3 resultados para right to privacy

em Chinese Academy of Sciences Institutional Repositories Grid Portal


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Land-use change is an important aspect of global environment change. It is, in a sense, the direct result of human activities influencing our physical environment. Supported by the dynamic serving system of national resources, including both the environment database and GIS technology, this paper analyzed the land-use change in northeastern China in the past ten years (1990 - 2000). It divides northeastern China into five land-use zones based on the dynamic degree (DD) of land-use: woodland/grassland - arable land conversion zone, dry land - paddy field conversion zone, urban expansion zone, interlocked zone of farming and pasturing, and reclamation and abandoned zone. In the past ten years, land-use change of northeastern China can be generalized as follows: increase of cropland area was obvious, paddy field and dry land increased by 74. 9 and 276. 0 thousand ha respectively; urban area expanded rapidly, area of town and rural residence increased by 76. 8 thousand ha; area of forest and grassland decreased sharply with the amount of 1399. 0 and 1521. 3 thousand ha respectively; area of water body and unused land increased by 148. 4 and 513. 9 thousand ha respectively. Besides a comprehensive analysis of the spatial patterns of land use, this paper also discusses the driving forces in each land-use dynamic zones. The study shows that some key biophysical factors affect conspicuously the conversion of different land- use types. In this paper, the relationships between land- use conversion and DEM, accnmlated temperature(>= 10 degrees C) and precipitation were analysed and represented. We conclude that the land- use changes in northeast China resulted from the change of macro social and economic factors and local physical elements. Rapid population growth and management changes, in some sense, can explain the shaping of woodland/grassland - cropland conversion zone. The conversion from dry land to paddy field in the dry land - paddy field conversion zone, apart from the physical elements change promoting the expansion of paddy field, results from two reasons: one is that the implementation of market-economy in China has given farmers the right to decide what they plant and how they plant their crops, the other factor is originated partially from the change of dietary habit with the social and economic development. The conversion from paddy field to dry land is caused primarily by the shortfall of irrigation water, which in turn is caused by poor water allocation managed by local governments. The shaping of the reclamation and abandoned zone is partially due to the lack of environment protection consciousness among pioneer settlers. The reason for the conversion from grassland to cropland is the relatively higher profits of fanning than that of pasturing in the interlocked zone of farming and pasturing. In northeastern China, the rapid expansion of built-up areas results from two factors: the first is its small number of towns; the second comes from the huge potential for expansion of existing towns and cities. It is noticeable that urban expansion in the northeastern China is characterized by gentle topographic relief and low population density. Physiognomy, transportation and economy exert great influences on the urban expansion.

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The estimation of Time to Collision (TTC) related to avoiding collisions or making interceptions is an important cognitive ability for individuals. A number of studies have been carried out on this topic and related theories are developed. One of the most famous theories is the τ Theory. Based on the τ Theory, researches have found that visual information and physical information of moving objects would influent the TTC estimation. Are there any other factors that can affect people’s TTC estimation? A mixed design was used to examine the TTC estimation by different types of participants (professional drivers / people can not drive), with different moving objects (car/tricycle), under different speed (slow/fast) and direction (left to right / right to left) in Occlusion Paradigm. There were 21 professional drivers and 20 individuals who cannot drive participated in the experiment which was displayed on a computer. Participants were asked to click the button when he/she believed that the moving object had just contacted the red line. E-prime was used to establish the whole experimental environment and the RT was recorded at the same time. The results revealed that: (1) there is significant different TTC estimation between car and tricycle; (2) the professional drivers have more accurate TTC estimation than people do not drive. We can come to conclusion that conceptual information and driving skill could affect TTC estimation.

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Human being built and updated the representations of spatial distances and spatial relations between protagonist and the around things in language comprehension. The representations of the spatial relations in egocentric spatial situational models were important in spatial cognition, narrative comprehension and psycholinguistic. Using imagery searching paradigm, Franklin and Tversky (1990) studied the representations of the spatial relations in egocentric spatial situational models and found the standard RT pattern of searching the objects in different directions around the observer (frontright). But in his paradigm, there was focus bias that could brought out the standard RT pattern based on the findings in perceptual space(Hintzman, 1981). Eight experiments were conducted to distinguish the factors that affected the RT pattern in imagery searching. Rt. patterns in experiments 1, 2, 3, showed that there were two factors in identify which object was currently located beyond the observer's front, back, right, and left. The first factor (called direction effect) was for identifying the referred direction of probing noun, with a pattern of process time frontright=left. the second factor (called relative position effect) was for putting the attention to the goal direction to identify the goal object, with a pattern of process time focusto focusto focus=clockwise next to focus. These two factors were independent to each other. These results supported that there are two kinds of spatial relations in egocentric framework: Body-Object relation and Object-Object relation. Without relation position effect, the standard RT pattern was found in reacting to direction nouns in Experiment 4, whereas another RT pattern (left=right=frontto direction arrows Experiment 5. These results supported this hypothesis: The mapping of conceptual representation (direction nouns) to perceptual representation (the position of objects around body) was required in searching task (from direction nouns to objects). The mapping needs the body of observer as reference frame. The body are designed asymmetry, so there are effects of direction, while as The arrows pointing to four directions around body map directly to the position around body; In spatial memory, the difficulty of retrieving objects in front, back, right or left is different(front=right=leftto focus = clockwise next to focus< opposition to focus) came with the 45 degree count-clockwise rotation of the objects around the body. The reason of the effect of relative locations of target object to focused object was that, the canonical axis constructed spatial representation, as consequence, front-back, right-left directions represents near than other pairs. So from front to back, from back to front, from right to left or from left to right, is quick than other pairs. With the 45-degree count-clockwise rotation of the objects around the body, the geometric distance between them determined the psychological distance between two objects. As a conclusion, the structural natures of the spatial representation determined the nature of spatial relations.