Academic literature on the topic 'Intrinsic Mappings'

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Journal articles on the topic "Intrinsic Mappings"

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Martin, Clara D., Romain Pastureau, Emilia Kerr, and Angela De Bruin. "Processing of Synonyms and Homographs in Bilingual and Monolingual Speakers." Journal of Cognition 7, no. 1 (2024): 4. http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/joc.329.

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Bilinguals have long-lasting experience with cross-language double-mappings (i.e., translation equivalents and interlingual homographs (or false friends)). Considering this, we examined whether bilinguals differ from monolinguals in within-language double-mapping (i.e., synonyms and homographs) processing. Across two experiments, we compared performances from Spanish monolinguals and Spanish-Basque bilinguals on a behavioral picture-word matching task. The words were all presented in Spanish, the native language of all participants. Participants responded to synonyms and homographs (both double-mappings) or single-mappings (controls). The reaction times in both experiments showed clear and significant costs in processing within-language double-mapping stimuli, as well as intrinsic differences in processing homographs versus synonyms. However, these effects did not differ between bilinguals and monolinguals. The present findings thus suggest that the bilinguals’ extensive experience with cross-linguistic double-mappings does not transfer onto within-language double-mapping processing.
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Rainio, Oona. "Intrinsic metrics under conformal and quasiregular mappings." Publicationes Mathematicae Debrecen 101, no. 1-2 (2022): 189–215. http://dx.doi.org/10.5486/pmd.2022.9263.

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Koskela, Pekka, and Sita Benedict. "Intrinsic Hardy-Orlicz spaces of conformal mappings." Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society 47, no. 1 (2014): 75–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1112/blms/bdu097.

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Karmanova, M. B. "Hölder mappings of Carnot groups and intrinsic bases." Doklady Mathematics 95, no. 1 (2017): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1134/s1064562417010033.

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MAGNANI, VALENTINO. "TOWARDS DIFFERENTIAL CALCULUS IN STRATIFIED GROUPS." Journal of the Australian Mathematical Society 95, no. 1 (2013): 76–128. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1446788713000098.

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AbstractWe study graded group-valued continuously differentiable mappings defined on stratified groups, where differentiability is understood with respect to the group structure. We characterize these mappings by a system of nonlinear first-order PDEs, establishing a quantitative estimate for their difference quotient. This provides us with a mean value estimate that allows us to prove both the inverse mapping theorem and the implicit function theorem. The latter theorem also relies on the fact that the differential admits a proper factorization of the domain into a suitable inner semidirect product. When this splitting property of the differential holds in the target group, then the inverse mapping theorem leads us to the rank theorem. Both implicit function theorem and rank theorem naturally introduce the classes of image sets and level sets. For commutative groups, these two classes of sets coincide and correspond to the usual submanifolds. In noncommutative groups, we have two distinct classes of intrinsic submanifolds. They constitute the so-called intrinsic graphs, that are defined with respect to the algebraic splitting and everywhere possess a unique metric tangent cone equipped with a natural group structure.
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Burkart, Uhland. "Orbit entropy in noninvertible mappings." Journal of the Australian Mathematical Society. Series A. Pure Mathematics and Statistics 40, no. 1 (1986): 95–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1446788700026537.

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AbstractBassed on the intrinsic structure of a selfmapping T: S → S of an arbitrary set S, called the orbit-structure of T, a new entropy is defined. The idea is to use the number of preimages of an element x under the iterates of T to characterize the complexity of the transformation T and their orbit graphs. The fundamental properties of the orbit entropy related to iteration, iterative roots and iteration semigroups are studied. For continuous (differentiable) functions of Rn to Rn, the chaos of Li and Yorke is characterized by means of this entropy, mainly using the method of Straffingraphs.
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Kurbatova, Irina, and M. Pistruil. "On quasi-geodesic mappings of special pseudo-Riemannian spaces." Proceedings of the International Geometry Center 15, no. 2 (2022): 120–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.15673/tmgc.v15i2.2226.

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The present paper continues the study of quasi-geodesic mappings f:(Vn, gij, Fih) → (V'n,g'ij, Fih) of pseudo-Riemannian spaces Vn, V'n with a generalized-recurrent structure Fih of parabolic type. By a generalized recurrent structure of parabolic type on Vn we mean an almost Hermitian affinor structure of parabolic type for which the covariant derivative of the structural affinor Fih satisfies the condition F(i,j)h=q(i Fj)h.
 In the previous paper by the authors [Proc. Intern. Geom. Center, 13:3 (2020) 18-32] it was proved that the class of pseudo-Riemannian spaces with generalized-recurrent structure of parabolic type is closed with respect to the considered mappings and the generalized recurrence vectors in (Vn, gij,Fih) and (V'_n, g'ij, Fih) may be distinct. In this article, it is assumed that the mapping f preserves the generalized recurrence vector qi.
 We construct geometric objects that are invariant under the quasi-geodesic mapping of generalized-recurrent spaces of parabolic type and recurrent-parabolic spaces. A number of conditions are given on these objects, which lead to the fact that a generalized-recurrent space of parabolic type admits a parabolic K-structure, and a recurrent-parabolic space admits a Kählerian structure of parabolic type.
 We study special types of these mappings that preserve some tensors of an intrinsic nature.
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Kurbatova, Irina, and M. Pistruil. "Canonical quasi-geodesic mappings of special pseudo-Riemannian spaces." Proceedings of the International Geometry Center 15, no. 3-4 (2022): 163–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.15673/tmgc.v15i3-4.2329.

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The present paper continues the study of quasi-geodesic mappings f:(Vn, gij, Fih) → (V'n,g'ij, Fih) of pseudo-Riemannian spaces Vn, V'n with a generalized-recurrent structure Fih of parabolic type. By a generalized recurrent structure of parabolic type on Vn we mean an almost Hermitian affinor structure of parabolic type for which the covariant derivative of the structural affinor Fih satisfies the condition F(i,j)h=q(i Fj)h.
 In the previous paper by the authors [Proc. Intern. Geom. Center, 13:3 (2020) 18-32] it was proved that the class of pseudo-Riemannian spaces with generalized-recurrent structure of parabolic type is closed with respect to the considered mappings and the generalized recurrence vectors in (Vn, gij,Fih) and (V'_n, g'ij, Fih) may be distinct. In this article, it is assumed that the mapping f preserves the generalized recurrence vector qi.
 We construct geometric objects that are invariant under the quasi-geodesic mapping of generalized-recurrent spaces of parabolic type and recurrent-parabolic spaces. A number of conditions are given on these objects, which lead to the fact that a generalized-recurrent space of parabolic type admits a parabolic K-structure, and a recurrent-parabolic space admits a Kählerian structure of parabolic type.
 We study special types of these mappings that preserve some tensors of an intrinsic nature.
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Wu, Xiuhua, Qingguo Li, and Dongsheng Zhao. "Some New Intrinsic Topologies on Complete Lattices and the Cartesian Closedness of the Category of Strongly Continuous Lattices." Abstract and Applied Analysis 2013 (2013): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/942628.

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We prove some new characterizations of strongly continuous lattices using two new intrinsic topologies and a class of convergences. Lastly we show that the category of strongly continuous lattices and Scott continuous mappings is cartesian closed.
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Rotella, Michele F., Ilana Nisky, Margaret Koehler, Mike D. Rinderknecht, Amy J. Bastian, and Allison M. Okamura. "Learning and generalization in an isometric visuomotor task." Journal of Neurophysiology 113, no. 6 (2015): 1873–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00255.2014.

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Adaptation is a prominent feature of the human motor system and has been studied extensively in reaching movements. This study characterizes adaptation and generalization during isometric reaching in which the arm remains stationary and the participant controls a virtual cursor via force applied by the hand. We measured how learning of a visual cursor rotation generalizes across workspace 1) to determine the coordinate system that predominates visual rotation learning, and 2) to ascertain whether mapping type, namely position or velocity control, influences transfer. Participants performed virtual reaches to one of two orthogonal training targets with the applied rotation. In a new workspace, participants reached to a single target, similar to the training target in either hand or joint space. Furthermore, a control experiment measured within-workspace generalization to an orthogonal target. Across position and velocity mappings, learning transferred predominantly in intrinsic (joint) space, although the transfer was incomplete. The velocity mapping resulted in significantly larger aftereffects and broader within-workspace generalization than the position mapping, potentially due to slower peak speeds, longer trial times, greater target overshoot, or other factors. Although we cannot rule out a mixed reference frame in our task, the predominance of intrinsic coding of cursor kinematics in the isometric environment opposes the extrinsic coding of arm kinematics in real reaching but matches the intrinsic coding of dynamics found in prior work. These findings have implications for the design of isometric control systems in human-machine interaction or in rehabilitation when coordinated multi-degree-of-freedom movement is difficult to achieve.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Intrinsic Mappings"

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Spelling, Victor, Mathias Axelsson, Lovisa Ringström, af Rosenschöld Johanna Munck, and Anton Lindblad. "Mapping the intrinsic viscosityof hyaluronic acid at high concentrations of OH-." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för teknikvetenskaper, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-325348.

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Hyaluronic acid is commonly used in dermatological fillers in the form of gels. It is established how these gels' firmness is affected by the amount of cross linker and hyaluronic acid respectively. However, the effect of hydroxide ions in solution is rather unknown. This thesis examines how the alkalinity of the solvent affects the intrinsic viscosity of 3 MDa hyaluronic acid by using the method of Ubbelohde capillary viscometry. Sodium hydroxide solutions between 2 and 10 wt% were prepared to study the variation in intrinsic viscosity at concentrations relevant for cross linking (1<wt%). From these respective solutions, four solutions of different mass concentrations of hyaluronic acid were made. The flow time of respective samples were measured between two points in the capillary viscometer in a controlled temperature of 25 °C with an SI Viscoclock to ensure a high accuracy.From the resulting flow times, the intrinsic viscosity was calculated. The intrinsic viscosity varied between 0,55 and 0,70. The relation between intrinsic viscosity and hydroxide ion concentration had a correlation coefficient r < 0,001. No trend could be ensured as the confidence interval for the intrinsic viscosity at the different concentrations was too large.
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Kaneko, Yoshio A. "Resting-state hyperconnectivity of the anticorrelated intrinsic networks in schizophrenic patients and their unaffected siblings." Yale University, 2010. http://ymtdl.med.yale.edu/theses/available/etd-03092010-145235/.

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Abnormal connectivity of the intrinsic anticorrelated networks, the task-negative network (TNN) and task-positive network (TPN), is implicated in schizophrenia. Comparisons between schizophrenic patients and their unaffected siblings offer an opportunity to further understand illness susceptibility and pathophysiology. We hypothesized that schizophrenic patients would demonstrate hyperconnectivity in the intrinsic networks and that similar, but less pronounced, hyperconnectivity would be evident in the networks of the unaffected siblings. Resting-state functional magnetic resonance images were obtained from schizophrenic patients (n=25), their unaffected siblings (n=25), and healthy controls (n=25). The posterior cingulate cortex/precuneus (PCC/PCu) and right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) were used as seed regions to identify the TNN and TPN. Interregional connectivity strengths were analyzed using overlapped intrinsic networks composed of regions common to the intrinsic networks of the three subject groups. In the TNN, schizophrenic patients alone demonstrated hyperconnectivity between the PCC/PCu and left inferior temporal gyrus and between the ventral medial prefrontal cortex and the right lateral parietal cortex. Both schizophrenic patients and their unaffected siblings showed increased connectivity in the TNN between the bilateral inferior temporal gyri. In the TPN, schizophrenic patients showed hyperconnectivity between the left DLPFC and right inferior frontal gyrus relative to unaffected siblings, though this trend only approached statistical significance in comparison to healthy controls. Resting-state hyperconnectivity of the intrinsic networks may underlie the pathophysiology of schizophrenia by disrupting network coordination. Similar, though milder, hyperconnectivity in unaffected siblings of schizophrenic patients may contribute to their cognitive deficits and increased risk to develop schizophrenia.
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Bonilla, Valverde José Pablo, Clemens Blank, Mario Roidt, Lisa Schneider, and Stefan Catalin. "Application of a GIS Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis for the Identification of Intrinsic Suitable Sites in Costa Rica for the Application of Managed Aquifer Recharge (MAR) through Spreading Methods." Saechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden, 2017. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-220396.

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Costa Rica’s annual mean precipitation is above 3300 mm, but this precipitation is not evenly distributed in time or space, producing clear differentiated wet and dry seasons in most of the country. Droughts are also common phenomena which greatly affect the availability of water resources. Managed aquifer recharge (MAR) schemes are being taken into consideration to enhance the underground water storage capacity of the country. The present study constitutes the first assessment for the identification of suitable sites for the implementation of MAR technology spreading methods (SM) in Costa Rica. The suitable sites are identified by means of a geographic information system multi-criteria decision analysis (GIS-MCDA) based on four criteria: hydrogeological aptitude, terrain slope, top soil texture and drainage network density. Four steps are performed in order to identify these sites: problem definition, screening for suitable areas, suitability mapping, and sensitivity analysis. The suitability map was divided in two zones after the screening: suitable and unsuitable, the first zone was further divided in five classes according to the weighted linear combination (WLC) ranking. The results indicate that 61% of the country is suitable for conducting SM. This map is a tool for future implementation of MAR techniques in the country.
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Bonilla, Valverde José Pablo, Clemens Blank, Mario Roidt, Lisa Schneider, and Stefan Catalin. "Application of a GIS Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis for the Identification of Intrinsic Suitable Sites in Costa Rica for the Application of Managed Aquifer Recharge (MAR) through Spreading Methods." Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI), 2016. https://tud.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A30199.

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Costa Rica’s annual mean precipitation is above 3300 mm, but this precipitation is not evenly distributed in time or space, producing clear differentiated wet and dry seasons in most of the country. Droughts are also common phenomena which greatly affect the availability of water resources. Managed aquifer recharge (MAR) schemes are being taken into consideration to enhance the underground water storage capacity of the country. The present study constitutes the first assessment for the identification of suitable sites for the implementation of MAR technology spreading methods (SM) in Costa Rica. The suitable sites are identified by means of a geographic information system multi-criteria decision analysis (GIS-MCDA) based on four criteria: hydrogeological aptitude, terrain slope, top soil texture and drainage network density. Four steps are performed in order to identify these sites: problem definition, screening for suitable areas, suitability mapping, and sensitivity analysis. The suitability map was divided in two zones after the screening: suitable and unsuitable, the first zone was further divided in five classes according to the weighted linear combination (WLC) ranking. The results indicate that 61% of the country is suitable for conducting SM. This map is a tool for future implementation of MAR techniques in the country.
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Eisemann, Elmar, and Frédo Durand. "Flash Photography Enhancement via Intrinsic Relighting." 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/7420.

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We enhance photographs shot in dark environments by combining a picture taken with the available light and one taken with the flash. We preserve the ambiance of the original lighting and insert the sharpness from the flash image. We use the bilateral filter to decompose the images into detail and large scale. We reconstruct the image using the large scale of the available lighting and the detail of the flash. We detect and correct flash shadows. This combines the advantages of available illumination and flash photography.<br>Singapore-MIT Alliance (SMA)
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Moss, Emmanuel. "The left atrial ganglionated plexus : its function and pathways relative to atrial fibrillation surgery." Thèse, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/5348.

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Le système nerveux autonome cardiaque est devenu une cible dans les thérapies ablatives de la fibrillation auriculaire. Nous avons étudié les voies de communication et la fonction des plexus ganglionnaires (PG) de l'oreillette gauche (PGOG) afin de clarifier la validité physiopathologique des méthodes de détection et des thérapies impliquant ces groupes de neuronnes. Méthodes: Vingt-deux chiens ont subi une double thoracotomie et ont été instrumentés avec des plaques auriculaires épidcardiques de multiélectrodes. Une stimulation électrique (2 mA, 15 Hz) des PGOG a été réalisée à l'état basal et successivement après: 1) une décentralisation vagale, 2) l'ablation par radiofréquence des plexus péri-aortiques et de la veine cave supérieure (Ao/VCS) et 3) l'ablation du PG de l'oreillette droite (PGOD). Ces procédures de dénervation ont été réalisées suivant une séquence antérograde (n = 17) ou rétrograde (n = 5). Résultats: Chez 17 des 22 animaux, la stimulation des PGOG a induit une bradycardie sinusale (149 ± 34 bpm vs 136 ± 28 bpm, p < 0.002) et des changements de repolarization (ΔREPOL) auriculaires isointégrales. Dans le groupe des ablations antérogrades, les réponses aux stimulations vagales ont été supprimées suite à la décentralisation vagale chez un seul animal, par l'ablation des plexus Ao/VCS dans 4 cas et par l'ablation du PGOG dans 5 autres animaux. Des changements ont persisté tout au long chez 2 chiens. La valeur de surface des ΔREPOL a diminué avec les dénervations séquentielles, passant de 365 ± 252 mm2 en basale à 53 ± 106 mm2 après l'ablation du PGOD (p < 0.03). Dans le groupe de dénervation rétrograde, les changements de repolarisation et chronotropiques ont été supprimés suite à l'ablation du PGOD chez deux chiens et suite à l'ablation Ao/VCS chez trois. La valeur de surface du ΔREPOL a aussi diminué après l'ablation du PGOD (269±144mm2 vs 124±158mm2, p<0.05). Conclusion: Les PGOD sont identifiables en préablation par la réponse bradycardique à la stimulation directe dans la plupart des cas. Le PGOD semble former la principale, mais non la seule, voie de communication avec le nœud sinusal. Ces résultats pourraient avoir des implications dans le traitement de la FA par méthodes ablatives.<br>The cardiac autonomic nervous system has recently become the target of ablative therapy in the treatment of atrial fibrillation. We investigated the pathways and function of the left atrial ganglionated plexus (LAGP) to clarify the pathophysiologic validity of therapies involving this cluster of neurons. Methods: Twenty-two bilaterally thoracotomized canines were instrumented with atrial epicardial plaques. LAGP stimulation was performed in the basal state and successively following 1) vagal decentralization, 2) radiofrequency ablation of the peri-aortic/superior vena caval (Ao/SVC) plexi, and 3) of the right atrial ganglionated plexus (RAGP). Denervation was carried out in either the aforementioned order (n=17, antegrade) or reversed (n=5, retrograde). Results: In 17 of 22 animals, LAGP stimulation induced a sinus bradycardia (149±34bpm to 136±28bpm, p<0.002) and atrial isointegral repolarization changes (REPOL∆). In the antegrade group, response was suppressed by vagal decentralization (n=1), Ao/SVC plexi ablation (n=4), and RAGP ablation (n=5). Changes persisted throughout in 2 canines. Surface area of REPOL∆ diminished with successive denervation, from 365±252 at baseline to 53±106mm2 following RAGP ablation (p<0.03). With retrograde denervation, chronotropic and repolarisation changes were suppressed following RAGP ablation in two canines, and following Ao/SVC ablation in three. Surface area of REPOL∆ diminished following RAGP ablation as well (269±144mm2 vs 124±158mm2, p<0.05). Conclusion: The LAGP can be identified intraoperatively by the bradycardic response to direct stimulation in most cases. The RAGP appears to be the primary, but not the only, gateway to the sinus node. These results could have important clinical implications relating to ablative treatment of atrial fibrillation.
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Raad, Nour. "NaV1.5 Modulation: From Ionic Channels to Cardiac Conduction and Substrate Heterogeneity." Doctoral thesis, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-1735-0000-0022-5E72-F.

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Book chapters on the topic "Intrinsic Mappings"

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Fountas, Konstantinos N., and Joseph R. Smith. "Extraoperative Cortical Stimulation and Mapping." In Epilepsy Surgery and Intrinsic Brain Tumor Surgery. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-95918-4_11.

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Tsytsarev, Vassiliy, and Reha S. Erzurumlu. "Voltage-Sensitive Dye and Intrinsic Signal Optical Imaging." In Neurophotonics and Brain Mapping. CRC Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781315373058-7.

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Hervey-Jumper, Shawn L., and Mitchel S. Berger. "Awake Craniotomy: Cortical and Subcortical Mapping for Glioma Resection." In Epilepsy Surgery and Intrinsic Brain Tumor Surgery. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-95918-4_12.

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Cardinal, René, and Pierre Pagé. "Mapping of Atrial Repolarization Changes and Tachyarrhythmia Sites of Origin During Activation of Mediastinal Nerve Inputs to the Intrinsic Cardiac Nervous System." In Cardiac Mapping. Wiley-Blackwell, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118481585.ch18.

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Tang, Yongjian, Hans Hegt, and Arthur van Roermund. "Design Techniques for High-Performance Intrinsic and Smart CS-DACs." In Dynamic-Mismatch Mapping for Digitally-Assisted DACs. Springer New York, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-1250-2_4.

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Zhang, Jiong, and Yonggang Shi. "Personalized Matching and Analysis of Cortical Folding Patterns via Patch-Based Intrinsic Brain Mapping." In Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention – MICCAI 2021. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-87234-2_67.

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Junová, Iva. "Leisure Time in Family Life." In Contemporary Family Lifestyles in Central and Western Europe. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-48299-2_4.

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AbstractThe chapter in its first part presents changing understanding of leisure time in the past and currently. Major shifts have occurred in the increasing amount of free time and its democratization. The free time or leisure time is understood only just as a supplement or the rest after work; however, it has its intrinsic value, carries potential of freedom, self-realization, fun and relax. The text deals with leisure time functions and its meaning for individuals and complete family. It highlights issues that are connected with spending of leisure time. In the second part of the chapter, there are results of survey, which was mapping of family spending of free time, its amount and fulfilment. In all the surveyed countries, spending of leisure time has proved to be an important perquisite for family life satisfaction. Activities that are the most likely to be undertaken together with family members are watching TV, walks, trips, visits of friends or relatives, visits of cultural actions and social games.
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Boufekane, Abdelmadjid, Hakim Saibi, and Omar Saighi. "Comparison of Two Methods for Groundwater Pollution Intrinsic Vulnerability Mapping in Wadi Nil (Jijel, North-East Algeria)." In Advances in Sustainable and Environmental Hydrology, Hydrogeology, Hydrochemistry and Water Resources. Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-01572-5_66.

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MacVicar, B. A., T. W. J. Watson, F. E. LeBlanc, S. G. Borg, and P. Federico. "Mapping of Neural Activity Patterns Using Intrinsic Optical Signals: From Isolated Brain Preparations to the Intact Human Brain." In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology. Springer US, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-2468-1_8.

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Plagnes, V., K. Kavouri, F. Huneau, et al. "PaPRIKa, the French Multicriteria Method for Mapping the Intrinsic Vulnerability of Karst Water Resource and Source – Two Examples (Pyrenees, Normandy)." In Advances in Research in Karst Media. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-12486-0_50.

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Conference papers on the topic "Intrinsic Mappings"

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Canales-Verdial, Jorge I. "Synaptic Weights in a Neuromemristive Radioisotope Classifier." In I Conferencia Internacional de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación. Trans Tech Publications Ltd, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/p-qi5dkx.

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A memristor crossbar’s intrinsic device network dynamics can be harnessed to efficiently conduct radionuclide classification tasks by retrofitting the network with a peripheral CMOS-based architecture that has been structurally and functionally optimized for this classification task. However, the hardware implementation of this classification platform is limited by the physical characteristics of the memristor which has a finite number of states. This renders the employment of traditional neural network learning algorithms, where the weights are not limited to defined states, as an excessively complex task. Hence, this paper tests the limitations on weight resolution and its effect in classification precision when implementing a spiking locally competitive learning algorithm. Both linear and nonlinear weight distributions are examined. The algorithm’s local competitiveness is assessed for the specific application of radionuclide identification. The system is tested using spectra data obtained from the United States National Nuclear Data Center as the classification database dictionary. The platform’s accuracy is measured when test signals with 100, 10 and 1 signal-to-noise ratios are assessed. It has been shown that the system is highly effective for classifying radioisotopes with linear weight distribution even with high levels of noise present. A minor classification accuracy improvement was also observed for weight states distributions with a higher density of values in the low conductivity range. Therefore, it is concluded that a memristor-based radionuclide classifier should have at least 4 possible states mapping the algorithm’s synaptic weights.
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Moulin-Frier, Clément, and Pierre-Yves Oudeyer. "The role of intrinsic motivations in learning sensorimotor vocal mappings: a developmental robotics study." In Interspeech 2013. ISCA, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/interspeech.2013-340.

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Johnson, John L. "Toward a fundamental dynamic image preprocessor." In OSA Annual Meeting. Optica Publishing Group, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/oam.1989.mk5.

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An image is a perceived, or measured, representation of the actual scene and depends on coordinate transformations. A set of proper coordinate transformations which provides a complete 4-D linear superposition of every coordinate component can be decomposed into scale, rotation, translation, and velocity transformations. For the case of small continuous incremental changes, a general transformation equation is derived. It is a basic transformation which applies to many physical situations. The transformation is applied to dynamic imagery from a single missile-mounted camera, to static imagery from stereo cameras, and to a rotating surveillance camera. It is shown that mappings are generated which display the range to every scene point, the rotation and velocity at every point, and maps of the centers of rotation. Camera motion yields global maps of these parameters while intrinsic scene variations yield local maps. The issue of extraction of these parameter maps is addressed. It leads to the statement of a requirement for a new adaptive training algorithm. If such an algorithm can be developed, neural network architectures could be applied to implement a preprocessor for image feature extraction, where the features are range, rotation, velocity, and translation of scene element.
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Wang, Yalin, Xianfeng Gu, Tony F. Chan, Paul M. Thompson, and Shing-Tung Yau. "Intrinsic brain surface conformal mapping using a variational method." In Medical Imaging 2004, edited by J. Michael Fitzpatrick and Milan Sonka. SPIE, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.534480.

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Duan, Puhong, Pedram Ghamisi, Robert Jackisch, Xudong Kang, Richard Gloaguen, and Shutao Li. "Intrinsic Image Decomposition-Based Resolution Enhancement for Mineral Mapping." In IGARSS 2020 - 2020 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium. IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/igarss39084.2020.9323470.

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Stern, Liron, I. Goykhman, B. Desiatov, and Uriel Levy. "Near Field Phase Mapping exploiting Intrinsic Oscillations of NSOM probe." In CLEO: Science and Innovations. OSA, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/cleo_si.2011.cmv4.

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Lerbet, Jean. "Intrinsic Formulation of Dynamics of Curvilinear Systems." In ASME 2005 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. ASMEDC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2005-84127.

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The paper concerns the dynamics of curvilinear systems which are often met in mechanical systems (robots, artificial satellites and so on). We only suppose that each section is rigid. Using Lie group theory, a general curvilinear system is then equivalent to a differentiable distribution of displacements, elements of the Lie group of Euclidean displacements the algebra of which may be identified with the Lie algebra of screws. The kinematics is described by the lagrangian field of deformations and the lagrangian field of velocities elements of the Lie algebra and with standard hypotheses about the distribution of external forces, the intrinsic equations are obtained, the displacements or deformations being small or large. The non linearities (of inertia terms as for internal strenghts) appear by the adjoint mapping and its derivation: the Lie braket. Last, the elements to automatically obtain scalar equations and to come back to more classical models (beam, cable,) are given.
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Cercola, Rosaria, Caroline Dessent, and Jason Lynam. "MAPPING THE INTRINSIC PHOTOCHEMISTRY OF PhotoCORMS VIA GAS-PHASE LASER SPECTROSCOPY." In 73rd International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.15278/isms.2018.fb03.

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Haifeng Gong, Chunhong Pan, Qing Yang, Hanqing Lu, and Songde Ma. "A semi-supervised framework for mapping data to the intrinsic manifold." In Tenth IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV'05) Volume 1. IEEE, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iccv.2005.18.

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Shi, Lei, Alan Davy, David Muldowney, Steven Davy, Edzard Hofig, and Xiaoming Fu. "Intrinsic monitoring within an IPv6 network: mapping node information to network paths." In 2010 International Conference on Network and Service Management (CNSM). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cnsm.2010.5691232.

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Reports on the topic "Intrinsic Mappings"

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Liggett, J., and A. Gilchrist. Technical summary of intrinsic vulnerability mapping methods in the regional districts of Nanaimo and Cowichan Valley, British Columbia (2010). Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/287315.

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De Man, Philip, Gustavo Müller, Marie Vandendriessche, Carlota Moreno Villar, Ana Aguilera Raga, and Jan Wouters. The Evolution of Global Governance. EsadeGeo. Center for Global Economy and Geopolitics, 2022. https://doi.org/10.56269/202209/pdm.

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This paper sets out to provide an overview of the evolution of global governance in key areas with security, defence and intelligence relevance, by mapping and analysing the evolution of eight case studies – trade, migration, outer space, health, energy, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity and climate change – over the past five to ten years. This approach allows the authors to identify key actors with which the EU should engage in multilateral settings. The paper finds that the role of traditional, formal intergovernmental organisations in the studied issue areas has shifted in recent years in favour of increasingly diverse governance regimes. Classified as either regime complexes or hybrid institutional complexes (HICs), they comprise a wide range of intergovernmental and private transnational actors working through increasingly informal institutions and cooperation mechanisms at different levels, often without a clear hierarchy. As a result, law-making efforts have become more informal as well and are prone to overlap and conflict. These findings tie in with the overall evolution of global governance witnessed over the past three decades in other areas, which is characterised by an increase in informality of, within and around institutions. Due to the intrinsic connection with state sovereignty in the studied security, defence and intelligence-related issue areas, informality manifests itself mainly through informal processes and a shift from FIGOs to IIGOs, though private transnational actor involvement is also prevalent in the governance of relatively novel areas of global concern. As such, trends of fragmentation, informalisation and hybridisation are present in all studied issue areas, which also pose specific challenges to overcoming gender blindness and ensuring gender equality in global governance. The authors conclude by making a number of observations that may help inform the EU’s engagement with key global and regional actors in the governance of the studied areas and global governance in general.
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Lunn, Pete, Marek Bohacek, Jason Somerville, Áine Ní Choisdealbha, and Féidhlim McGowan. PRICE Lab: An Investigation of Consumers’ Capabilities with Complex Products. ESRI, 2016. https://doi.org/10.26504/bkmnext306.

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Executive Summary This report describes a series of experiments carried out by PRICE Lab, a research programme at the Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI) jointly funded by the Central Bank of Ireland, the Commission for Energy Regulation, the Competition and Consumer Protection Commission and the Commission for Communications Regulation. The experiments were conducted with samples of Irish consumers aged 18-70 years and were designed to answer the following general research question: At what point do products become too complex for consumers to choose accurately between the good ones and the bad ones? BACKGROUND AND METHODS PRICE Lab represents a departure from traditional methods employed for economic research in Ireland. It belongs to the rapidly expanding area of ‘behavioural economics’, which is the application of psychological insights to economic analysis. In recent years, behavioural economics has developed novel methods and generated many new findings, especially in relation to the choices made by consumers. These scientific advances have implications both for economics and for policy. They suggest that consumers often do not make decisions in the way that economists have traditionally assumed. The findings show that consumers have limited capacity for attending to and processing information and that they are prone to systematic biases, all of which may lead to disadvantageous choices. In short, consumers may make costly mistakes. Research has indeed documented that in several key consumer markets, including financial services, utilities and telecommunications, many consumers struggle to choose the best products for themselves. It is often argued that these markets involve ‘complex’ products. The obvious question that arises is whether consumer policy can be used to help them to make better choices when faced with complex products. Policies are more likely to be successful where they are informed by an accurate understanding of how real consumers make decisions between products. To provide evidence for consumer policy, PRICE Lab has developed a method for measuring the accuracy with which consumers make choices, using techniques adapted from the scientific study of human perception. The method allows researchers to measure how reliably consumers can distinguish a good deal from a bad one. A good deal is defined here as one where the product is more valuable than the price paid. In other words, it offers good value for money or, in the jargon of economics, offers the consumer a ‘surplus’. Conversely, a bad deal offers poor value for money, providing no (or a negative) surplus. PRICE Lab’s main experimental method, which we call the ‘Surplus Identification’ (S-ID) task, allows researchers to measure how accurately consumers can spot a surplus and whether they are prone to systematic biases. Most importantly, the S-ID task can be used to study how the accuracy of consumers’ decisions changes as the type of product changes. For the experiments we report here, samples of consumers arrived at the ESRI one at a time and spent approximately one hour doing the S-ID task with different kinds of products, which were displayed on a computer screen. They had to learn to judge the value of one or more products against prices and were then tested for accuracy. As well as people’s intrinsic motivation to do well when their performance on a task like this is tested, we provided an incentive: one in every ten consumers who attended PRICE Lab won a prize, based on their performance. Across a series of these experiments, we were able to test how the accuracy of consumers’ decisions was affected by the number and nature of the product’s characteristics, or ‘attributes’, which they had to take into account in order to distinguish good deals from bad ones. In other words, we were able to study what exactly makes for a ‘complex’ product, in the sense that consumers find it difficult to choose good deals. FINDINGS Overall, across all ten experiments described in this report, we found that consumers’ judgements of the value of products against prices were surprisingly inaccurate. Even when the product was simple, meaning that it consisted of just one clearly perceptible attribute (e.g. the product was worth more when it was larger), consumers required a surplus of around 16-26 per cent of the total price range in order to be able to judge accurately that a deal was a good one rather than a bad one. Put another way, when most people have to map a characteristic of a product onto a range of prices, they are able to distinguish at best between five and seven levels of value (e.g. five levels might be thought of as equivalent to ‘very bad’, ‘bad’, ‘average’, ‘good’, ‘very good’). Furthermore, we found that judgements of products against prices were not only imprecise, but systematically biased. Consumers generally overestimated what products at the top end of the range were worth and underestimated what products at the bottom end of the range were worth, typically by as much as 10-15 per cent and sometimes more. We then systematically increased the complexity of the products, first by adding more attributes, so that the consumers had to take into account, two, three, then four different characteristics of the product simultaneously. One product might be good on attribute A, not so good on attribute B and available at just above the xii | PRICE Lab: An Investigation of Consumers’ Capabilities with Complex Products average price; another might be very good on A, middling on B, but relatively expensive. Each time the consumer’s task was to judge whether the deal was good or bad. We would then add complexity by introducing attribute C, then attribute D, and so on. Thus, consumers had to negotiate multiple trade-offs. Performance deteriorated quite rapidly once multiple attributes were in play. Even the best performers could not integrate all of the product information efficiently – they became substantially more likely to make mistakes. Once people had to consider four product characteristics simultaneously, all of which contributed equally to the monetary value of the product, a surplus of more than half the price range was required for them to identify a good deal reliably. This was a fundamental finding of the present experiments: once consumers had to take into account more than two or three different factors simultaneously their ability to distinguish good and bad deals became strikingly imprecise. This finding therefore offered a clear answer to our primary research question: a product might be considered ‘complex’ once consumers must take into account more than two or three factors simultaneously in order to judge whether a deal is good or bad. Most of the experiments conducted after we obtained these strong initial findings were designed to test whether consumers could improve on this level of performance, perhaps for certain types of products or with sufficient practice, or whether the performance limits uncovered were likely to apply across many different types of product. An examination of individual differences revealed that some people were significantly better than others at judging good deals from bad ones. However the differences were not large in comparison to the overall effects recorded; everyone tested struggled once there were more than two or three product attributes to contend with. People with high levels of numeracy and educational attainment performed slightly better than those without, but the improvement was small. We also found that both the high level of imprecision and systematic bias were not reduced substantially by giving people substantial practice and opportunities to learn – any improvements were slow and incremental. A series of experiments was also designed to test whether consumers’ capability was different depending on the type of product attribute. In our initial experiments the characteristics of the products were all visual (e.g., size, fineness of texture, etc.). We then performed similar experiments where the relevant product information was supplied as numbers (e.g., percentages, amounts) or in categories (e.g., Type A, Rating D, Brand X), to see whether performance might improve. This question is important, as most financial and contractual information is supplied to consumers in a numeric or categorical form. The results showed clearly that the type of product information did not matter for the level of imprecision and bias in consumers’ decisions – the results were essentially the same whether the product attributes were visual, numeric or categorical. What continued to drive performance was how many characteristics the consumer had to judge simultaneously. Thus, our findings were not the result of people failing to perceive or take in information accurately. Rather, the limiting factor in consumers’ capability was how many different factors they had to weigh against each other at the same time. In most of our experiments the characteristics of the product and its monetary value were related by a one-to-one mapping; each extra unit of an attribute added the same amount of monetary value. In other words, the relationships were all linear. Because other findings in behavioural economics suggest that consumers might struggle more with non-linear relationships, we designed experiments to test them. For example, the monetary value of a product might increase more when the amount of one attribute moves from very low to low, than when it moves from high to very high. We found that this made no difference to either the imprecision or bias in consumers’ decisions provided that the relationship was monotonic (i.e. the direction of the relationship was consistent, so that more or less of the attribute always meant more or less monetary value respectively). When the relationship involved a turning point (i.e. more of the attribute meant higher monetary value but only up to a certain point, after which more of the attribute meant less value) consumers’ judgements were more imprecise still. Finally, we tested whether familiarity with the type of product improved performance. In most of the experiments we intentionally used products that were new to the experimental participants. This was done to ensure experimental control and so that we could monitor learning. In the final experiment reported here, we used two familiar products (Dublin houses and residential broadband packages) and tested whether consumers could distinguish good deals from bad deals any better among these familiar products than they could among products that they had never seen before, but which had the same number and type of attributes and price range. We found that consumers’ performance was the same for these familiar products as for unfamiliar ones. Again, what primarily determined the amount of imprecision and bias in consumers’ judgments was the number of attributes that they had to balance against each other, regardless of whether these were familiar or novel. POLICY IMPLICATIONS There is a menu of consumer polices designed to assist consumers in negotiating complex products. A review, including international examples, is given in the main body of the report. The primary aim is often to simplify the consumer’s task. Potential policies, versions of which already exist in various forms and which cover a spectrum of interventionist strength, might include: the provision and endorsement of independent, transparent price comparison websites and other choice engines (e.g. mobile applications, decision software); the provision of high quality independent consumer advice; ‘mandated simplification’, whereby regulations stipulate that providers must present product information in a simplified and standardised format specifically determined by regulation; and more strident interventions such as devising and enforcing prescriptive rules and regulations in relation to permissible product descriptions, product features or price structures. The present findings have implications for such policies. However, while the experimental findings have implications for policy, it needs to be borne in mind that the evidence supplied here is only one factor in determining whether any given intervention in markets is likely to be beneficial. The findings imply that consumers are likely to struggle to choose well in markets with products consisting of multiple important attributes that must all be factored in when making a choice. Interventions that reduce this kind of complexity for consumers may therefore be beneficial, but nothing in the present research addresses the potential costs of such interventions, or how providers are likely to respond to them. The findings are also general in nature and are intended to give insights into consumer choices across markets. There are likely to be additional factors specific to certain markets that need to be considered in any analysis of the costs and benefits of a potential policy change. Most importantly, the policy implications discussed here are not specific to Ireland or to any particular product market. Furthermore, they should not be read as criticisms of existing regulatory regimes, which already go to some lengths in assisting consumers to deal with complex products. Ireland currently has extensive regulations designed to protect consumers, both in general and in specific markets, descriptions of which can be found in Section 9.1 of the main report. Nevertheless, the experiments described here do offer relevant guidance for future policy designs. For instance, they imply that while policies that make it easier for consumers to switch providers may be necessary to encourage active consumers, they may not be sufficient, especially in markets where products are complex. In order for consumers to benefit, policies that help them to identify better deals reliably may also be required, given the scale of inaccuracy in consumers’ decisions that we record in this report when products have multiple important attributes. Where policies are designed to assist consumer decisions, the present findings imply quite severe limits in relation to the volume of information consumers can simultaneously take into account. Good impartial Executive Summary | xv consumer advice may limit the volume of information and focus on ensuring that the most important product attributes are recognised by consumers. The findings also have implications for the role of competition. While consumers may obtain substantial potential benefits from competition, their capabilities when faced with more complex products are likely to reduce such benefits. Pressure from competition requires sufficient numbers of consumers to spot and exploit better value offerings. Given our results, providers with larger market shares may face incentives to increase the complexity of products in an effort to dampen competitive pressure and generate more market power. Where marketing or pricing practices result in prices or attributes with multiple components, our findings imply that consumer choices are likely to become less accurate. Policymakers must of course be careful in determining whether such practices amount to legitimate innovations with potential consumer benefit. Yet there is a genuine danger that spurious complexity can be generated that confuses consumers and protects market power. The results described here provide backing for the promotion and/or provision by policymakers of high-quality independent choice engines, including but not limited to price comparison sites, especially in circumstances where the number of relevant product attributes is high. A longer discussion of the potential benefits and caveats associated with such policies is contained in the main body of the report. Mandated simplification policies are gaining in popularity internationally. Examples include limiting the number of tariffs a single energy company can offer or standardising health insurance products, both of which are designed to simplify the comparisons between prices and/or product attributes. The present research has some implications for what might make a good mandate. Consumer decisions are likely to be improved where a mandate brings to the consumer’s attention the most important product attributes at the point of decision. The present results offer guidance with respect to how many key attributes consumers are able simultaneously to trade off, with implications for the design of standardised disclosures. While bearing in mind the potential for imposing costs, the results also suggest benefits to compulsory ‘meta-attributes’ (such as APRs, energy ratings, total costs, etc.), which may help consumers to integrate otherwise separate sources of information. FUTURE RESEARCH The experiments described here were designed to produce findings that generalise across multiple product markets. However, in addition to the results outlined in this report, the work has resulted in new experimental methods that can be applied to more specific consumer policy issues. This is possible because the methods generate experimental measures of the accuracy of consumers’ decision-making. As such, they can be adapted to assess the quality of consumers’ decisions in relation to specific products, pricing and marketing practices. Work is underway in PRICE Lab that applies these methods to issues in specific markets, including those for personal loans, energy and mobile phones.
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