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CONTENT 1.MESSAGE FROM DIRECTOR …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 03 2.ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 05 3.HIGHLIGHTS OF ACHIEVEMENTS …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 06 Coexistence of Conserve and Research----“The Germplasm Bank of Wild Species ” services biodiversity protection and socio-economic development ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 06 The Structure, Activity and New Drug Pre-Clinical Research of Monoterpene Indole Alkaloids ………………………………………… 09 Anti-Cancer Constituents in the Herb Medicine-Shengma (Cimicifuga L) ……………………………………………………………………………… 10 Floristic Study on the Seed Plants of Yaoshan Mountain in Northeast Yunnan …………………………………………………………………… 11 Higher Fungi Resources and Chemical Composition in Alpine and Sub-alpine Regions in Southwest China ……………………… 12 Research Progress on Natural Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV) Inhibitors…………………………………………………………………………………… 13 Predicting Global Change through Reconstruction Research of Paleoclimate………………………………………………………………………… 14 Chemical Composition of a traditional Chinese medicine-Swertia mileensis……………………………………………………………………………… 15 Mountain Ecosystem Research has Made New Progress ………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 16 Plant Cyclic Peptide has Made Important Progress ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 17 Progresses in Computational Chemistry Research ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 18 New Progress in the Total Synthesis of Natural Products ……………………………………………………………………………………………………… -
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 -
2016 International Conference on Machine Learning and Cybernetics (ICMLC 2016)
2016 International Conference on Machine Learning and Cybernetics (ICMLC 2016) Jeju Island, South Korea 10-13 July 2016 Volume 1 Pages 1-476 IEEE Catalog Number: CFP16523-POD ISBN: 978-1-5090-0391-4 1/2 Copyright © 2016 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: CFP16523-POD ISBN (Print-On-Demand): 978-1-5090-0391-4 ISBN (Online): 978-1-5090-0390-7 ISSN: 2160-133X 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 Contents Organizing Committee ........................................................................................................................................................ -
XUN XU's FIRST POSTS, CA. 248–265 We Know Next to Nothing
CHAPTER TWO XUN XU’S FIRST POSTS, CA. 248–265 Shang 商: The Harmonious Step Moving away from gong is made comfortable by the harmonious and harmonic shang note. In modes and melodies, shang forms unoffending chords; it cooperates with other notes, like zhi and yu. Harmonics masters knew that the circle-of-fifths derivation, based on gong as “9,” resulted in the pleasing whole number “8” for shang. Xun Xu began his career under the Jin by fitting in with the new regime and cooperat- ing in court projects. We know next to nothing about Xun Xu’s childhood and youth. But from the previous chapter we do know that his family was used to power—power that had first been local, then on the move defensively, next serving Cao Cao’s court at Xu, and finally the Simas in Luoyang. The Xuns offered important political service to the Cao-Wei dynasty, even if the fate of Xun Yu at the hands of Cao Cao had weakened Xun loyalties to that family. Cao Cao’s heirs began to rebuild Luoyang pal- aces and state offices in the 220s, so by the mid-230s such Xun men as Xun Can and Xun Yi began residing there, and the young orphan Xun Xu relied on them, as well as on in-laws, for political grooming and entree. His biography states: Xun Xu was styled Gongceng 公曾. He was a Yingchuan 穎川, Yingyin 穎陰, man, and the great-grandson of Xun Shuang 爽, an [Eastern Han- dynasty] Minister of Works. His grandfather was Xun Fei 棐, who was a Colonel of Archers Who Shoot by Sound. -
Intellectuals in Chinese Fiction a Publication of the Institute of East Asian Studies University of California Berkeley, California 94720
Intellectuals in Chinese Fiction A publication of the Institute of East Asian Studies University of California Berkeley, California 94720 The China Research Monograph series, whose first title appeared in 1967, is one of several publications series sponsored by the Institute of East Asian Studies in conjunction with its constituent units. The others include the Japan Research Monograph series, the Korea Research Monograph series, the Indochina Research Monograph series, and the Research Papers and Pol icy Studies series. The Institute sponsors also a Faculty Reprint series. Correspondence may be sent to: Ms. Joanne Sandstrom, Editor Institute of East Asian Studies University of California Berkeley, California 94720 CHINA RESEARCH MONOGRAPH 33 & INSTITUTE OF EAST ASIAN STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA • BERKELEY CCS CENTER FOR CHINESE STUDIES Intellectuals in Chinese Fiction YUE DAIYUN Although the Institute of East Asian Studies is responsible for the selection and acceptance of manuscripts in this series, responsibility for the opinions expressed and for the accuracy ofstatements rests with their authors. Copyright © 1988 by the Regents of the University of California ISBN 0-912966-97-1 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 87-82667 Printed in the United States of America All rights reserved. Contents Foreword vii Joyce K. Kallgren Acknowledgments viii Introduction 1 1. The First Anecdotal Collection Describing the Lives of Intellectuals: A New Account of Tales of the World 8 2. Intellectuals at an Impasse and the Collapse of Feudal Society: Six Chapters of a Floating Life 38 3. Modem Chinese Intellectuals in Modem Chinese Literature: The Eclipse and Rainbow of Mao Dun 57 4. The Young Intelligentsia in the War Years: Lu Ling's Children of the Rich 83 5. -
The Romance of the Three Kingdoms Podcast. This Is Episode 40. When
Welcome to the Romance of the Three Kingdoms Podcast. This is episode 40. When we left off last time, Yuan Shao was dead, and his three sons quickly took to squabbling with each other and getting smacked around by Cao Cao. When push came to shove and Cao Cao was on the brink of destroying them, however, the three brothers put their differences aside for just long enough to hold down the fort in Ji (4) Province and prevent Cao Cao from breaching the city. Cao Cao then decided that the best course of action was to give these guys a little breathing room and wait for them to turn on their most hated enemy -- each other. So Cao Cao marched his army off to invade Liu Biao’s Jing (1) Province instead. The sons of Yuan Shao did not turn on each other immediately. They first took a few minutes to congratulate each other on fending off Cao Cao. But after Yuan Xi (1), the middle brother, and Gao (1) Gan (4), their cousin, left for their respective home provinces, Yuan Tan (2), the eldest brother, and Yuan Shang (4), the youngest, began to plot against each other. Yuan Tan said to his advisers Guo Tu and Xin Ping, “I am the eldest son, but I did not get to inherit my father’s title. Yuan Shang was born to my stepmother, and yet he got the inheritance. I cannot let this go.” “My lord, you should move your troops to outside the city,” Guo Tu said. “Then invite Yuan Shang and his adviser Shen (3) Pei (4) to your camp for a feast, where you can ambush and kill them. -
Aesthetics and Precision in Court Ritual Songs, Ca. 266–272
CHAPTER THREE AESTHETICS AND PRECISION IN COURT RITUAL SONGS, CA. 266–272 Jue 角: The Turn The third step in the Chinese gamut, another whole step, is a “turn” – the jue note. It gives our ears the “major third” interval from gong. In early China’s circle-of-fifths, the major third’s length is assigned the fraction 7.111, whereas gong, shang, and zhi, have whole numbers. Nu- meric ratios begin to clash with the physics of actual musical instruments. A musicologist in early China would know that beyond jue lay not just hard-to- produce notes, but a world of competing modes. For Xun Xu, the “turn” turned out to be a time of com- plexity and competition. These several years were a turning point during which Xun Xu’s ca- reer went in a new direction. He challenged his peers intellectually and experienced forward motion. He gained appointments to reform the court’s music, starting with lyrics for ritual songs. We see for the first time his overarching principle as a reformer intent on a funda- mentalist Zhou restoration, which on several occasions in China’s past had served as an ideological frame in attempts to unify and shape the realm. A Zhou restoration, according to the most trenchant model, that of Wang Mang’s 王莽 (r. 9–23 ad) court, involved nominal and real changes in noble grants, official hierarchies, administrative and penal code, the calendar, architectural standards and shapes, and ritual song-texts and musical scales. As this book progresses, we shall see that Xun Xu directed many of these areas for the Jin court. -
An Analysis of Chinese Talent Management Strategy: Emphasis on Cao Cao’S Competencies from the Records of the Three Kingdoms
AN ANALYSIS OF CHINESE TALENT MANAGEMENT STRATEGY: EMPHASIS ON CAO CAO’S COMPETENCIES FROM THE RECORDS OF THE THREE KINGDOMS LU KUICHENG A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL GRADUATE STUDIES IN HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT FACULTY OF EDUCATION BURAPHA UNIVERSITY MAY 2018 COPYRIGHT OF BURAPHA UNIVERSITY ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I wish to express my sincere gratitude to the many people who supported and helped me in the completion of this study. For my worthily principle advisor Associate Professor Dr.Chalong Tubsree, I send my heartfelt thanks for his patience and guidance in helping me. In the process of composing this paper, he gave me much academic and constructive advice, and helped me to correct my paper. Without his enlightening instruction, impressive kindness and patience, I could not have completed my thesis. His keen and vigorous academic observation enlightened me not only in this thesis but also in my future study. At the same time, I would like to express my appreciation to my Co-advisor, who gave me useful literature knowledge and information in this paper. She is Assist. Prof. Dr. Wilai Limthawaranun. I am very grateful for her patient guidance in the course of my thesis writing. Finally, I would like to thank the teachers who helped me during my entire study process in the International Graduate Studies Human Resource Development Center of Burapha University. Dr. Watunyoo Suwannaset, Dr. Chalermsri Chantarathong and Rattanasiri Khemraj in the IG-HRD office, thank you for taking care of me meticulously for the last three years. -
The Romance of the Three Kingdoms Podcast. This Is Episode 143. Last
Welcome to the Romance of the Three Kingdoms Podcast. This is episode 143. Last time, Sima Zhao was secretly entertaining thoughts of usurping the throne, but that stirred up a rebellion in the southeastern corner of the kingdom of Wei, led by the general Zhuge Dan (4). Zhuge Dan (4) also asked for and received help from the kingdom of Wu, so now he set himself to preparing for a showdown against Sima Zhao. Meanwhile, a memorial that Zhuge Dan had sent to the emperor arrived in the Wei capital. This memorial was a justification for Zhuge Dan’s rebellion, and it included a long laundry list of Sima Zhao’s offenses. Sima Zhao was naturally ticked off and wanted to go put down this upstart himself. But his adviser Jia Chong (1) said, “My lord, you have inherited your father and brother’s work, but your own virtue and kindness have yet to be felt throughout the realm. If you leave the capital and the emperor now, something might happen at court, and it will be too late for regrets. Why don’t you have the empress dowager and the emperor accompany you on your campaign. That will ensure nothing goes wrong.” Now, it made sense to take the emperor along since, after all, he was the symbol of authority. But the empress dowager? Really? Well, remember how Sima Zhao’s own father seized power at court. While the then emperor was out of the capital, Sima Yi went to the empress dowager and basically forced her to give his coup her blessings. -
428379 1 En Bookbackmatter 179..198
Epilogue Ever since the term “Chinese people’s Inner Experience” was proposed in 2009, I have wanted to write a book with that title to call people’s attention to the changes in Chinese values and social mentality since the adoption of reform and opening up in 1978. My motive was simple: it had been thirty years since the introduction of reform and opening up in 1978 and China had experienced earth-shattering changes during this period; our GDP had risen from 265 billion USD to 5 trillion USD to become the world’s second largest behind the United States, and we had been marching toward a truly modern society through the implementation of relevant systems, the rule of law, and the market economy. Furthermore, concurrent with the changes in social structure, what we call the ever-changing “socialmentality” exemplified by values, lifestyle, and social behavior has also undergone profound transformation. Like the changes in social structure, those in social mentality are also far-reaching and profound; not only have they left their imprint on the five thousand years of China’s cultural history, they can also serve as a psychological playbook for all the developing countries undergoing transformation toward modernity. Viewed from this angle, these massive changes in social mentality experienced by the Chinese people in the past thirty years can be totalized as the Chinese Experience, or more appropriately, the Chinese people’s Inner Experience, which comprises the changes in values and social mentality at its core but also subjective emotions and psychological condensates; the Chinese people’s Inner Experience rounds out the Chinese Experience by imbuing it with value and meaning. -
中国物理快报 Chinese Physics Letters
ISSN: 0256-307X 中国物理快报 Chinese Physics Letters A Series Journal of the Chinese Physical Society Distributed by IOP Publishing Online: http://www.iop.org/journals/cpl http://cpl.iphy.ac.cn CHINESE PHYSICAL SOCIETY CHIN. PHYS. LETT. Vol. 27, No. 5 (2010) 056201 Frequency Response of the Sample Vibration Mode in Scanning Probe Acoustic Microscope * ZHAO Ya-Jun(ë亚军), CHENG Qian(§0), QIAN Meng-Lu(a梦è)** Institute of Acoustics, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092 (Received 22 December 2009) Based on the interaction mechanism between tip and sample in the contact mode of a scanning probe acoustic microscope (SPAM), an active mass of the sample is introduced in the mass-spring model. The tip motion and frequency response of the sample vibration mode in the SPAM are calculated by the Lagrange equation with dissipation function. For the silicon tip and glass assemblage in the SPAM the frequency response is simulated and it is in agreement with the experimental result. The living myoblast cells on the glass slide are imaged at resonance frequencies of the SPAM system, which are 20 kHz, 30 kHz and 120 kHz. It is shown that good contrast of SPAM images could be obtained when the system is operated at the resonance frequencies of the system in high and low-frequency regions. PACS: 62. 30. +d, 68. 37. Ps, 07. 79. Lh DOI: 10.1088/0256-307X/27/5/056201 The quasi-static detection technology of scanning The sample contacting with the tip can be con- probe microscopy (SPM) has been rapidly develop- sidered as a dynamic load of the tip in the sample ing into a fully dynamic detection technology recently. -
An Empirical Study of Chinese Historical Text and Novel
Complicating the Social Networks for Better Storytelling: An Empirical Study of Chinese Historical Text and Novel CHENHAN ZHANG, Southern University of Science and Technology Digital humanities is an important subject because it enables developments in history, literature, and films. In this paper, we perform an empirical study of a Chinese historical text, Records of the Three Kingdoms (Records), and a historical novel of the same story, Romance of the Three Kingdoms (Romance). We employ natural language processing techniques to extract characters and their relationships. Then, we characterize the social networks and sentiments of the main characters in the historical text and the historical novel. We find that the social network in Romance is more complex and dynamic than that of Records, and the influence of the main characters differs. These findings shed light on the different styles of storytelling in the two literary genres and howthehistorical novel complicates the social networks of characters to enrich the literariness of the story. CCS Concepts: • Networks ! Topology analysis and generation. Additional Key Words and Phrases: natural language processing, social network analysis ACM Reference Format: Chenhan Zhang. 2020. Complicating the Social Networks for Better Storytelling: An Empirical Study of Chinese Historical Text and Novel. 1, 1 (August 2020), 20 pages. https://doi.org/10.1145/nnnnnnn.nnnnnnn 1 INTRODUCTION Digital humanities is a transdisciplinary subject between information technologies and humanities, such as literary classics. For instance, Google makes a contribution to digital humanities by promoting the “Google Books Library Project” which includes millions of paper books scanned into electronic text [33]. Digital text is easier for researchers to explore than printed books, since the development of information technology has provided numerous effective tools [35].