987 resultados para General Algorithm
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Background: Paranoid ideation has been regarded as a cognitive and a social process used as a defence against perceived threats. According to this perspective, paranoid ideation can be understood as a process extending across the normal-pathological continuum. Methods: In order to refine the construct of paranoid ideation and to validate a measure of paranoia, 906 Portuguese participants from the general population and 91 patients were administered the General Paranoia Scale (GPS), and two conceptual models (one - and tridimensional) were compared through confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). Results: Results from the CFA of the GPS confirmed a different model than the one-dimensional model proposed by Fenigstein and Vanable, which com-prised three dimensions (mistrust thoughts, persecutory ideas, and self-deprecation). This alternative model presented a better fit and increased sensitivity when compared with the one-dimensional model. Further data analysis of the scale revealed that the GPS is an adequate assessment tool for adults, with good psychometric characteristics and high internal consistency. Conclusion: The model proposed in the current work leads to further refinements and enrichment of the construct of paranoia in different populations, allowing the assessment of three dimensions of paranoia and the risk of clinical paranoia in a single measure for the general population.
Paranoia in the General Population : a revised version of the General Paranoia Scale for adolescents
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The aim of the current study was to validate the General Paranoia Scale for Portuguese Adolescents population (GPS-A). This scale assesses the paranoid ideation in non-clinical population. Results from a confirmatory factor analysis of the scale on 1218 youths confirmed an alternative model to the one-dimensional model proposed by Fenigstein and Vanable (1992) comprising three different dimensions (Mistrust thoughts, persecutory ideas and depreciation). This alternative model presented a good fit: χ2 (162)= 727.200, p = .000; CFI = .925; RMSEA = .054, P(rmsea ≤0.05) = .000; PCFI = .788; AIC = 863.200. All items presented adequate factor loadings (λij ≥0.5) and individual reliability ((λij)2 ≥0.25). Further data analysis on the scale revealed that the GPS-A is an adequate assessment tool for adolescents, with good psychometric characteristics and high internal consistency.
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Introdução Actualmente, as mensagens electrónicas são consideradas um importante meio de comunicação. As mensagens electrónicas – vulgarmente conhecidas como emails – são utilizadas fácil e frequentemente para enviar e receber o mais variado tipo de informação. O seu uso tem diversos fins gerando diariamente um grande número de mensagens e, consequentemente um enorme volume de informação. Este grande volume de informação requer uma constante manipulação das mensagens de forma a manter o conjunto organizado. Tipicamente esta manipulação consiste em organizar as mensagens numa taxonomia. A taxonomia adoptada reflecte os interesses e as preferências particulares do utilizador. Motivação A organização manual de emails é uma actividade morosa e que consome tempo. A optimização deste processo através da implementação de um método automático, tende a melhorar a satisfação do utilizador. Cada vez mais existe a necessidade de encontrar novas soluções para a manipulação de conteúdo digital poupando esforços e custos ao utilizador; esta necessidade, concretamente no âmbito da manipulação de emails, motivou a realização deste trabalho. Hipótese O objectivo principal deste projecto consiste em permitir a organização ad-hoc de emails com um esforço reduzido por parte do utilizador. A metodologia proposta visa organizar os emails num conjunto de categorias, disjuntas, que reflectem as preferências do utilizador. A principal finalidade deste processo é produzir uma organização onde as mensagens sejam classificadas em classes apropriadas requerendo o mínimo número esforço possível por parte do utilizador. Para alcançar os objectivos estipulados, este projecto recorre a técnicas de mineração de texto, em especial categorização automática de texto, e aprendizagem activa. Para reduzir a necessidade de inquirir o utilizador – para etiquetar exemplos de acordo com as categorias desejadas – foi utilizado o algoritmo d-confidence. Processo de organização automática de emails O processo de organizar automaticamente emails é desenvolvido em três fases distintas: indexação, classificação e avaliação. Na primeira fase, fase de indexação, os emails passam por um processo transformativo de limpeza que visa essencialmente gerar uma representação dos emails adequada ao processamento automático. A segunda fase é a fase de classificação. Esta fase recorre ao conjunto de dados resultantes da fase anterior para produzir um modelo de classificação, aplicando-o posteriormente a novos emails. Partindo de uma matriz onde são representados emails, termos e os seus respectivos pesos, e um conjunto de exemplos classificados manualmente, um classificador é gerado a partir de um processo de aprendizagem. O classificador obtido é então aplicado ao conjunto de emails e a classificação de todos os emails é alcançada. O processo de classificação é feito com base num classificador de máquinas de vectores de suporte recorrendo ao algoritmo de aprendizagem activa d-confidence. O algoritmo d-confidence tem como objectivo propor ao utilizador os exemplos mais significativos para etiquetagem. Ao identificar os emails com informação mais relevante para o processo de aprendizagem, diminui-se o número de iterações e consequentemente o esforço exigido por parte dos utilizadores. A terceira e última fase é a fase de avaliação. Nesta fase a performance do processo de classificação e a eficiência do algoritmo d-confidence são avaliadas. O método de avaliação adoptado é o método de validação cruzada denominado 10-fold cross validation. Conclusões O processo de organização automática de emails foi desenvolvido com sucesso, a performance do classificador gerado e do algoritmo d-confidence foi relativamente boa. Em média as categorias apresentam taxas de erro relativamente baixas, a não ser as classes mais genéricas. O esforço exigido pelo utilizador foi reduzido, já que com a utilização do algoritmo d-confidence obteve-se uma taxa de erro próxima do valor final, mesmo com um número de casos etiquetados abaixo daquele que é requerido por um método supervisionado. É importante salientar, que além do processo automático de organização de emails, este projecto foi uma excelente oportunidade para adquirir conhecimento consistente sobre mineração de texto e sobre os processos de classificação automática e recuperação de informação. O estudo de áreas tão interessantes despertou novos interesses que consistem em verdadeiros desafios futuros.
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Linear unmixing decomposes a hyperspectral image into a collection of reflectance spectra of the materials present in the scene, called endmember signatures, and the corresponding abundance fractions at each pixel in a spatial area of interest. This paper introduces a new unmixing method, called Dependent Component Analysis (DECA), which overcomes the limitations of unmixing methods based on Independent Component Analysis (ICA) and on geometrical properties of hyperspectral data. DECA models the abundance fractions as mixtures of Dirichlet densities, thus enforcing the constraints on abundance fractions imposed by the acquisition process, namely non-negativity and constant sum. The mixing matrix is inferred by a generalized expectation-maximization (GEM) type algorithm. The performance of the method is illustrated using simulated and real data.
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Chapter in Book Proceedings with Peer Review First Iberian Conference, IbPRIA 2003, Puerto de Andratx, Mallorca, Spain, JUne 4-6, 2003. Proceedings
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Given a set of mixed spectral (multispectral or hyperspectral) vectors, linear spectral mixture analysis, or linear unmixing, aims at estimating the number of reference substances, also called endmembers, their spectral signatures, and their abundance fractions. This paper presents a new method for unsupervised endmember extraction from hyperspectral data, termed vertex component analysis (VCA). The algorithm exploits two facts: (1) the endmembers are the vertices of a simplex and (2) the affine transformation of a simplex is also a simplex. In a series of experiments using simulated and real data, the VCA algorithm competes with state-of-the-art methods, with a computational complexity between one and two orders of magnitude lower than the best available method.
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In this paper, we will focus on the importance of languages as an asset to people and companies in knowledge-based society, giving special attention to the case of portuguese, not forgetting the role of Higher Education Institutions in preparing students to be part of the new creative multilingual and sucsessful class.
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The calculation of the dose is one of the key steps in radiotherapy planning1-5. This calculation should be as accurate as possible, and over the years it became feasible through the implementation of new algorithms to calculate the dose on the treatment planning systems applied in radiotherapy. When a breast tumour is irradiated, it is fundamental a precise dose distribution to ensure the planning target volume (PTV) coverage and prevent skin complications. Some investigations, using breast cases, showed that the pencil beam convolution algorithm (PBC) overestimates the dose in the PTV and in the proximal region of the ipsilateral lung. However, underestimates the dose in the distal region of the ipsilateral lung, when compared with analytical anisotropic algorithm (AAA). With this study we aim to compare the performance in breast tumors of the PBC and AAA algorithms.
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Conferência - 16th International Symposium on Wireless Personal Multimedia Communications (WPMC)- Jun 24-27, 2013
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This paper studies the effects of the diffusion of a General Purpose Technology (GPT) that spreads first within the developed North country of its origin, and then to a developing South country. In the developed general equilibrium growth model, each final good can be produced by one of two technologies. Each technology is characterized by a specific labor complemented by a specific set of intermediate goods, which are enhanced periodically by Schumpeterian R&D activities. When quality reaches a threshold level, a GPT arises in one of the technologies and spreads first to the other technology within the North. Then, it propagates to the South, following a similar sequence. Since diffusion is not even, neither intra- nor inter-country, the GPT produces successive changes in the direction of technological knowledge and in inter- and intra-country wage inequality. Through this mechanism the different observed paths of wage inequality can be accommodated.
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Trabalho Final de Mestrado para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia de Electrónica e Telecomunicações
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Objectivo do estudo: comparar o desempenho dos algoritmos Pencil Beam Convolution (PBC) e do Analytical Anisotropic Algorithm (AAA) no planeamento do tratamento de tumores de mama com radioterapia conformacional a 3D.
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The economical and environment impacts of fossil energies increased the interest for hybrid, battery and fuel-cell electric vehicles. Several demanding engineering challenges must be faced, motivated by different physical domains integration. This paper aims to present an overview on hybrid (HEV) and electric vehicles (EV) basic structures and features. In addition, it will try to point out some of the most relevant challenges to overcome for HEV and EV may be a solid option for the mobility issue. New developments in energy storage devices and energy management systems (EMS) are crucial to achieve this goal.
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The basic motivation of this work was the integration of biophysical models within the interval constraints framework for decision support. Comparing the major features of biophysical models with the expressive power of the existing interval constraints framework, it was clear that the most important inadequacy was related with the representation of differential equations. System dynamics is often modelled through differential equations but there was no way of expressing a differential equation as a constraint and integrate it within the constraints framework. Consequently, the goal of this work is focussed on the integration of ordinary differential equations within the interval constraints framework, which for this purpose is extended with the new formalism of Constraint Satisfaction Differential Problems. Such framework allows the specification of ordinary differential equations, together with related information, by means of constraints, and provides efficient propagation techniques for pruning the domains of their variables. This enabled the integration of all such information in a single constraint whose variables may subsequently be used in other constraints of the model. The specific method used for pruning its variable domains can then be combined with the pruning methods associated with the other constraints in an overall propagation algorithm for reducing the bounds of all model variables. The application of the constraint propagation algorithm for pruning the variable domains, that is, the enforcement of local-consistency, turned out to be insufficient to support decision in practical problems that include differential equations. The domain pruning achieved is not, in general, sufficient to allow safe decisions and the main reason derives from the non-linearity of the differential equations. Consequently, a complementary goal of this work proposes a new strong consistency criterion, Global Hull-consistency, particularly suited to decision support with differential models, by presenting an adequate trade-of between domain pruning and computational effort. Several alternative algorithms are proposed for enforcing Global Hull-consistency and, due to their complexity, an effort was made to provide implementations able to supply any-time pruning results. Since the consistency criterion is dependent on the existence of canonical solutions, it is proposed a local search approach that can be integrated with constraint propagation in continuous domains and, in particular, with the enforcing algorithms for anticipating the finding of canonical solutions. The last goal of this work is the validation of the approach as an important contribution for the integration of biophysical models within decision support. Consequently, a prototype application that integrated all the proposed extensions to the interval constraints framework is developed and used for solving problems in different biophysical domains.
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Consider a single processor and a software system. The software system comprises components and interfaces where each component has an associated interface and each component comprises a set of constrained-deadline sporadic tasks. A scheduling algorithm (called global scheduler) determines at each instant which component is active. The active component uses another scheduling algorithm (called local scheduler) to determine which task is selected for execution on the processor. The interface of a component makes certain information about a component visible to other components; the interfaces of all components are used for schedulability analysis. We address the problem of generating an interface for a component based on the tasks inside the component. We desire to (i) incur only a small loss in schedulability analysis due to the interface and (ii) ensure that the amount of space (counted in bits) of the interface is small; this is because such an interface hides as much details of the component as possible. We present an algorithm for generating such an interface.