Academic literature on the topic 'Architectural Concerns'

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Journal articles on the topic "Architectural Concerns"

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Alamin M, Hind, and Hany H. Ammar. "Concerns-Based Reverse Engineering for Partial Software Architecture Visualization." JOIV : International Journal on Informatics Visualization 4, no. 2 (May 26, 2020): 58. http://dx.doi.org/10.30630/joiv.4.2.357.

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Recently, reverse engineering (RE) is becoming one of the essential engineering trends for software evolution and maintenance. RE is used to support the process of analyzing and recapturing the design information in legacy systems or complex systems during the maintenance phase. The major problem stakeholders might face in understanding the architecture of existing software systems is that the knowledge of software architecture information is difficult to obtain because of the size of the system, and the existing architecture document often is missing or does not match the current implementation of the source code. Therefore, much more effort and time are needed from multiple stakeholders such as developers, maintainers and architects for obtaining and re-documenting and visualizing the architecture of a target system from its source code files. The current works is mainly focused on the developer viewpoint. In this paper, we present a RE methodology for visualizing architectural information for multiple stakeholders and viewpoints based on applying the RE process on specific parts of the source code. The process is driven by eliciting stakeholders’ concerns on specific architectural viewpoints to obtain and visualize architectural information related these concerns. Our contributions are three fold: 1- The RE methodology is based on the IEEE 1471 standard for architectural description and supports concerns of stakeholder including the end-user and maintainer; 2- It supports the visualization of a particular part of the target system by providing a visual model of the architectural representation which highlights the main components needed to execute specific functionality of the target system, 3- The methodology also uses architecture styles to organize the visual architecture information. We illustrate the methodology using a case study of a legacy web application system.
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Pareto, Lars, Anna Börjesson Sandberg, Peter Eriksson, and Staffan Ehnebom. "Collaborative prioritization of architectural concerns." Journal of Systems and Software 85, no. 9 (September 2012): 1971–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2012.04.054.

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Johnson, Philip. "Architectural concerns in EGRET (abstract)." ACM SIGOIS Bulletin 13, no. 4 (April 1993): 7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/152716.152719.

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BROWN, ALAN W., and JOHN A. McDERMID. "THE ART AND SCIENCE OF SOFTWARE ARCHITECTURE." International Journal of Cooperative Information Systems 16, no. 03n04 (September 2007): 439–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0218843007001718.

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Experience in all aspects of software engineering has confirmed the pivotal role of focusing on architectural concerns in the development of complex software-intensive systems. Consequently, the past 20 years has seen significant investments in the theory and practice of software architecture. However, architectural deficiencies are frequently cited as a key factor in the shortcomings and failures that lead to unpredictable delivery of complex operational systems. Here, we consider the art and science of software architecture: we explore the current state of software architecture, identify key architectural trends, and directions in academia and industry, and highlight some of the architectural research challenges which need to be addressed. The paper proposes a detailed agenda of research activities to be carried out by a partnership between academia and industry. While challenges exist in many domains, for this paper we draw examples from one area of particular concern: safety-critical systems.
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Mahmoud, Heba-Talla Hamdy. "Interior Architectural Elements that Affect Human Psychology and Behavior." Academic Research Community publication 1, no. 1 (September 18, 2017): 10. http://dx.doi.org/10.21625/archive.v1i1.112.

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This research will inspect factors with higher impact that are predicted to be more influential in the relation between architecture, interior architectural design and the psychological status of residents and users. The level of awareness about the importance of this relation is the basic introductory factor. Identity, privacy and safety impacts, health concerns, accessibility degree, open spaces feature, aesthetic sense are the main parts of the research. Most parts consist of two divisions. The first identifies the nature of each factor. The second recognizes the important architectural consideration needed to realize the psychological condition of residents and users. The research aims to increase the concern about the importance of the interaction between interior architectural design and human psychological behavior. An introduction of a group of important consideration can be used to help designers choose and apply a suitable interior architectural design that match psychological needs through sound relations between architecture, interior architecture and the psychological status of residents and users.
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Webber, Peter. "CRITICAL CONCERNS OF ARCHITECTURAL THEORY 1996." Architectural Theory Review 1, no. 2 (November 1996): 11–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13264829609478283.

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Rosenblum, D. S., and R. Natarajan. "Supporting architectural concerns in component interoperability standards." IEE Proceedings - Software 147, no. 6 (2000): 215. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/ip-sen:20000913.

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Jakobac, Vladimir, Nenad Medvidovic, and Alexander Egyed. "Separating architectural concerns to ease program understanding." ACM SIGSOFT Software Engineering Notes 30, no. 4 (July 2005): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1082983.1083132.

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Swope, Curtis. "Is Green the New Red? Marxism, Ecology, and Contemporary Architectural Theory." Humanities 10, no. 1 (March 8, 2021): 45. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/h10010045.

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This essay examines the role of Marxist concepts in recent architectural theories of ecology using two architecture firms, Estudio Teddy Cruz and Sauerbruch Hutton (SH), as case studies. In their writings, Cruz and SH mobilize the critique of capital, a dialectical materialist understanding of history, and the Frankfurt School’s critique of functionalist culture for the theorization of sustainable design. Their work has two vital ramifications for current sustainability discourses in two different fields which this essay seeks to bridge. For Marxist theorists concerned about ecology but averse to Western Marxism because of its supposed idealism, Cruz and SH show anew the importance of aesthetic concerns to conceptions of the environment. For design scholars accustomed to thinking of Marxism as having been absorbed into broader debates about cultural studies, the architects’ theories have the potential to recentralize the left-wing inheritance through its adaptation to concerns of ecology. In addition, in the essay’s conclusion, I reflect briefly, as a suggestion for further research, on how Cruz’s and SH’s architectural practice and theories might productively be analyzed in light of the terms of the Adorno-Benjamin debate of the 1930s over the political status of the cultural products of capital. Can eighty-year old discussions of the potentially revolutionary and retrograde qualities of mass cultural objects be relevant to radical thought in the age of climate change.
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Yang, Sunggu A. "With Jørn Utzon: Approaching and Preaching Architectural Texts." Homiletic 45, no. 2 (December 2, 2020): 53–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.15695/hmltc.v45i2.5000.

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Architecture is communication. It conveys human stories, feelings, philosophies, and cultural histories and interacts through them with viewers, occupants, artists, and surrounding communities. Architecture, whether explicitly religious or not, is spiritual, too. Embodying and manifesting spatial spirituality, it invokes in the mind of the appreciator awe, wonder, and contact with the transcendent. All this is possible because architecture is, to borrow Paul Tillich’s language, an art form carrying the ultimate concerns of human life. Recognizing the communicative, spiritual, and existential nature of architecture exemplified in Jørn Utzon’s Sydney Opera House, this article meets a need and demonstrates the potential for architectural preaching. Preaching can serve biblical texts efficiently—particularly architectural ones (e.g., Exodus 26 and Revelation 21)—by approaching them through an architectural hermeneutic and creatively presenting them with architectural imagination.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Architectural Concerns"

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Florean, Alexander, and Laoa Jalal. "Mapping Java Source Code To Architectural Concerns Through Machine Learning." Thesis, Karlstads universitet, Institutionen för matematik och datavetenskap (from 2013), 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-84250.

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The explosive growth of software systems with both size and complexity results in the recognised need of techniques to combat architectural degradation. Reflexion Modelling is a method commonly used for Software Architectural Consistency Checking (SACC). However, the steps needed to utilise the method involve manual mapping, which could become tedious depending on the system's size. Recently, machine learning has been showing promising results outperforming other approaches. However, neither a comparison of different classifiers nor a comprehensive investigation of how to best pre-process source code has yet been performed. This thesis compares different classifier and their performance to the manual effort needed to train them and how different pre-processing settings affect their accuracy. The study can be divided into two areas: pre-processing and how large the manual mapping should be to achieve satisfactory performance. Across the three software systems used in this study, the overall best performing model, MaxEnt, achieved the following average results, accuracy 0.88, weighted precision 0.89 and weighted recall 0.88. SVM performed almost identically to MaxEnt. Furthermore, the results show that Naive-Bayes, the algorithm in recent related work approaches, performs worse than SVM and MaxEnt. The results yielded that the pre-processing that extracts packages and libraries, together with the feature representation method Bag-of-Words had the best performance. Furthermore, it was found that manual mapping of a minimum of ten files per concern is needed for satisfactory performance. The research results represent a further step towards automating code-to-architecture mappings, as required in reflexion modelling and similar techniques.
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Gokyer, Gokhan. "Identifying Architectural Concerns From Non-functional Requirements Using Support Vector Machine." Master's thesis, METU, 2008. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/12609964/index.pdf.

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There has been no commonsense on how to identify problem domain concerns in architectural modeling of software systems. Even, there is no commonly accepted method for modeling the Non-Functional Requirements (NFRs) effectively associated with the architectural aspects in the solution domain. This thesis introduces the use of a Machine Learning (ML) method based on Support Vector Machines to relate NFRs to classified "
architectural concerns"
in an automated way. This method uses Natural Language Processing techniques to fragment the plain NFR texts under the supervision of domain experts. The contribution of this approach lies in continuously applying ML techniques against previously discovered &ldquo
NFR - architectural concerns&rdquo
associations to improve the intelligence of repositories for requirements engineering. The study illustrates a charted roadmap and demonstrates the automated requirements engineering toolset for this roadmap. It also validates the approach and effectiveness of the toolset on the snapshot of a real-life project.
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Wilson, Margaret A. "The development of architectural concepts : a comparative study of two schools of architecture." Thesis, University of Surrey, 1989. http://epubs.surrey.ac.uk/848582/.

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There are both intuitive and theoretical bases to the notion that differences exist in the way in which architects and non architects construe their physical environment. Despite their procedural constraints, many previous studies have added empirical weight to this assumption. As it is most likely to be within the schools of architecture where the socialisation of professional values takes place, the thesis explores changes in the structure and content of architectural concepts and evaluations as a function of time spent in training. Further, the thesis considers the variation in architectural orientation amongst the students, and explores the adoption of school specific values. The study focusses on two schools of architecture, one university based, in the north of Britian, and one polytechnic based, in the south. A cross-sectional sample of fifteen students in each year of training were interviewed at both schools. Data were collected using the Multiple Sorting Procedure, an open-ended yet structured sorting technique, and analysed using Multidimensional Scalogram Analysis (MSA) and Smallest Space Analysis (SSA). The results demonstrate the development of architectural concepts from concrete tangible concepts, to more complex abstract ones. The students' evaluative judgements show both development with each year sampled, and school specific differences in the type of architecture preferred. Architectural evaluation is shown to be based upon architectural style. The students' judgements of the buildings, combined with their architectural 'heroes' allows the proposal of a model of stylistic orientation in architecture. Case studies indicate that the results derived from the Multiple Sorting Procedure accord well with the students' orientation in architecture; in the focus of their architectural interests, in their evaluative judgements, and in the type of architecture they design. The architectural, educational and methodological implications are discussed.
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D’Aquino, de Paula Pedro Ivan. "Architectural Concepts in Retail Research." Thesis, KTH, Ledning och organisering i byggande och förvaltning, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-277722.

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The Retail industry is one of the most important areas in the Real Estate field. In retailing, design involves several aspects to create a communicative and attractive environment. Retailers are in an incessant search for the most vanguard design methods for branding promotion and customer attraction. Therefore, the architectural design is a significant strategy to increase commercial performance and a vital element for the store environment. This research aims to investigate the architectural concepts in retail research and to comprehend the design strategies for the spatial attractiveness. Based on the retail design research reviews, it is expected to find and comprehend the relation between available architectural concepts in retail research and the application for the shopping experience.
Detaljhandeln är en av de viktigaste områdena inom fastighetsbranchen. Inom detaljhandeln används design i flera aspekter för att skapa en kommunikativ och attraktiv miljö. Detaljhandeln söker konstant efter de mest avancerade designmetoderna för att marknadsföra sitt varumärke och och öka kundattraktion. Därför är arkitekturen en viktig strategi för att öka de kommersiella resultaten och ett viktigt element för butiksmiljön. Denna uppsat s syftar till att undersöka de arkitektkoncepten inom detaljhandeln och att förstå designstrategierna för rumslig attraktionskraft. Baserat på studier av detaljhandelsdesign och analys av designmetoder förväntas man hitta och förstå förhållandet mellan tillgängliga arkitektoniska koncept inom detaljhandelsforskning och applikationen för shoppingupplevelsen.
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Reves, Ian P. "New assemblies for learning : flexible construction systems aimed at new concepts of learning environments." Thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/39616.

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The design and construction of American public high schools are forcibly influenced by ultra-cost effective techniques demanding simplicity in construction and durability of material. The inflexibility and banality of the architecture this paradigm typically delivers begs for exploration of the feasibility of innovative construction technologies. Technologies that influence both form and technique such as prefabrication of modular elements, utilization of CAD/CAM techniques to mill customized parts and pliable materials (i.e. plastics) crafted to achieve dynamic forms. More engaging, flexible learning environments could be realized that significantly increase the performance of the architecture, both formally and ecologically, as well as ennobling students.
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Nicholson, Kendall A. "Investigating architectural values| Concepts and competencies." Thesis, Regent University, 2014. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3643469.

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The problem this research study aims to address is the development of architectural values in graduate architecture students and faculty. This study explores the relationship between academic values (architectural concepts) and practical skillsets (architectural competencies) within architectural education. It also investigates the relationship between student and faculty value priorities in regards to the profession. Conducted at the University of Virginia, School of Architecture, the study utilized the administration of the researcher-made Architectural Values Inventory (AVI), based on Rokeach's (1973) Value Survey. The principal component analysis, used to evaluate reliability and validity proved, the AVI to be both valid and reliable surfacing six significant components. The canonical correlation analysis showed a significant relationship between architectural concepts and competencies. The Goodman-Kruskal gamma rendered a relationship between students and faculty on only five of the 32 architectural values, subsequently showing little to no correlation between students and faculty on the whole. These research findings have the potential to influence areas of architectural education such as accreditation, curriculum development, professional development, and professional practice.

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Bellik, Yacine. "Interfaces multimodales : concepts, modeles et architectures." Paris 11, 1995. http://www.theses.fr/1995PA112178.

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Cette these s'inscrit dans le domaine de la communication homme-machine et plus specifiquement dans celui de la conception et de la realisation des interfaces multimodales. Les travaux de recherche presentes decrivent les nouveaux problemes poses par ce type d'interfaces et proposent des solutions qui sont testees a travers des realisations abouties. Le travail est divise en trois etapes. La premiere, a caractere exploratoire, decrit la conception et la realisation d'une interface multimodale pour une application de dessin graphique (limsi-draw). Cette premiere experimentation permet de reveler des problemes importants lies aux contraintes technologiques actuelles, de souligner l'importance du facteur temporel souvent neglige dans les interfaces classiques et de proposer une methode efficace pour la fusion des informations. Le modele d'architecture adopte est articule autour d'interpreteurs independants et d'un controleur de dialogue central utilisant des regles de decision qui permettent d'assurer une fusion robuste. Cette partie de l'etude se termine par une evaluation avec des sujets humains d'ou sont degages des enseignements interessants sur l'utilisation des modalites. La seconde etape a pour but la conception d'un outil pour la specification des interactions multimodales. Cet outil, baptise specimen, est fonde sur un modele combinant une specification par des reseaux de transitions augmentes a une specification par messages a l'aide d'operateurs de composition permettant de decrire des actions sequentielles et/ou paralleles. Par ailleurs, l'elaboration d'une methode de detection de messages repartie a travers des agents specialises permet la definition de mecanismes de fusion generaux. Dans la derniere etape, specimen est applique pour la construction d'une interface multimodale pour non-voyants (meditor). L'objectif vise est double: d'une part valider cet outil a travers une realisation concrete, d'autre part etudier l'apport de la multimodalite au probleme de l'acces aux systemes informatiques par des utilisateurs non-voyants. Des resultats preliminaires encourageants sont obtenus et des perspectives prometteuses pour une communication homme-machine intelligente combinant des modeles d'interaction anthropomorphiques et physiques sont discutees en conclusion
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Ribeiro, Maria Marta Lobão Ferreira. "O Palácio Concerto." Master's thesis, Universidade de Lisboa. Faculdade de Arquitetura, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/12546.

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Dissertação para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Arquitectura, apresentada na Universidade de Lisboa - Faculdade de Arquitetura, mestrado integrado com a especialização em Arquitetura de Interiores.
A história tem um papel marcante na construção e no crescimento da cidade, pois vai moldando os elementos que incidem no território, assegurando no desenho urbano a sua continuidade no espaço e no tempo. A preservação da cidade histórica passa por um conjunto de intervenções de reabilitação arquitectónica. O objecto de estudo é um antigo palacete do séc. XIX situado na Rua do Benformoso, adjacente ao Largo do Intendente, em Lisboa. Pretende-se intervir no antigo palacete cujo interior foi demolido, restando apenas uma fachada para o contemplar. O trabalho tem como objectivo conceber um projecto de reabilitação com um programa ligado às artes musicais, com uma componente habitacional. Pretende-se que o programa estimule a vivência do espaço por pessoas socioculturalmente diferentes proporcionando uma harmonia na sua ocupação através da multiculturalidade musical. Tem-se a intenção de criar espaços particulares bem como a delimitação de espaços públicos e privados presentes no edifício, através dos elementos luz, cor, matéria e som como elementos fundamentais na percepção espacial no processo de reabilitação arquitectónica.
ABSTRACT: History has a remarkable role in the building and growing of the city, as it has been shaping the elements that affect the territory in urban design, ensuring its continuity through space and time. The preservation of the historical city goes through a set of architectural rehabilitation interventions. The present work is about an ancient palace of the XIX century located at Rua do Benformoso near by Largo do Intendente in Lisbon. The old building interior was demolished remainig only the facade to be seen. The main goal of this work is to design a rehabilitation project with a musical and habitational program. It is intend to conceive a program that stimulates the experience of the space for socioculturally diferent people, providing harmony in their occupation through musical multiculturalism. The intention is to create peculiar spaces as well as the delimitation of public and private spaces through the elements of light, color, material and sound as the fundamental elements in the spatial perception in the process of architectural rehabilitation.
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Chedid, Michel. "Wearable Systems in Harsh Environments : Realizing New Architectural Concepts." Doctoral thesis, Norrköping : Department of Science and Technology, Linköping University, 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-54461.

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Kleiven, Tommy. "Natural ventilation in buildings : architectural concepts, consequences and possibilities." Doctoral thesis, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Department of Architectural Design, History and Technology, 2003. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:no:ntnu:diva-914.

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This thesis, “Natural Ventilation in Buildings -Architectural concepts, consequences and possibilities”, is the result of a PhD study financed by Hydro Aluminium/Wicona, The Research Council of Norway and the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). The work was carried out at the Department of Architectural Design, History and Technology, Faculty of Architecture and Fine Art at NTNU in the period January 2000 to March 2003.

The study has been conducted in close collaboration with fellow researchers Bjørn J. Wachenfeldt and Tor Arvid Vik. Chapter 2 “Principles and elements of natural ventilation” is in its entirety written by the three of us together.

The main objectives of this work have been to identify and investigate the architectural consequences and possibilities of natural ventilation in office and school buildings in Northern Europe. Case studies and interviews with architects and HVAC consultants have been the most central “research instruments” in achieving this. Three buildings have been studied in detail. These are the GSW Headquarters in Germany, the B&O Headquarters in Denmark, and the Mediå Primary School in Norway. In addition, a larger set of buildings has been used to substantiate the findings.

The most important findings of this work are that:

- utilisation of natural ventilation in buildings has architectural consequences as well as possibilities.

- natural ventilation primarily affects the facades, the roof/silhouette and the layout and organisation of the interior spaces.

- the ventilation principle applied (single-sided, cross- or stack ventilation) together with the nature of the supply and extract paths, i.e. whether they are local or central, are of key importance for the architectural consequences and possibilities.

- designing a naturally ventilated building is more difficult than designing a similar but mechanically ventilated building. An interdisciplinary approach from the initial stages of design is mandatory for achieving successful natural ventilation concepts.

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Books on the topic "Architectural Concerns"

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Winters, Nathan B. Architecture is elementary: Visual thinking through architectural concepts. Salt Lake City, Ut: Gibbs Smith Publisher, 1997.

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Architecture is elementary: Visual thinking through architectural concepts. Salt Lake City: G. Smith, 2005.

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Architecture is elementary: Visual thinking through architectural concepts. Salt Lake City: Gibbs M. Smith, 1986.

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Jacobi, Lauren, and Daniel Zolli, eds. Contamination and Purity in Early Modern Art and Architecture. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789462988699.

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The concepts of purity and contamination preoccupied early modern Europeans fundamentally, structuring virtually every aspect of their lives, not least how they created and experienced works of art and the built environment. In an era that saw a great number of objects and people in motion, the meteoric rise of new artistic and building technologies, and religious upheaval exert new pressures on art and its institutions, anxieties about the pure and the contaminated – distinctions between the clean and unclean, sameness and difference, self and other, organization and its absence – took on heightened importance. In this series of geographically and methodologically wide-ranging essays, thirteen leading historians of art and architecture grapple with the complex ways that early modern actors negotiated these concerns, covering topics as diverse as Michelangelo’s unfinished sculptures, Venetian plague hospitals, Spanish-Muslim tapestries, and emergency currency. The resulting volume offers surprising new insights into the period and into the modern disciplinary routines of art and architectural history.
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Bill, Hancock. Network concepts and architectures. Wellesley, Mass: QED Information Sciences, 1989.

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Yonezawa, Akinori, and Satoshi Matsuoka, eds. Metalevel Architectures and Separation of Crosscutting Concerns. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-45429-2.

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Concepts and practice of architectural daylighting. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1991.

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Concepts and practice of architectural daylighting. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1985.

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service), SpringerLink (Online, ed. Visualizing landscape architecture: Functions, concepts, strategies. Basel: Birkhäuser, 2010.

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Mark Fisher: Staged architecture. West Sussex: Wiley-Academy, 2000.

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Book chapters on the topic "Architectural Concerns"

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Andrade, L. F., J. C. Gouveia, P. J. Xardoné, and J. A. Câmara. "Architectural Concerns in Automating Code Generation." In Software Architecture, 495–510. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-35563-4_29.

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Tekinerdogan, Bedir, and Hasan Sözer. "Defining Architectural Viewpoints for Quality Concerns." In Software Architecture, 26–34. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-23798-0_3.

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Caporuscio, Mauro, Farid Edrisi, Margrethe Hallberg, Anton Johannesson, Claudia Kopf, and Diego Perez-Palacin. "Architectural Concerns for Digital Twin of the Organization." In Software Architecture, 265–80. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-58923-3_18.

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Diagne, A. "Architectural Concepts for Agent Paradigm: A Way to Separate Concerns in Open Distributed Systems." In IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology, 387–98. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-35261-9_26.

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Vissers, Chris A., Luís Ferreira Pires, Dick A. C. Quartel, and Marten van Sinderen. "Basic Design Concepts." In Architectural Design, 53–92. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-43298-4_3.

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Snelling, David, Ali Anjomshoaa, Francis Wray, Achim Basermann, Mike Fisher, Mike Surridge, and Philipp Wieder. "NextGRID Architectural Concepts." In Towards Next Generation Grids, 3–13. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-72498-0_1.

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Handley, Holly A. H. "Architecture Concepts." In The Human Viewpoint for System Architectures, 17–25. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-11629-3_3.

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Thilmany, Drew Nathan. "Questioning the shape of social concepts." In Architectural Anthropology, 194–206. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003094142-12-17.

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Paul, Wolfgang J., Christoph Baumann, Petro Lutsyk, and Sabine Schmaltz. "Basic Mathematical Concepts." In System Architecture, 15–31. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-43065-2_3.

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Mitchell, H. B. "Architecture." In Data Fusion: Concepts and Ideas, 31–50. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-27222-6_3.

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Conference papers on the topic "Architectural Concerns"

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Gill, Asif Qumer, Vahid Behbood, Rania Ramadan-Jradi, and Ghassan Beydoun. "IoT architectural concerns." In ICC '17: Second International Conference on Internet of Things, Data and Cloud Computing. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3018896.3025166.

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Pareto, Lars, Anna Sandberg, Peter Eriksson, and Staffan Ehnebom. "Prioritizing Architectural Concerns." In 2011 9th Working IEEE/IFIP Conference on Software Architecture (WICSA). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/wicsa.2011.13.

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Boucké, Nelis, and Tom Holvoet. "Relating architectural views with architectural concerns." In the 2006 international workshop. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1137639.1137643.

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Garcia, Joshua, Daniel Popescu, Chris Mattmann, Nenad Medvidovic, and Yuanfang Cai. "Enhancing architectural recovery using concerns." In 2011 26th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Automated Software Engineering (ASE). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ase.2011.6100123.

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Sion, Laurens, Koen Yskout, Alexander van den Berghe, Riccardo Scandariato, and Wouter Joosen. "MASC: Modelling Architectural Security Concerns." In 2015 IEEE/ACM 7th International Workshop on Modeling in Software Engineering (MiSE). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/mise.2015.14.

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Xing, Song, Xiannong Meng, and Xusheng Wang. "Detection of Security Concerns on Data Communications Systems." In Architectural Engineering Conference (AEI) 2006. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/40798(190)63.

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Subasu, Ionut Emanuel, Patrick Ziegler, Klaus R. Dittrich, and Harald Gall. "Architectural concerns for flexible data management." In the 2008 EDBT workshop. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1385486.1385497.

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Cleland-Huang, Jane, Mehdi Mirakhorli, Adam Czauderna, and Mateusz Wieloch. "Decision-Centric Traceability of architectural concerns." In 2013 International Workshop on Traceability in Emerging Forms of Software Engineering (TEFSE). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tefse.2013.6620147.

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WORCESTER, ERIC. "ARCHITECTURE AND DEFENCE: BALANCING CONTEMPORARY SECURITY CONCERNS WITH ARCHITECTURAL PRINCIPLES." In International Seminar on Nuclear War and Planetary Emergencies 34th Session. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812773890_0056.

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Qing Gu and Patricia Lago. "On service-oriented architectural concerns and viewpoints." In 3rd European Conference on Software Architecture (ECSA). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/wicsa.2009.5290822.

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Reports on the topic "Architectural Concerns"

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Yoozbashizadeh, Mahdi, and Forouzan Golshani. Robotic Parking Technology for Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Control Around Park & Rides. Mineta Transportation Institute, June 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31979/mti.2021.1936.

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A lack or limited availability for parking may have multiple consequences, not the least of which is driver frustration, congestion, and air pollution. However, there is a greater problem that is not widely recognized by the public, namely the negative effect on the use of transit systems due to insufficient parking spaces close to key transit stations. Automated parking management systems, which have been successfully deployed in several European and Japanese cities, can manage parking needs at transit stations more effectively than other alternatives. Numerous studies have confirmed that quick and convenient automobile access to park-and-ride lots can be essential to making public transit competitive with the automobile in suburban areas. Automated parking systems use a robotic platform that carries each vehicle to one of the locations in a custom designed structure. Each location is designed compactly so that considerably more vehicles can be parked in the automated garages than the traditional parking lots. Central to the design of these systems are three key technologies, namely: 1. Mechanical design and the operation of vehicle transfer, i.e., the robotic platform 2. Structural and architectural requirements to meet safety and earthquake standards, among other design imperatives, 3. Automation and intelligent control issues as related to the overall operation and system engineering. This article concerns the first technology, and more specifically the design of the robotic platform for vehicle transfers. We will outline the overall design of the robot and the shuttle, followed by a description of the prototype that was developed in our laboratories. Subsequently, performance related issues and scalability of the current design will be analyzed.
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Schwartz, Robert K., Derek W. Cooper, and Paul H. Etheridge. Sedimentologic Architecture of the Shoreface Prism, Relationship to Profile Dynamics, and Relevance to Engineering Concerns: Duck, North Carolina. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, September 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada330038.

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Gupte, Jaideep, Sarath MG Babu, Debjani Ghosh, Eric Kasper, and Priyanka Mehra. Smart Cities and COVID-19: Implications for Data Ecosystems from Lessons Learned in India. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/sshap.2021.034.

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This brief distils best data practice recommendations through consideration of key issues involved in the use of technology for surveillance, fact-checking and coordinated control during crisis or emergency response in resource constrained urban contexts. We draw lessons from how data enabled technologies were used in urban COVID-19 response, as well as how standard implementation procedures were affected by the pandemic. Disease control is a long-standing consideration in building smart city architecture, while humanitarian actions are increasingly digitised. However, there are competing city visions being employed in COVID-19 response. This is symptomatic of a broader range of tech-based responses in other humanitarian contexts. These visions range from aspirations for technology driven, centralised and surveillance oriented urban regimes, to ‘frugal innovations’ by firms, consumers and city governments. Data ecosystems are not immune from gendered- and socio-political discrimination, and technology-based interventions can worsen existing inequalities, particularly in emergencies. Technology driven public health (PH) interventions thus raise concerns about 1) what types of technologies are appropriate, 2) whether they produce inclusive outcomes for economically and socially disadvantaged urban residents and 3) the balance between surveillance and control on one hand, and privacy and citizen autonomy on the other.
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Hunter, Fraser, and Martin Carruthers. Iron Age Scotland. Society for Antiquaries of Scotland, September 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.9750/scarf.09.2012.193.

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The main recommendations of the panel report can be summarised under five key headings:  Building blocks: The ultimate aim should be to build rich, detailed and testable narratives situated within a European context, and addressing phenomena from the longue durée to the short-term over international to local scales. Chronological control is essential to this and effective dating strategies are required to enable generation-level analysis. The ‘serendipity factor’ of archaeological work must be enhanced by recognising and getting the most out of information-rich sites as they appear. o There is a pressing need to revisit the archives of excavated sites to extract more information from existing resources, notably through dating programmes targeted at regional sequences – the Western Isles Atlantic roundhouse sequence is an obvious target. o Many areas still lack anything beyond the baldest of settlement sequences, with little understanding of the relations between key site types. There is a need to get at least basic sequences from many more areas, either from sustained regional programmes or targeted sampling exercises. o Much of the methodologically innovative work and new insights have come from long-running research excavations. Such large-scale research projects are an important element in developing new approaches to the Iron Age.  Daily life and practice: There remains great potential to improve the understanding of people’s lives in the Iron Age through fresh approaches to, and integration of, existing and newly-excavated data. o House use. Rigorous analysis and innovative approaches, including experimental archaeology, should be employed to get the most out of the understanding of daily life through the strengths of the Scottish record, such as deposits within buildings, organic preservation and waterlogging. o Material culture. Artefact studies have the potential to be far more integral to understandings of Iron Age societies, both from the rich assemblages of the Atlantic area and less-rich lowland finds. Key areas of concern are basic studies of material groups (including the function of everyday items such as stone and bone tools, and the nature of craft processes – iron, copper alloy, bone/antler and shale offer particularly good evidence). Other key topics are: the role of ‘art’ and other forms of decoration and comparative approaches to assemblages to obtain synthetic views of the uses of material culture. o Field to feast. Subsistence practices are a core area of research essential to understanding past society, but different strands of evidence need to be more fully integrated, with a ‘field to feast’ approach, from production to consumption. The working of agricultural systems is poorly understood, from agricultural processes to cooking practices and cuisine: integrated work between different specialisms would assist greatly. There is a need for conceptual as well as practical perspectives – e.g. how were wild resources conceived? o Ritual practice. There has been valuable work in identifying depositional practices, such as deposition of animals or querns, which are thought to relate to house-based ritual practices, but there is great potential for further pattern-spotting, synthesis and interpretation. Iron Age Scotland: ScARF Panel Report v  Landscapes and regions:  Concepts of ‘region’ or ‘province’, and how they changed over time, need to be critically explored, because they are contentious, poorly defined and highly variable. What did Iron Age people see as their geographical horizons, and how did this change?  Attempts to understand the Iron Age landscape require improved, integrated survey methodologies, as existing approaches are inevitably partial.  Aspects of the landscape’s physical form and cover should be investigated more fully, in terms of vegetation (known only in outline over most of the country) and sea level change in key areas such as the firths of Moray and Forth.  Landscapes beyond settlement merit further work, e.g. the use of the landscape for deposition of objects or people, and what this tells us of contemporary perceptions and beliefs.  Concepts of inherited landscapes (how Iron Age communities saw and used this longlived land) and socal resilience to issues such as climate change should be explored more fully.  Reconstructing Iron Age societies. The changing structure of society over space and time in this period remains poorly understood. Researchers should interrogate the data for better and more explicitly-expressed understandings of social structures and relations between people.  The wider context: Researchers need to engage with the big questions of change on a European level (and beyond). Relationships with neighbouring areas (e.g. England, Ireland) and analogies from other areas (e.g. Scandinavia and the Low Countries) can help inform Scottish studies. Key big topics are: o The nature and effect of the introduction of iron. o The social processes lying behind evidence for movement and contact. o Parallels and differences in social processes and developments. o The changing nature of houses and households over this period, including the role of ‘substantial houses’, from crannogs to brochs, the development and role of complex architecture, and the shift away from roundhouses. o The chronology, nature and meaning of hillforts and other enclosed settlements. o Relationships with the Roman world
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