Academic literature on the topic 'PhD recognition'

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Journal articles on the topic "PhD recognition"

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Zheng, Shuangping, Yucong Bi, Haining Chen, Bo Gong, Shunji Jia, and Haitao Li. "Molecular basis for bipartite recognition of histone H3 by the PZP domain of PHF14." Nucleic Acids Research 49, no. 15 (2021): 8961–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkab670.

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Abstract Histone recognition constitutes a key epigenetic mechanism in gene regulation and cell fate decision. PHF14 is a conserved multi-PHD finger protein that has been implicated in organ development, tissue homeostasis, and tumorigenesis. Here we show that PHF14 reads unmodified histone H3(1–34) through an integrated PHD1-ZnK-PHD2 cassette (PHF14PZP). Our binding, structural and HDX-MS analyses revealed a feature of bipartite recognition, in which PHF14PZP utilizes two distinct surfaces for concurrent yet separable engagement of segments H3-Nter (e.g. 1–15) and H3-middle (e.g. 14–34) of H3(1–34). Structural studies revealed a novel histone H3 binding mode by PHD1 of PHF14PZP, in which a PHF14-unique insertion loop but not the core β-strands of a PHD finger dominates H3K4 readout. Binding studies showed that H3-PHF14PZP engagement is sensitive to modifications occurring to H3 R2, T3, K4, R8 and K23 but not K9 and K27, suggesting multiple layers of modification switch. Collectively, our work calls attention to PHF14 as a ‘ground’ state (unmodified) H3(1–34) reader that can be negatively regulated by active marks, thus providing molecular insights into a repressive function of PHF14 and its derepression.
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Metzen, Eric. "Enzyme substrate recognition in oxygen sensing: how the HIF trap snaps." Biochemical Journal 408, no. 2 (2007): e5-e6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/bj20071306.

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The transcriptional activator HIF (hypoxia-inducible factor) is a focal point of biomedical research because many situations in physiology and in pathology coincide with hypoxia. The effects of HIF activation may be a facet of normal growth, as in embryonic development, they may counterbalance a disease, as seen in the stimulation of erythropoiesis in anaemia, and they may be part of the pathological processes, as exemplified by tumour angiogenesis. The oxygen-sensitive α-subunits of HIF are primarily regulated by the enzymatic hydroxylation that induces rapid proteasomal degradation. The HIFα hydroxylases belong to a superfamily of dioxygenases that require the co-substrates oxygen and 2-oxoglutarate as well as the cofactors Fe2+ and ascorbate. The regulation of enzyme turnover by the concentration of the cosubstrate oxygen constitutes the interface between tissue oxygen level and the activity of HIF. The HIFα prolyl hydroxylases, termed PHDs/EGLNs (prolyl hydroxylase domain proteins/EGL nine homologues), bind to a conserved Leu-Xaa-Xaa-Leu-Ala-Pro motif present in all substrates identified so far. This recognition motif is present twice in HIF1α, which gives rise to a NODD [N-terminal ODD (oxygen-dependent degradation domain)] containing Pro402 of HIF1α and a CODD (C-terminal ODD) where Pro564 is hydroxylated. PHD1/EGLN2 and PHD2/EGLN1 hydroxylate both ODDs with higher activity towards CODD, whereas PHD3/EGLN3 is specific for CODD. The reason for this behaviour has been unclear. In this issue of the Biochemical Journal, Villar and colleagues demonstrate that distinct PHD/EGLN domains, that are remote from the catalytic site, function in substrate discrimination. This elegant study improves our understanding of the interaction of the oxygen-sensing PHDs/EGLNs with their substrates, which include, but are not limited to, the HIFα proteins.
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Panne, Daniel. "Chromatin recognition and regulation of the acetyltransferase CBP/p300." Acta Crystallographica Section A Foundations and Advances 70, a1 (2014): C1586. http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/s2053273314084137.

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Gene regulation in higher eukaryotes requires recruitment of the transcriptional co-activators CBP/p300 that associate with transcriptional regulators and integrate a large number of signal transduction pathways. Recruitment of CBP/p300 results in acetylation and remodeling of inhibitory chromatin. Recently we have determined the 2.8Å crystal structure of the catalytic core of p300 containing its Bromodomain, the CH2 region and HAT domain in complex with the bi-substrate inhibitor, Lys-CoA. Unexpectedly the structure reveals that the CH2 region contains a discontinuous PHD domain which is interrupted by a RING domain. The Bromodomain, PHD, RING and HAT domains adopt an assembled configuration in which the RING domain is positioned over the HAT substrate binding pocket. Disease mutations that disrupt RING attachment lead to upregulation of HAT activity, revealing an auto-inhibitory role for this domain. Detailed investigation of chromatin substrate recognition showed that the Bromodomain preferentially interacts with histones containing combinations of acetylations rather than singly modified sequences, whereas the p300 PHD domain did not interact with canonical substrates. Our results demonstrate that the Bromodomain substrate specificity is compatible with HAT substrate acetylation patterns suggesting that positive feedback is likely an important component in establishment of active chromatin states. We here present progress in our understanding of the regulation of p300 activity, chromatin modification, readout and how disease-related mutations result in dysregulation of these activities.
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Champagne, Karen, and Tatiana Kutateladze. "Structural Insight Into Histone Recognition by the ING PHD Fingers." Current Drug Targets 10, no. 5 (2009): 432–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/138945009788185040.

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He, Chao, Ning Liu, Dongya Xie, Yanhong Liu, Yazhong Xiao, and Fudong Li. "Structural basis for histone H3K4me3 recognition by the N-terminal domain of the PHD finger protein Spp1." Biochemical Journal 476, no. 13 (2019): 1957–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/bcj20190091.

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Abstract Saccharomyces cerevisiae Spp1, a plant homeodomain (PHD) finger containing protein, is a critical subunit of the histone H3K4 methyltransferase complex of proteins associated with Set1 (COMPASS). The chromatin binding affinity of the PHD finger of Spp1 has been proposed to modulate COMPASS activity. During meiosis, Spp1 plays another role in promoting programmed double-strand break (DSB) formation by binding H3K4me3 via its PHD finger and interacting with a DSB protein, Mer2. However, how the Spp1 PHD finger performs site-specific readout of H3K4me3 is still not fully understood. In the present study, we determined the crystal structure of the highly conserved Spp1 N-terminal domain (Sc_Spp1NTD) in complex with the H3K4me3 peptide. The structure shows that Sc_Spp1NTD comprises a PHD finger responsible for methylated H3K4 recognition and a C3H-type zinc finger necessary to ensure the overall structural stability. Our isothermal titration calorimetry results show that binding of H3K4me3 to Sc_Spp1NTD is mildly inhibited by H3R2 methylation, weakened by H3T6 phosphorylation, and abrogated by H3T3 phosphorylation. This histone modification cross-talk, which is conserved in the Saccharomyces pombe and mammalian orthologs of Sc_Spp1 in vitro, can be rationalized structurally and might contribute to the roles of Spp1 in COMPASS activity regulation and meiotic recombination.
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Oliver, Samuel S., Catherine A. Musselman, Rajini Srinivasan, John P. Svaren, Tatiana G. Kutateladze, and John M. Denu. "Multivalent Recognition of Histone Tails by the PHD Fingers of CHD5." Biochemistry 51, no. 33 (2012): 6534–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi3006972.

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Proto, Anthony V. "Diagnosis Please Certificate of Recognition Awarded to Taro Shimono, MD, PhD." Radiology 236, no. 3 (2005): 747. http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/radiol.2363050922.

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Kreutzer, Jeffrey S., and Nathan D. Zasler. "Recognition of Service – Dr. William W. McKinlay, BA, MSc, PhD, CPsychol." Brain Injury 31, no. 1 (2017): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02699052.2017.1277836.

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Bortoluzzi, Alessio, Anastasia Amato, Xavier Lucas, Manuel Blank, and Alessio Ciulli. "Structural basis of molecular recognition of helical histone H3 tail by PHD finger domains." Biochemical Journal 474, no. 10 (2017): 1633–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/bcj20161053.

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The plant homeodomain (PHD) fingers are among the largest family of epigenetic domains, first characterized as readers of methylated H3K4. Readout of histone post-translational modifications by PHDs has been the subject of intense investigation; however, less is known about the recognition of secondary structure features within the histone tail itself. We solved the crystal structure of the PHD finger of the bromodomain adjacent to zinc finger 2A [BAZ2A, also known as TIP5 (TTF-I/interacting protein 5)] in complex with unmodified N-terminal histone H3 tail. The peptide is bound in a helical folded-back conformation after K4, induced by an acidic patch on the protein surface that prevents peptide binding in an extended conformation. Structural bioinformatics analyses identify a conserved Asp/Glu residue that we name ‘acidic wall’, found to be mutually exclusive with the conserved Trp for K4Me recognition. Neutralization or inversion of the charges at the acidic wall patch in BAZ2A, and homologous BAZ2B, weakened H3 binding. We identify simple mutations on H3 that strikingly enhance or reduce binding, as a result of their stabilization or destabilization of H3 helicity. Our work unravels the structural basis for binding of the helical H3 tail by PHD fingers and suggests that molecular recognition of secondary structure motifs within histone tails could represent an additional layer of regulation in epigenetic processes.
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Proto, Anthony V. "Diagnosis Please Certificate of Recognition Awarded to Seyed Alireza Emamian, MD, PhD." Radiology 216, no. 3 (2000): 617. http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/radiology.216.3.r00se62617.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "PhD recognition"

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Frankel, Joe. "Linear dynamic models for automatic speech recognition." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/1087.

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The majority of automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems rely on hidden Markov models (HMM), in which the output distribution associated with each state is modelled by a mixture of diagonal covariance Gaussians. Dynamic information is typically included by appending time-derivatives to feature vectors. This approach, whilst successful, makes the false assumption of framewise independence of the augmented feature vectors and ignores the spatial correlations in the parametrised speech signal. This dissertation seeks to address these shortcomings by exploring acoustic modelling for ASR with an application of a form of state-space model, the linear dynamic model (LDM). Rather than modelling individual frames of data, LDMs characterize entire segments of speech. An auto-regressive state evolution through a continuous space gives a Markovian model of the underlying dynamics, and spatial correlations between feature dimensions are absorbed into the structure of the observation process. LDMs have been applied to speech recognition before, however a smoothed Gauss-Markov form was used which ignored the potential for subspace modelling. The continuous dynamical state means that information is passed along the length of each segment. Furthermore, if the state is allowed to be continuous across segment boundaries, long range dependencies are built into the system and the assumption of independence of successive segments is loosened. The state provides an explicit model of temporal correlation which sets this approach apart from frame-based and some segment-based models where the ordering of the data is unimportant. The benefits of such a model are examined both within and between segments. LDMs are well suited to modelling smoothly varying, continuous, yet noisy trajectories such as found in measured articulatory data. Using speaker-dependent data from the MOCHA corpus, the performance of systems which model acoustic, articulatory, and combined acoustic-articulatory features are compared. As well as measured articulatory parameters, experiments use the output of neural networks trained to perform an articulatory inversion mapping. The speaker-independent TIMIT corpus provides the basis for larger scale acoustic-only experiments. Classification tasks provide an ideal means to compare modelling choices without the confounding influence of recognition search errors, and are used to explore issues such as choice of state dimension, front-end acoustic parametrization and parameter initialization. Recognition for segment models is typically more computationally expensive than for frame-based models. Unlike frame-level models, it is not always possible to share likelihood calculations for observation sequences which occur within hypothesized segments that have different start and end times. Furthermore, the Viterbi criterion is not necessarily applicable at the frame level. This work introduces a novel approach to decoding for segment models in the form of a stack decoder with A* search. Such a scheme allows flexibility in the choice of acoustic and language models since the Viterbi criterion is not integral to the search, and hypothesis generation is independent of the particular language model. Furthermore, the time-asynchronous ordering of the search means that only likely paths are extended, and so a minimum number of models are evaluated. The decoder is used to give full recognition results for feature-sets derived from the MOCHA and TIMIT corpora. Conventional train/test divisions and choice of language model are used so that results can be directly compared to those in other studies. The decoder is also used to implement Viterbi training, in which model parameters are alternately updated and then used to re-align the training data.
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Jiang, Yugang. "Large scale semantic concept detection, fusion, and selection for domain adaptive video search /." access full-text access abstract and table of contents, 2009. http://libweb.cityu.edu.hk/cgi-bin/ezdb/thesis.pl?phd-cs-b23749957f.pdf.

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Thesis (Ph.D.)--City University of Hong Kong, 2009.<br>"Submitted to Department of Computer Science in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 145-161)
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Wei, Xiaoyong. "Concept-based video search by semantic and context reasoning /." access full-text access abstract and table of contents, 2009. http://libweb.cityu.edu.hk/cgi-bin/ezdb/thesis.pl?phd-cs-b23750509f.pdf.

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Thesis (Ph.D.)--City University of Hong Kong, 2009.<br>"Submitted to Department of Computer Science in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 122-133)
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Wysoski, Simei Gomes. "Evolving spiking neural networks for adaptive audiovisual pattern recognition a thesis submitted to Auckland University of Technology in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), 2008." Click here to access this resource online, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10292/390.

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Cordero, Gamboa Nadia. "Le devenir professionnel des jeunes diplômés étrangers en France." Thesis, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018USPCC013/document.

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Les migrations professionnelle et étudiante ont été abordées sous l’angle des réseaux, de la socialisation ou des échanges entre les pays d’origine et la France. Cette recherche anthropologique, quant à elle, s’attache à analyser la situation professionnelle des jeunes diplômés de master ou de doctorat issus de pays n’appartenant pas à l’Union européenne. Ceux-ci souhaitent s’engager dans une activité professionnelle en France, toutefois « la question du retour au pays d’origine se pose souvent à l’issue de leurs cursus universitaire ». Pour eux, l’entrée dans le monde professionnel prend une dimension administrative très marquée. Ils se trouvent confrontés à des obligations administratives (pendant leurs études, dans la vie quotidienne ou au travail), à des contraintes d’insertion professionnelle ou de poursuite de carrière (postes réservés aux ressortissants de l’Union européenne, problèmes pour changer de statut) en passant par des difficultés à établir un projet professionnel après l’obtention de leur diplôme. Dans le cadre d’une démarche anthropologique, un travail d’immersion est mené au sein d’associations représentatives des doctorants travaillant sur la valorisation du parcours doctoral et d’associations qui informent et apportent leur soutien aux jeunes diplômés étrangers, afin d’appréhender la manière dont ils envisagent la suite de leur parcours en France et de connaître la manière dont ils le vivent<br>Professional and student migrations have been considered from the point of view of networks, socialization and exchanges between countries of origin and France. For its part, this anthropological study focuses on analysis of the professional status of recent foreign graduates of a PhD or a master degree coming from non european union countries. Those foreign graduates wish to start a professional activity in France, however "the return home issue often comes up at the end of their university curriculum". For them, entering the labor market takes on a strong administrative dimension. They have to face administrative obligations (during their studies, in their everyday life or at work), constraints to integrate the labor market or to carry on with their career (reserved positions for citizens of the european union, problems to get a change of legal status) or even difficulties to determine a professional project after graduating. Within an anthropological approach, an immersion work is led in representative associations of PhD students interested in the promotion of PhD experience and in associations that provide information and support to recent foreign graduates, in order to apprehend the way they consider the continuation of their experience in France and to know how they feel about it
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Frerichs, Gundrun. "Balancing recognition and disrespect recovery as the process of identity formation : a New Zealand study of how services shape recovery from sexual abuse : a thesis submitted to Auckland University of Technology in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), 2007 /." Click here to access this resource online, 2007. http://aut.researchgateway.ac.nz/handle/10292/344.

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Sandford, Adam. "Configural procesing in familiar face recognition." Thesis, University of Aberdeen, 2014. http://digitool.abdn.ac.uk:80/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=225680.

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Face recognition is widely held to rely on 'configural processing', recently defined as an analysis of metric distances between features. Given that face recognition concerns those faces of people who we know, it is suggested that our unique representations of familiar faces contain information about these metric distances. The experiments in this thesis examine the hypothesis that face recognition relies on 'configural processing' by comparing performance between familiar and unfamiliar faces in a range of tasks. Experiments in the first half of the thesis investigate the effects of geometric distortions on different face tasks. Experiments in the second half examine familiarity advantages in rescaling distorted facial images. The main findings are that face recognition might not rely on simple measures of metric distances between features, and that observers show a surprising degree of tolerance to configural changes applied to familiar faces. This suggests that an operationalisation of configural processing will need to consider other measures that do not survive the image deformations tested in this thesis. The findings are discussed in relation to existing research on familiar face recognition as distinct from unfamiliar face perception.
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Coleman, Matthew Charles. "Pattern recognition of historical fermentation data for optimization of recombinant protein production /." For electronic version search Digital dissertations database. Restricted to UC campuses. Access is free to UC campus dissertations, 2005. http://uclibs.org/PID/11984.

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McKenzie, Christopher Gordon Jemison. "Candida albicans recognition by and escape from macrophages." Thesis, University of Aberdeen, 2011. http://digitool.abdn.ac.uk:80/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=167784.

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Disruption of <i>N-</i>mannosylation and <i>O</i>-mannosylation on the <i>C. albicans</i> outer cell wall increased the rate by which <i>C. albicans</i> is ingested by macrophages. Conversely, disruption of phosphomannosylation reduced the rate of <i>C. albicans</i> is phagocytosis. Alterations to the outer cell wall and genetic or chemical inhibition of hyphal morphogenesis in <i>C. albicans</i> resulted in significantly abrogated macrophage killing <i>in vitro</i>. Disruption of <i>C. albicans </i>ability to tolerate oxidative stresses also perturbed its ability to escape from and kill macrophages. The engagement of specific receptors on the macrophage surface is an essential component of <i>C. albicans</i> recognition and clearance. In the presence of serum, blocking pattern recognition receptors associated with specific fungal cell wall epitopes (Mannose Receptor, Dectin 1 and CD16/32) resulted in an initial decrease in phagocytosis and decreased macrophage killing. Blocking macrophage pattern recognition receptors using soluble components of the<i> C. albicans</i> cell wall resulted in decreased phagocytosis under serum free conditions of <i>O-</i>linked mannans only, and reduced macrophage killing for macrophages pre-exposed to <i>N-</i>mannan and laminarin. The presence of serum increased the rate of uptake for macrophages pre-exposed to <i>N-</i>mannan and laminarin, and had no affect upon macrophage killing. The interaction of <i>C. albicans</i> cell wall epitopes with macrophage pattern recognition receptors, coupled with <i>C. albicans</i> ability to respond to stresses encountered after ingestion are critical determinants of the macrophage’s ability to ingest and process <i>C. albicans.</i>
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Masato, Daniele. "Incremental activity and plan recognition for human teams." Thesis, University of Aberdeen, 2012. http://digitool.abdn.ac.uk:80/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=186768.

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Anticipating human subjects' intentions and information needs is considered one of the ultimate goals of Artificial Intelligence. Activity and plan recognition contribute to this goal by studying how low-level observations about subjects and the environment in which they act can be linked to a high-level plan representation. This task is challenging in a dynamic and uncertain environment; the environment may change while the subjects are reasoning about it, and the effects of the subjects' interactions cannot be predicted with certainty. Humans generally struggle to enact plans and maintain situation awareness in such circumstances, even when they work in teams towards a common objective. Intelligent software assistants can support human teams by monitoring their activities and plan progress, thus relieving them from some of the cognitive burden they experience. The assistants' design needs to keep into account that teams can form and disband quickly in response to environmental changes, and that the course of action may change during plan execution. It is also crucial to efficiently and incrementally process a stream of observations in order to enable online prediction of those intentions and information needs. In this thesis we propose an incremental approach for team composition and activity recognition based on probabilistic graphical models. We show that this model can successfully learn team formations and behaviours in highly dynamic domains, and that classification can be performed in polynomial time. We evaluate our model within a simulated scenario provided by an open-source computer game. In addition, we discuss an incremental approach to plan recognition that exploits the results yielded by activity recognition to assess a team's course of action. We show how this model can account for incomplete or inconsistent knowledge about recognised activities, and how it can be integrated into an existing mechanism for plan recognition.
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Books on the topic "PhD recognition"

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Go, dog, go!: P.D. Eastman's book of things that go. Random House, 1997.

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Perez, Perdomo Adolfo, ed. Ve, perro. ve!: Libro de cosas que van. Random House, 2003.

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ZnO bao mo zhi bei ji qi guang, dian xing neng yan jiu. Shanghai da xue chu ban she, 2010.

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Trifunovic, N. Pattern Recognition for Reliability Assessment of Water Distribution Networks: UNESCO-IHE PhD Thesis. Taylor & Francis Group, 2012.

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Trifunovic, N. Pattern Recognition for Reliability Assessment of Water Distribution Networks: UNESCO-IHE PhD Thesis. Taylor & Francis Group, 2012.

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Pellerin, Denis, Nuno Cardim, and Christian Prinz. Hand-held echocardiography. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198726012.003.0009.

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Pocket-size hand-held echocardiography (PHE) is low cost, portable, user friendly, and battery powered. Studies using PHE do not replace conventional echo studies and do not provide a complete diagnostic echocardiographic examination. PHE should be used for goal-oriented studies that include assessment of left ventricular (LV) cavity size, LV systolic function, detection of pericardial effusion, and haemodynamic compromise. Examinations using PHE have been demonstrated to be feasible and provide additional information to the physical examination. For potential users other than cardiology experts in echocardiography the accuracy of PHE data highly depends on training and competency. Emphasis must be placed on acquisition of good quality images and knowledge of pitfalls and limitations. The challenge is providing efficient training programmes to ensure competency in performing focused studies and have recognition of an appropriate threshold for seeking expert advice and full echo examination. PHE is a useful teaching tool and provides important complementary information for medical education.
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Walsh, Richard A. When Less Is More. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190607555.003.0006.

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The natural history of PD produces a predominance of nonmotor complications in the later years that can often be more disabling than the motor complications due to their impact on quality of life. Quality of life is less impaired by motor symptoms than it is by cognitive impairment, hallucinations, autonomic involvement, and sleep disruption. Carer burden can be significant, and a shift of emphasis toward maximizing quality of life for patient and carer over the achievement of continuous dopaminergic stimulation is required. Recognition of the carer burden is an important facet of the palliative neurology consultation, which should target resources to limit carer burnout in recognition of their critical role.
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Charles, Susanne, ed. Evaluation of biology in the European Union: Structure of teaching, perspectives of academic recognition, new needs, future of inter-university cooperation, European Ph.D. Vubpress, 1995.

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Susanne, Charles. Evaluation of Biology in the European Union: Structure of Teaching, Perspectives of Academic Recognition, New Needs, Future of Inter-University Cooperation, European Ph.D. Vub Brussels University Press, 1995.

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Paul, Richard, Pavlos Myrianthefs, George Baltopoulos, and Shaun McMaster. Blood gas analysis: acid–base, fluid, and electrolyte disorders. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199687039.003.0018.

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Acid-base homeostasis is vital for the maintenance of normal tissue and organ function, as both acidosis and alkalosis can have harmful and potentially life-threatening effects. Arterial blood gas analysis, combined with routine clinical history and examination, can provide useful information for the management of the critically ill cardiac patient. Most acid-base derangements are reversed by treatment of the underlying disease process, rather than simple correction of the abnormal pH, and prognosis is determined by the nature of the underlying disease, rather than the extent of pH value deviation. Within this chapter, a six-step approach is presented for prompt and accurate acid-base interpretation. Water and electrolyte disorders are common in the intensive cardiac care unit, particularly in patients with cardiac failure. Prompt recognition and treatment is required to prevent cardiovascular and neurological compromise. Therapeutic strategies range from simple electrolyte substitution and fluid management to extracorporeal filtration of excess fluid and electrolytes. These are discussed within this chapter.
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Book chapters on the topic "PhD recognition"

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Gatchalian, Jovylyn, and Tatiana G. Kutateladze. "PHD Fingers as Histone Readers." In Histone Recognition. Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-18102-8_2.

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Attabi, Yazid, and Pierre Dumouchel. "Automatic Emotion Recognition from Speech A PhD Research Proposal." In Affective Computing and Intelligent Interaction. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-24571-8_20.

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Deng, Shaobo, Meiying Sun, Cungen Cao, and Yuefei Sui. "A Sound and Complete Axiomatic System for Modality $\Box\phi\equiv\Box_1\phi\land\Box_2\phi$." In Progress in Pattern Recognition, Image Analysis, Computer Vision, and Applications. Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-44980-6_17.

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Rai, Anuj, Narayanan C. Krishnan, and Sukalpa Chanda. "Pho(SC)Net: An Approach Towards Zero-Shot Word Image Recognition in Historical Documents." In Document Analysis and Recognition – ICDAR 2021. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-86549-8_2.

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Dong, Hongbin, Jin Xu, and Qiang Fu. "Facial Expression Recognition Based on PCD-CNN with Pose and Expression." In Communications in Computer and Information Science. Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-7981-3_38.

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"Foreword." In Similarity Measures for Face Recognition, edited by Luigi Preziosi. BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBLISHERS, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/9781681080444115010001.

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This book addresses a fundamental step in face recognition research answering, among other issues, the following questions: how to properly measure the distance between surfaces representing faces, what are the pros and contras of each algorithms and how they compare with each other, what are their computational costs. In this respect, this book represents a reference point for PhD students and researchers who want to start working not only at face recognition problems but also at other applications dealing with the recognition of three-dimensional shapes. The need for such a book was particularly evident when we presented to our multidisciplinary team of the High Polytechnic School the topic to be studied that was aimed at the development of a diagnostic tool of prenatal syndromes from three-dimensional ultrasound scans (SYN DIAG). A book, easy to use, putting order and organizing the scientific significance of similarity measures applied to face recognition problems was missing. This aspect was crucial to support the choice of measures to be selected and tested. Coming to the topic of the book, face recognition has several applications, including security, such as authentication and identification of suspects, and medical ones, such as corrective surgery and diagnosis. So, I think that this book is going to be a valuable tool for all scientists 'facing face'.
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Mojtahed, Reza, and Guo Chao Peng. "Practically Applying the Technology Acceptance Model in Information Systems Research." In Information Systems Research and Exploring Social Artifacts. IGI Global, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-2491-7.ch004.

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Explaining the factors that lead to use and acceptance of Information Technology (IT), both at individual and organizational levels, has been the focus of Information Systems (IS) researchers since the 1970s. The Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) is known as such an explanatory model and has increasingly gained recognition due to its focus on theories of human behaviour. Although this model has faced some criticism in terms of not being able to fully explain the social-technical acceptance of technology, TAM is still known as one of the best IS methodologies that contribute greatly to explain IT/IS acceptance. It has been widely used in different areas of IS studies, such as e-commerce, e-business, multimedia, and mobile commerce. This chapter discusses, describes, and explains TAM as one of the well-known information system research models and attempts to demonstrate how this model can be customised and extended when applyied in practice in IS research projects. In order to illustrate this, the chapter presents and discussed two case studies, respectively, applying TAM in the areas of mobile banking and mobile campus in the UK. It is also proposed that comparing with the traditional questionnaire approach, mixed-methods designs (that contain both a quantitative and a qualitative component) can generate more meaningful and significant findings in IS studies that apply the TAM model. The practical guidance provided in this chapter is particularly useful and valuable to researchers, especially junior researchers and PhD students, who intend to apply TAM in their research.
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Cavoukian, Ann. "Privacy by Design." In Privacy Protection Measures and Technologies in Business Organizations. IGI Global, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-61350-501-4.ch007.

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This chapter traces the origins of the Privacy by Design (PbD) concept and leadership by the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner (IPC) of Ontario, Canada, from the mid-1990s to the current day (2011), with specific attention to three major themes: The evolution of PbD from its early emphasis on information technologies, which also apply to organizational practices and processes, and to broader information eco-systems and architectures; The evolution of the need to articulate and promote a set of universal principles to help guide the design of privacy, from Fair Information Practices to PbD’s 7 Foundational Principles; An account of the evolving work of the IPC in support of the new or “enhanced” FIPs that were codified in the PbD Foundational Principles. The chapter will outline recognition for PbD received, and the challenges ahead.
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Hosseini, Seyyed Abed, Mohammed-Reza Akbarzadeh-T, and Mohammed-Bagher Naghibi-Sistani. "Methodology for Epilepsy and Epileptic Seizure Recognition using Chaos Analysis of Brain Signals." In Intelligent Technologies and Techniques for Pervasive Computing. IGI Global, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-4038-2.ch002.

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A novel combination of chaotic features and Adaptive Neuro-Fuzzy Inference System (ANFIS) is proposed for epileptic seizure recognition. The non-linear dynamics of the original EEGs are quantified in the form of the Hurst exponent (H), Correlation dimension (D2), Petrosian Fractal Dimension (PFD), and the Largest lyapunov exponent (?). The process of EEG analysis consists of two phases, namely the qualitative and quantitative analysis. The classification ability of the H, D2, PFD, and ? measures is tested using ANFIS classifier. This method is evaluated with using a benchmark EEG dataset, and qualitative and quantitative results are presented. The inter-ictal EEG-based diagnostic approach achieves 98.6% accuracy with using 4-fold cross validation. Diagnosis based on ictal data is also tested in ANFIS classifier, reaching 98.1% accuracy. Therefore, the method can be successfully applied to both inter-ictal and ictal data.
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Karbownik, Lidia. "Pomiar i ocena zróżnicowania zakresu działalności gospodarczej przedsiębiorstw sektora TSL." In Przedsiębiorczość, strategie i metody zarządzania przedsiębiorstwem. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/7969-097-8.04.

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The main goal of this paper is to analyse the diversification of businesses activity of enterprises from the TSL sector. The main research hypothesis formulated in order to achieve the goal of the paper took the form of the following statement: the significant diversification of activities of the enterprises from the transport, forwarding and logistic sector is mainly outside the section „Transport and warehouse management”. The recognition of businesses activity extent of the analysed enterprises has been done with using of the basic descriptive statistics (i.e., the mean and median) and Friedman Test in SPSS. The results of conducted empirical research show that the highest number of groups PKD 2007 reported most frequently in 2010 and significantly different from the analysed variable for 2004 and 2005.
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Conference papers on the topic "PhD recognition"

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Raczynski, Michal. "Speech processing algorithm for isolated words recognition." In 2018 International Interdisciplinary PhD Workshop (IIPhDW). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iiphdw.2018.8388238.

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Bayliff, Alec. "PhD Forum: Human Activity Recognition in Smart Environments." In 2017 IEEE International Conference on Smart Computing (SMARTCOMP). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/smartcomp.2017.7947013.

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Michalak, Hubert, and Krzysztof Okarma. "Region based adaptive binarization for optical character recognition purposes." In 2018 International Interdisciplinary PhD Workshop (IIPhDW). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iiphdw.2018.8388391.

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Tarnowski, Pawel, Marcin Kolodziej, Andrzej Majkowski, and Remigiusz Jan Rak. "Combined analysis of GSR and EEG signals for emotion recognition." In 2018 International Interdisciplinary PhD Workshop (IIPhDW). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iiphdw.2018.8388342.

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Mahler, Ronald. "The multisensor PHD filter: I. General solution via multitarget calculus." In Signal Processing, Sensor Fusion, and Target Recognition XVIII. SPIE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.818024.

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Mahler, Ronald. "The multisensor PHD filter: II. Erroneous solution via "Poisson magic"." In Signal Processing, Sensor Fusion, and Target Recognition XVIII. SPIE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.818025.

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Jingjing Wu and Shiqiang Hu. "PHD filter for multi-target visual tracking with trajectory recognition." In 2010 13th International Conference on Information Fusion (FUSION 2010). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icif.2010.5711985.

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"The multisensor PHD filter: II. Erroneous solution via "Poisson magic" (Erratum)." In Signal Processing, Sensor Fusion, and Target Recognition XVIII. SPIE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2539169.

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"The multisensor PHD filter: I. General solution via multitarget calculus (Erratum)." In Signal Processing, Sensor Fusion, and Target Recognition XVIII. SPIE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2539174.

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Sulic, Vildana, Janez Pers, Matej Kristan, and Stanislav Kovacic. "PhD forum: Hierarchical feature scheme for object recognition in visual sensor networks." In 2009 Third ACM/IEEE International Conference on Distributed Smart Cameras (ICDSC). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icdsc.2009.5289394.

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