zhou, 99 acknowledgement, reciprocal king, 212 time Zhou, 106 action affiliation, tribal, 432, 469 first, 152–53 Afghanistan, 411, 425–26, 429, 434, 470 five-nation, 239–40 Afghanistan in Central Asia, 400 joint, 27, 42, 105, 157, 196, 198, 200, age, 61–62, 65, 147–48, 214, 237–38, 232, 263, 266 313–14, 332, 334, 385–86, 397–98, joint
    [Show full text]