590 resultados para Automatized Indexing
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Many of the research institutions and universities across the world are facilitating open-access (OA) to their intellectual outputs through their respective OA institutional repositories (IRs) or through the centralized subject-based repositories. The registry of open access repositories (ROAR) lists more than 2850 such repositories across the world. The awareness about the benefits of OA to scholarly literature and OA publishing is picking up in India, too. As per the ROAR statistics, to date, there are more than 90 OA repositories in the country. India is doing particularly well in publishing open-access journals (OAJ). As per the directory of open-access journals (DOAJ), to date, India with 390 OAJs, is ranked 5th in the world in terms of numbers of OAJs being published. Much of the research done in India is reported in the journals published from India. These journals have limited readership and many of them are not being indexed by Web of Science, Scopus or other leading international abstracting and indexing databases. Consequently, research done in the country gets hidden not only from the fellow countrymen, but also from the international community. This situation can be easily overcome if all the researchers facilitate OA to their publications. One of the easiest ways to facilitate OA to scientific literature is through the institutional repositories. If every research institution and university in India set up an open-access IR and ensure that copies of the final accepted versions of all the research publications are uploaded in the IRs, then the research done in India will get far better visibility. The federation of metadata from all the distributed, interoperable OA repositories in the country will serve as a window to the research done across the country. Federation of metadata from the distributed OAI-compliant repositories can be easily achieved by setting up harvesting software like the PKP Harvester. In this paper, we share our experience in setting up a prototype metadata harvesting service using the PKP harvesting software for the OAI-compliant repositories in India.
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The crystal structures of several designed peptide hairpins have been determined in order to establish features of molecular conformations and modes of aggregation in the crystals. Hairpin formation has been induced using a centrally positioned (D)Pro-Xxx segment (Xxx = (L)Pro, Aib, Ac(6)c, Ala; Aib = alpha-aminoisobutyric acid; Ac(6)c = 1-aminocyclohexane-1-carboxylic acid). Structures of the peptides Boc-Leu-Phe-Val-(D)Pro-(L)Pro-Leu-Phe-Val-OMe (1), Boc-Leu-Tyr-Val-(D)Pro-(L)Pro-Leu-Phe-Val-OMe (2, polymorphic forms labeled as 2a and 2b), Boc-Leu-Val-Val-(D)Pro-(L)Pro-Leu-Val-Val-OMe (3), Boc-Leu-Phe-Val-(D)Pro-Aib-Leu-Phe-Val-OMe (4, polymorphic forms labeled as 4a and 4b), Boc-Leu-Phe-Val-(D)Pro-Ac(6)c-Leu-Phe-Val-OMe (5) and Boc-Leu-Phe-Val-(D)Pro-Ala-Leu-Phe-Val-OMe (6) are described. All the octapeptides adopt type II' beta-turn nucleated hairpins, stabilized by three or four cross-strand intramolecular hydrogen bonds. The angle of twist between the two antiparallel strands lies in the range of -9.8 degrees to -26.7 degrees. A detailed analysis of packing motifs in peptide hairpin crystals is presented, revealing three broad modes of association: parallel packing, antiparallel packing and orthogonal packing. An attempt to correlate aggregation modes in solution with observed packing motifs in crystals has been made by indexing of crystal faces in the case of three of the peptide hairpins. The observed modes of hairpin aggregation may be of relevance in modeling multiple modes of association, which may provide insights into the structure of insoluble polypeptide aggregates.
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Visual tracking is an important task in various computer vision applications including visual surveillance, human computer interaction, event detection, video indexing and retrieval. Recent state of the art sparse representation (SR) based trackers show better robustness than many of the other existing trackers. One of the issues with these SR trackers is low execution speed. The particle filter framework is one of the major aspects responsible for slow execution, and is common to most of the existing SR trackers. In this paper,(1) we propose a robust interest point based tracker in l(1) minimization framework that runs at real-time with performance comparable to the state of the art trackers. In the proposed tracker, the target dictionary is obtained from the patches around target interest points. Next, the interest points from the candidate window of the current frame are obtained. The correspondence between target and candidate points is obtained via solving the proposed l(1) minimization problem. In order to prune the noisy matches, a robust matching criterion is proposed, where only the reliable candidate points that mutually match with target and candidate dictionary elements are considered for tracking. The object is localized by measuring the displacement of these interest points. The reliable candidate patches are used for updating the target dictionary. The performance and accuracy of the proposed tracker is benchmarked with several complex video sequences. The tracker is found to be considerably fast as compared to the reported state of the art trackers. The proposed tracker is further evaluated for various local patch sizes, number of interest points and regularization parameters. The performance of the tracker for various challenges including illumination change, occlusion, and background clutter has been quantified with a benchmark dataset containing 50 videos. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Identifying cellular processes in terms of metabolic pathways is one of the avowed goals of metabolomics studies. Currently, this is done after relevant metabolites are identified to allow their mapping onto specific pathways. This task is daunting due to the complex nature of cellular processes and the difficulty in establishing the identity of individual metabolites. We propose here a new method: ChemSMP (Chemical Shifts to Metabolic Pathways), which facilitates rapid analysis by identifying the active metabolic pathways directly from chemical shifts obtained from a single two-dimensional (2D) C-13-H-1] correlation NMR spectrum without the need for identification and assignment of individual metabolites. ChemSMP uses a novel indexing and scoring system comprised of a ``uniqueness score'' and a ``coverage score''. Our method is demonstrated on metabolic pathways data from the Small Molecule Pathway Database (SMPDB) and chemical shifts from the Human Metabolome Database (HMDB). Benchmarks show that ChemSMP has a positive prediction rate of >90% in the presence of deduttered data and can sustain the same at 60-70% even in the presence of noise, such as deletions of peaks and chemical shift deviations. The method tested on NMR data acquired for a mixture of 20 amino acids shows a success rate of 93% in correct recovery of pathways. When used on data obtained from the cell lysate of an unexplored oncogenic cell line, it revealed active metabolic pathways responsible for regulating energy homeostasis of cancer cells. Our unique tool is thus expected to significantly enhance analysis of NMIR-based metabolomics data by reducing existing impediments.
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Image and video analysis requires rich features that can characterize various aspects of visual information. These rich features are typically extracted from the pixel values of the images and videos, which require huge amount of computation and seldom useful for real-time analysis. On the contrary, the compressed domain analysis offers relevant information pertaining to the visual content in the form of transform coefficients, motion vectors, quantization steps, coded block patterns with minimal computational burden. The quantum of work done in compressed domain is relatively much less compared to pixel domain. This paper aims to survey various video analysis efforts published during the last decade across the spectrum of video compression standards. In this survey, we have included only the analysis part, excluding the processing aspect of compressed domain. This analysis spans through various computer vision applications such as moving object segmentation, human action recognition, indexing, retrieval, face detection, video classification and object tracking in compressed videos.
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In this paper, we propose a vision based mobile robot localization strategy. Local scale-invariant features are used as natural landmarks in unstructured and unmodified environment. The local characteristics of the features we use prove to be robust to occlusion and outliers. In addition, the invariance of the features to viewpoint change makes them suitable landmarks for mobile robot localization. Scale-invariant features detected in the first exploration are indexed into a location database. Indexing and voting allow efficient recognition of global localization. The localization result is verified by epipolar geometry between the representative view in database and the view to be localized, thus the probability of false localization will be decreased. The localization system can recover the pose of the camera mounted on the robot by essential matrix decomposition. Then the position of the robot can be computed easily. Both calibrated and un-calibrated cases are discussed and relative position estimation based on calibrated camera turns out to be the better choice. Experimental results show that our approach is effective and reliable in the case of illumination changes, similarity transformations and extraneous features. © 2004 IEEE.
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(Document pdf contains 193 pages) Executive Summary (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 1. Introduction (pdf, 0.2 Mb) 1.1 Data sharing, international boundaries and large marine ecosystems 2. Objectives (pdf, 0.3 Mb) 3. Background (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 3.1 North Pacific Ecosystem Metadatabase 3.2 First federation effort: NPEM and the Korea Oceanographic Data Center 3.2 Continuing effort: Adding Japan’s Marine Information Research Center 4. Metadata Standards (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 4.1 Directory Interchange Format 4.2 Ecological Metadata Language 4.3 Dublin Core 4.3.1. Elements of DC 4.4 Federal Geographic Data Committee 4.5 The ISO 19115 Metadata Standard 4.6 Metadata stylesheets 4.7 Crosswalks 4.8 Tools for creating metadata 5. Communication Protocols (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 5.1 Z39.50 5.1.1. What does Z39.50 do? 5.1.2. Isite 6. Clearinghouses (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 7. Methodology (pdf, 0.2 Mb) 7.1 FGDC metadata 7.1.1. Main sections 7.1.2. Supporting sections 7.1.3. Metadata validation 7.2 Getting a copy of Isite 7.3 NSDI Clearinghouse 8. Server Configuration and Technical Issues (pdf, 0.4 Mb) 8.1 Hardware recommendations 8.2 Operating system – Red Hat Linux Fedora 8.3 Web services – Apache HTTP Server version 2.2.3 8.4 Create and validate FGDC-compliant Metadata in XML format 8.5 Obtaining, installing and configuring Isite for UNIX/Linux 8.5.1. Download the appropriate Isite software 8.5.2. Untar the file 8.5.3. Name your database 8.5.4. The zserver.ini file 8.5.5. The sapi.ini file 8.5.6. Indexing metadata 8.5.7. Start the Clearinghouse Server process 8.5.8. Testing the zserver installation 8.6 Registering with NSDI Clearinghouse 8.7 Security issues 9. Search Tutorial and Examples (pdf, 1 Mb) 9.1 Legacy NSDI Clearinghouse search interface 9.2 New GeoNetwork search interface 10. Challenges (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 11. Emerging Standards (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 12. Future Activity (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 13. Acknowledgments (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 14. References (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 15. Acronyms (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 16. Appendices 16.1. KODC-NPEM meeting agendas and minutes (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 16.1.1. Seattle meeting agenda, August 22–23, 2005 16.1.2. Seattle meeting minutes, August 22–23, 2005 16.1.3. Busan meeting agenda, October 10–11, 2005 16.1.4. Busan meeting minutes, October 10–11, 2005 16.2. MIRC-NPEM meeting agendas and minutes (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 16.2.1. Seattle Meeting agenda, August 14-15, 2006 16.2.2. Seattle meeting minutes, August 14–15, 2006 16.2.3. Tokyo meeting agenda, October 19–20, 2006 16.2.4. Tokyo, meeting minutes, October 19–20, 2006 16.3. XML stylesheet conversion crosswalks (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 16.3.1. FGDCI to DIF stylesheet converter 16.3.2. DIF to FGDCI stylesheet converter 16.3.3. String-modified stylesheet 16.4. FGDC Metadata Standard (pdf, 0.1 Mb) 16.4.1. Overall structure 16.4.2. Section 1: Identification information 16.4.3. Section 2: Data quality information 16.4.4. Section 3: Spatial data organization information 16.4.5. Section 4: Spatial reference information 16.4.6. Section 5: Entity and attribute information 16.4.7. Section 6: Distribution information 16.4.8. Section 7: Metadata reference information 16.4.9. Sections 8, 9 and 10: Citation information, time period information, and contact information 16.5. Images of the Isite server directory structure and the files contained in each subdirectory after Isite installation (pdf, 0.2 Mb) 16.6 Listing of NPEM’s Isite configuration files (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 16.6.1. zserver.ini 16.6.2. sapi.ini 16.7 Java program to extract records from the NPEM metadatabase and write one XML file for each record (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) 16.8 Java program to execute the metadata extraction program (pdf, < 0.1 Mb) A1 Addendum 1: Instructions for Isite for Windows (pdf, 0.6 Mb) A2 Addendum 2: Instructions for Isite for Windows ADHOST (pdf, 0.3 Mb)
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Aponta aspectos que devem ser considerados na identificação de metadados de assunto granulares para a legislação federal brasileira. O objeto de estudo foi o Sistema de Legislação Informatizada (Legin Web) disponível no Portal da Câmara dos Deputados. Os objetivos específicos foram: identificar tipos de assuntos amplamente utilizados na indexação da legislação federal brasileira e aspectos do contexto de busca de informação que interferissem na identificação dos metadados de assunto; analisar possibilidades de metadados de assunto para a legislação federal com base em padrões de metadados e modelos de organização da informação abordados na literatura; e, com isso, propor metadados de assunto para a legislação federal brasileira. A ideia é usar esses metadados para diminuir a imprecisão dos resultados das pesquisas na legislação federal, tornando o processo mais rápido e eficiente.
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Descreve a elaboração da Política de Indexação da Câmara dos Deputados como exemplo de política de informação para a estruturação da Arquitetura da Informação. Tem por objetivo analisar a relevância institucional das políticas de informação para a implementação de um modelo de Arquitetura de Informação na Câmara dos Deputados. Relata que sistemas de informação legislativa e administrativa da Casa são separados, o que dificulta a criação de diretrizes e regras sobre a informação, mesmo havendo a necessidade de utilização compartilhada destes dados, gerando resistências às políticas de informação. Exemplifica que processo de indexação, que é fortemente influenciado pela subjetividade do indexador, e que sem normas claras sobre como proceder, acaba prejudicando a recuperação de um documento em um sistema de informação, pois além do conhecimento do assunto tratado no documento, o indexador deve ter orientação quanto aos procedimentos que deve observar para garantir a qualidade, a consistência e a coerência da indexação. Avalia que para a elaboração de uma Política de Indexação, além da técnica, há uma necessidade de amplos acordos, criação de significados conjuntos e de estruturas de governança, formalizados em normas com força impositiva e coercitiva que serão seguidos por toda a Casa.
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210 p. : graf.
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The interactions of N2, formic acid and acetone on the Ru(001) surface are studied using thermal desorption mass spectrometry (TDMS), electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS), and computer modeling.
Low energy electron diffraction (LEED), EELS and TDMS were used to study chemisorption of N2 on Ru(001). Adsorption at 75 K produces two desorption states. Adsorption at 95 K fills only the higher energy desorption state and produces a (√3 x √3)R30° LEED pattern. EEL spectra indicate both desorption states are populated by N2 molecules bonded "on-top" of Ru atoms.
Monte Carlo simulation results are presented on Ru(001) using a kinetic lattice gas model with precursor mediated adsorption, desorption and migration. The model gives good agreement with experimental data. The island growth rate was computed using the same model and is well fit by R(t)m - R(t0)m = At, with m approximately 8. The island size was determined from the width of the superlattice diffraction feature.
The techniques, algorithms and computer programs used for simulations are documented. Coordinate schemes for indexing sites on a 2-D hexagonal lattice, programs for simulation of adsorption and desorption, techniques for analysis of ordering, and computer graphics routines are discussed.
The adsorption of formic acid on Ru(001) has been studied by EELS and TDMS. Large exposures produce a molecular multilayer species. A monodentate formate, bidentate formate, and a hydroxyl species are stable intermediates in formic acid decomposition. The monodentate formate species is converted to the bidentate species by heating. Formic acid decomposition products are CO2, CO, H2, H2O and oxygen adatoms. The ratio of desorbed CO with respect to CO2 increases both with slower heating rates and with lower coverages.
The existence of two different forms of adsorbed acetone, side-on, bonded through the oxygen and acyl carbon, and end-on, bonded through the oxygen, have been verified by EELS. On Pt(111), only the end-on species is observed. On dean Ru(001) and p(2 x 2)O precovered Ru(001), both forms coexist. The side-on species is dominant on clean Ru(001), while O stabilizes the end-on form. The end-on form desorbs molecularly. Bonding geometry stability is explained by surface Lewis acidity and by comparison to organometallic coordination complexes.
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We wished to replicate evidence that an experimental paradigm of speech illusions is associated with psychotic experiences. Fifty-four patients with a first episode of psychosis (FEP) and 150 healthy subjects were examined in an experimental paradigm assessing the presence of speech illusion in neutral white noise. Socio-demographic, cognitive function and family history data were collected. The Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) was administered in the patient group and the Structured Interview for Schizotypy-Revised (SIS-R), and the Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences (CAPE) in the control group. Patients had a much higher rate of speech illusions (33.3% versus 8.7%, ORadjusted: 5.1, 95% CI: 2.3-11.5), which was only partly explained by differences in IQ (ORadjusted: 3.4, 95% CI: 1.4-8.3). Differences were particularly marked for signals in random noise that were perceived as affectively salient (ORadjusted: 9.7, 95% CI: 1.8-53.9). Speech illusion tended to be associated with positive symptoms in patients (ORadjusted: 3.3, 95% CI: 0.9-11.6), particularly affectively salient illusions (ORadjusted: 8.3, 95% CI: 0.7-100.3). In controls, speech illusions were not associated with positive schizotypy (ORadjusted: 1.1, 95% CI: 0.3-3.4) or self-reported psychotic experiences (ORadjusted: 1.4, 95% CI: 0.4-4.6). Experimental paradigms indexing the tendency to detect affectively salient signals in noise may be used to identify liability to psychosis.
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A presente pesquisa visa refletir, sob a ótica do discurso, a cultura noticiosa a respeito do Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra (MST), no que se refere à cobertura jornalística dos jornais Zero Hora e Folha de S.Paulo das linhas políticas sobre as questões conjunturais apresentadas pelo Movimento em seus três últimos Congressos Nacionais (1995, 2000 e 2007), para comprovar o tratamento dado pela mídia ao MST e o modo como as formações discursivas em textualizações jornalísticas são indiciárias de permanente tensão em torno da luta pela terra, o que dificulta o diálogo do Movimento com a sociedade. Este trabalho pretende ainda debater qual a intervenção do MST na construção das agendas política e pública e por que o Movimento não consegue provocar mudanças em seu enquadramento noticioso e, assim, constatar o que o processo de saturação do discurso midiático, neste caso o do jornalismo impresso, é capaz de produzir sobre a sociedade, partindo da hipótese de que a mídia, em geral, funciona como aparelho político-ideológico, que elabora e divulga concepções de mundo, cumprindo a função de contribuir com orientações para exercer influência na compreensão dos fatos sociais. A mediação dos meios de comunicação de massa, em geral, produz um deslocamento na experiência pública e, ao mesmo tempo, dá forma aos saberes possíveis que essa experiência desenvolve sobre si mesma. Sabemos que as ideologias presentes nos discursos jornalísticos podem não produzir novos saberes sobre o mundo, mas produzem um reconhecimento do mundo tal como já aprendemos a apropriá-lo. Demonstrar-se-á que, na fase atual do capitalismo sistema que demanda maior valorização da informação , a reprodução ideológica se dá diretamente pelos meios de comunicação, por intermédio de pautas e agendas. Considerando o contexto apresentado pela pesquisa, o trabalho destaca também dois fios condutores para alcançar seus objetivos: a submissão da mídia à hegemonia neoliberal e a luta do MST pela reforma agrária diante da valorização do agronegócio latifundiário.
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Esta dissertação apresenta a estruturação de um sistema para indexação e visualização de depoimentos de história oral em vídeo. A partir do levantamento de um referencial teórico referente à indexação, o sistema resultou em um protótipo funcional de alta fidelidade. O conteúdo para a realização deste foi obtido pela indexação de 12 depoimentos coletados pela equipe do Museu da Pessoa durante o projeto Memórias da Vila Madalena, em São Paulo (ago/2012). Acervos de História Oral como o Museu da Pessoa, o Museu da Imagem e do Som ou o Centro de Pesquisa e Documentação de História Contemporânea do Brasil / CPDOC da Fundação Getúlio Vargas, reúnem milhares de horas de depoimentos em áudio e vídeo. De uma forma geral, esses depoimentos são longas entrevistas individuais, onde diversos assuntos são abordados; o que dificulta sua análise, síntese e consequentemente, sua recuperação. A transcrição dos depoimentos permite a realização de buscas textuais para acessar assuntos específicos nas longas entrevistas. Por isso, podemos dizer que as transcrições são a principal fonte de consulta dos pesquisadores de história oral, deixando a fonte primária (o vídeo) para um eventual segundo momento da pesquisa. A presente proposta visa ampliar a recuperação das fontes primárias a partir da indexação de segmentos de vídeo, criando pontos de acesso imediato para trechos relevantes das entrevistas. Nessa abordagem, os indexadores (termos, tags ou anotações) não são associados ao vídeo completo, mas a pontos de entrada e saída (timecodes) que definem trechos específicos no vídeo. As tags combinadas com os timecodes criam novos desafios e possibilidades para indexação e navegação através de arquivos de vídeo. O sistema aqui estruturado integra conceitos e técnicas de áreas aparentemente desconectadas: metodologias de indexação, construção de taxonomias, folksonomias, visualização de dados e design de interação são integrados em um processo unificado que vai desde a coleta e indexação dos depoimentos até sua visualização e interação.
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Uma vez que C. pseudotuberculosis é o agente etiológico de processos infecciosos em animais caprinos e ovinos e que também pode ser isolado de processos infecciosos em seres humanos as investigações direcionadas para a espécie em questão são necessárias, visto que a escassez de dados epidemiológicos e de conhecimento relativo ao comportamento do microrganismo em hospedeiros animais e humanos em nosso país dificulta o diagnóstico laboratorial da espécie, à semelhança do observado com outra espécie de transmissão zoonótica, o C. ulcerans. Uma preocupação adicional é o fato da espécie em questão também ser capaz de albergar bacteriófagos codificadores da toxina diftérica, representando uma ameaça à circulação dos bacteriófagos. Assim, o presente estudo tem como objetivo geral analisar as características fenotípicas e genotípicas de amostras de C. pseudotuberculosis. Neste sentido, foram propostos os seguintes objetivos: Avaliar as características bioquímicas das amostras através de testes bioquímicos convencionais; avaliar as características bioquímicas das amostras utilizando o sistema semi-automatizado API Coryne; diferenciar amostras de C. pseudotuberculosis de C. ulcerans utilizando a técnica de PCR multiplex; pesquisar a presença de gene tox. Os resultados demonstraram que amostras de C. diphtheriae, C. ulcerans e C. pseudotuberculosis podem ser caracterizadas por métodos bioquímicos convencionais e por taxonomia numérica (API Coryne System). C. ulcerans e C. pseudotuberculosis, com potencial de circulação zoonótica, da mesma forma que C. diphtheriae são capazes de albergar o gene da toxina diftérica. A reação m-PCR foi capaz de discernir as amostras de C. diphtheriae, C. ulcerans e C. pseudotuberculosis e ainda definir o potencial das amostras em produzir a toxina diftérica. Os dados enfatizam a necessidade da técnica multiplex PCR para o diagnostico e para o controle de espécies associadas a quadros de difteria em populações humana.