969 resultados para Description of photographic documents
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A presente dissertação de mestrado apresenta o trabalho desenvolvido em torno de um conjunto de fotografias provenientes do Hospital Miguel Bombarda e custodiadas pelo Centro Hospitalar Psiquiátrico de Lisboa. Partindo de uma reflexão sobre a fotografia enquanto documento de arquivo e, por isso, enquadrada num certo contexto que presidiu à sua produção e conservação, pretende-se contribuir para uma melhor compreensão de um conjunto retratos de doentes. Os objectivos deste trabalho passam por procurar compreender as abordagens teóricas relativamente à fotografia enquanto documento de arquivo, reconstituir o contexto de produção da documentação fotográfica seleccionada e perceber de que forma este conhecimento pode enriquecer a leitura das imagens. É apresentada numa proposta de descrição arquivística sob a forma de um catálogo. Pretende-se que a descrição seja capaz de reflectir a investigação efectuada e possa também servir de modelo e ser alargada à restante documentação fotográfica.
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O presente Relatório de Estágio é o resultado de um conjunto de actividades realizadas no Arquivo Histórico Ultramarino (AHU), que incidiram na documentação fotográfica produzida no âmbito da Missão Antropológica e Etnológica da Guiné, chefiada pelo Professor Amílcar de Magalhães Mateus, entre 1946 e 1947. O tratamento arquivístico da referida documentação consistiu na identificação, organização, higienização, acondicionamento, descrição e digitalização, com vista a preservação e posterior disponibilização, bem como identificar o contexto de produção em que a mesma foi produzida e verificar o respeito pelos princípios da proveniência e da ordem original. O presente trabalho pretende contribuir para o aprofundamento do conhecimento sobre o papel da fotografia como ferramenta para o conhecimento e trabalho científico, bem como a sua importância e estatuto no campo da arquivística
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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We consider the problem of segmenting text documents that have a
two-part structure such as a problem part and a solution part. Documents
of this genre include incident reports that typically involve
description of events relating to a problem followed by those pertaining
to the solution that was tried. Segmenting such documents
into the component two parts would render them usable in knowledge
reuse frameworks such as Case-Based Reasoning. This segmentation
problem presents a hard case for traditional text segmentation
due to the lexical inter-relatedness of the segments. We develop
a two-part segmentation technique that can harness a corpus
of similar documents to model the behavior of the two segments
and their inter-relatedness using language models and translation
models respectively. In particular, we use separate language models
for the problem and solution segment types, whereas the interrelatedness
between segment types is modeled using an IBM Model
1 translation model. We model documents as being generated starting
from the problem part that comprises of words sampled from
the problem language model, followed by the solution part whose
words are sampled either from the solution language model or from
a translation model conditioned on the words already chosen in the
problem part. We show, through an extensive set of experiments on
real-world data, that our approach outperforms the state-of-the-art
text segmentation algorithms in the accuracy of segmentation, and
that such improved accuracy translates well to improved usability
in Case-based Reasoning systems. We also analyze the robustness
of our technique to varying amounts and types of noise and empirically
illustrate that our technique is quite noise tolerant, and
degrades gracefully with increasing amounts of noise
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comp. chiefly from native documents by the Rev. Father Sangermano and transl. from his Ms. by William Tandy
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Description based on: Feb. 1984; title from cover.
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Vol. 2 has title: An account of travels into the interior of Southern Africa; in which is considered, the importance of the Cape of Good Hope to the different European powers, as a naval and military station ; as a territorial acquisition and commercial emporium in time of peace : with a statistical sketch of the whole colony ; comp. from authentic documents.
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"The outcome of a photographic survey ... executed in 1915, by M. P. Bridgland, dominion land surveyor. The topographical part of the guide was written by him and the historical notes by R. Douglas ... The illutrations ... were selected ... and the book edited by E. Deville."
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This report explains the objectives, datasets and evaluation criteria of both the clustering and classification tasks set in the INEX 2009 XML Mining track. The report also describes the approaches and results obtained by the different participants.
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Taking an 'action genre' approach (Lemke, 199**) this paper analyses representational strategies of three genres of photography: press photography, photojournalism and documentary photography. While there has been much written on editorial photography, there is no organised body of scholarship that distinguishes between these three very different modes of of editorial photography.
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This article discusses some recent judicial decisions to assist legal practitioners to overcome some of the problems encountered when serving Bankruptcy Notices and Creditor’s Petitions. Some of the issues covered in the discussion are: What the valid last-known address of the debtor can be, whether a Bankruptcy Notice can be validly served by email on a debtor who is located outside Australia, whether service of a Bankruptcy Notice is valid when the debtor is outside Australia when service on the debtor occurs in Australia, whether the creditor’s failure to obtain leave for service of a Bankruptcy Notice can be excused, what can be done regarding personal service of a Creditor’s Petition when a debtor is outside Australia and whether the Court can set aside a sequestration order. The article goes on to place the issues in the context of broader bankruptcy policies noting that effective service of bankruptcy documents is challenging in a world where mobility of debtors is global and new modes of communication ever changing.