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Journal articles on the topic 'Process migration'

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1

Milojičić, Dejan S., Fred Douglis, Yves Paindaveine, Richard Wheeler, and Songnian Zhou. "Process migration." ACM Computing Surveys 32, no. 3 (September 2000): 241–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/367701.367728.

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2

Naumenko, Tamara V. "THE SPECIFICS OF THE EUROPEAN MIGRATION PROCESS." EKONOMIKA I UPRAVLENIE: PROBLEMY, RESHENIYA 9/4, no. 129 (2022): 64–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.36871/ek.up.p.r.2022.09.04.008.

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The article is devoted to the consideration of an acute issue of modernity – the problem of migration. The most important aspects of the migration crisis in Europe are analyzed and much attention is paid to its impact on young people and on the formation of the youth environment. The analysis of this problem is carried out from various sides of the political space of modernity and participants in political processes, as well as from the perspective of the predictive function of the scientific article, several possible ways to solve this problem using generalized international experience are proposed
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3

Beames, Simon, and Kenneth Fraser. "Migration Pattern Process." Architectural Design 79, no. 5 (September 2009): 120–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ad.963.

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4

Hidayati, Inayah. "The Process of Migration and Communication Technology Roles among Labor Migrants in Batam - Indonesia." Society 7, no. 2 (December 31, 2019): 173–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.33019/society.v7i2.99.

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This research explains the roles of communication technology on the migration process of labor migrants in Batam, Indonesia. Differences between places are strong reasons for people to migrate. The advances in communication technology have freed up opportunities for people to migrate. Technology has made it more accessible for migrants to raise links to their next destination through the internet. Interactions within communication technology make migration easier by decreasing the expenses and risks of moving. The explanations in this study are to understand the communication technology for the migrating process and calculate the social networks of migrants. This research applied mixed methods to explore the migration process with data collected included quantitative data from a survey with 500 respondents and supported by qualitative data from in-depth interviews. The results: 1) Communication technology helps migrants in the migration process, especially for searching for information about the destination area. 2) The migrant who uses communication technology has a strong social network and less risk of migration. The role of communication technology in the migration's processes is as a tool to maintain social ties of migrants, migrant uses their social media to make contact and gain information about their destination. This study related to SDGs' target number 10.7 which facilitates orderly, safe, regular and responsible migration and mobility of people, including through the implementation of planned and well-managed migration policies, communications technology facilitate safe and well-managed migration.
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5

Larner, Ken, and Craig Beasley. "Cascaded migrations: Improving the accuracy of finite‐difference migration." GEOPHYSICS 52, no. 5 (May 1987): 618–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1190/1.1442331.

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The accuracy of time migrations done with finite‐difference schemes deteriorates with increasing reflector dip. Some properties of migration in general, and of finite‐difference approaches in particular, suggest a way of improving the accuracy of finite‐difference schemes for migrating steep dips. First, although data will be undermigrated when too low a velocity is used in migration, a correctly migrated result can be obtained by migrating again, this time with the previously undermigrated result as input. In fact, a sequence of undermigrations will yield the correct result as long as the sum of the squares of the migration velocities used in the different migration stages equals the square of the correct migration velocity. A second property is that the apparent spatial dip of a reflector perceived by the migration process is a function of not only the time dip of the unmigrated reflection, but also the velocity used in the migration. In a sequence of low‐velocity migrations, the apparent spatial dip perceived at each migration stage can be considerably less than the true dip. Thus, because finite‐difference migration is accurate for small spatial dips, the cascaded migrations yield a more accurate result than that of single‐stage migration. Also, because each migration stage is done with low velocity, the depth step can be large; hence, the computational effort need not be. The accuracy of the method is not compromised (in fact, it improves) in media in which velocity increases with depth. Moreover, the cascaded approach suffers no more than other methods of time migration where velocity varies mildly in the lateral direction. In applications of the method to stacked data from the Gulf of Mexico, reflections from near‐vertical flanks of salt domes were migrated with accuracy comparable to that achieved by frequency‐wavenumber domain migration.
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6

Romero, Louis A., Dennis C. Ghiglia, Curtis C. Ober, and Scott A. Morton. "Phase encoding of shot records in prestack migration." GEOPHYSICS 65, no. 2 (March 2000): 426–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1190/1.1444737.

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Frequency‐domain shot‐record migration can produce higher quality images than Kirchhoff migration but typically at a greater cost. The computing cost of shot‐record migration is the product of the number of shots in the survey and the expense of each individual migration. Many attempts to reduce this cost have focused on the speed of the individual migrations, trying to achieve a better trade‐off between accuracy and speed. Another approach is to reduce the number of migrations. We investigate the simultaneous migration of shot records using frequency‐domain shot‐record migration algorithms. The difficulty with this approach is the production of so‐called crossterms between unrelated shot and receiver wavefields, which generate unwanted artifacts or noise in the final image. To reduce these artifacts and obtain an image comparable in quality to the single‐shot‐per‐migration result, we have introduced a process called phase encoding, which shifts or disperses these crossterms. The process of phase encoding thus allows one to trade S/N ratio for the speed of migrating the entire survey. Several encoding functions and two application strategies have been tested. The first strategy, combining multiple shots per migration and using each shot only once, reduces computation in direct relation to the number of shots combined. The second strategy, performing multiple migrations of all the shots in the survey, provides a means to reduce the crossterm noise by stacking the resulting images. The additional noise in both strategies may be tolerated if it is no stronger than the inherent seismic noise in the migrated image and if the final image is achieved with less cost.
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7

Branford, A. J. "A self-excited migration process." Journal of Applied Probability 22, no. 1 (March 1985): 58–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3213748.

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Processes whose entities would be independent but whose behaviour is influenced by environmental variables, which they in turn affect, are processes with mediated interactions. The independent open migration process with which is associated a random variable, the excitation, is such a process. This self-excited (conditionally) independent open migration process, with finite excitation, is related to a derived process, its piecewise-deterministic analogue. The correspondence gives insight into the process, as well as an equilibrium independence result. A simple example illustrates the presence of paroxysmal phenomena.
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8

Patel, Drashti. "Process migration and load balancing." INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN ADVANCE ENGINEERING 1, no. 1 (January 27, 2015): 25. http://dx.doi.org/10.26472/ijrae.v1i1.10.

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9

Zarrabi, Amirreza. "A Generic Process Migration Algorithm." International Journal of Distributed and Parallel systems 3, no. 5 (September 30, 2012): 29–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.5121/ijdps.2012.3504.

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10

Song, Xue Ying, Xiao Jun Hu, Cai Xia Jin, Ji Song Yang, Hong Liang Chen, Yong Xia Hou, and Yu Shuang Li. "Cadmium Migration and Distribution Process." Advanced Materials Research 518-523 (May 2012): 1873–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.518-523.1873.

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The significant pollution accidents which not only threaten public health and public property safety, but also bring major disaster, have become the world concerning environmental problems. The migration process and feature of CdCl2 in the vertical and horizontal profiles of soil were studied by the stimulating experiment to present the theory for the treatment of significant pollution accident. The column leaching device was taken to simulate the vertical and horizontal migration of CdCl2 in the soil profile under two-phase rainfall during 16 days. The portable manual control negative pressure pump was taken to extract soil solution sample and the CdCl2 concentration was determined by the atomic absorption spectrophotometer. Results showed that during the whole experiment, the obvious horizontal and vertical migration features of CdCl2 appeared. The CdCl2 covered the whole horizontal profile in 0.5 h and the whole vertical profile in 146 hours. The relative variation rate of CdCl2 in the different depth of bulk showed that the rapid passing time differed in the different depths. The simulating device used in this paper could well investigate the vertical and horizontal distribution and migration of contaminant. Under the condition of greater rainfall, the CdCl2 gave priority to the horizontal runoff in the surface soil, followed by the vertical migration.
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11

Prigoda, Anastasiya. "MIGRATION PROCESS IN MODERN WORLD." MEST Journal 6, no. 2 (July 15, 2018): 104–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.12709/mest.06.06.02.13.

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12

Richmond, Michael, and Michael Hitchens. "A new process migration algorithm." ACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review 31, no. 1 (January 1997): 31–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/254784.254790.

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13

Nickerson, Bill, and Phil Bording. "Process visualization: The migration movie." Leading Edge 15, no. 1 (January 1996): 38–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1190/1.1437200.

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14

Zayas, E. "Attacking the process migration bottleneck." ACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review 21, no. 5 (November 1987): 13–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/37499.37503.

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15

Branford, A. J. "A self-excited migration process." Journal of Applied Probability 22, no. 01 (March 1985): 58–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021900200029016.

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Processes whose entities would be independent but whose behaviour is influenced by environmental variables, which they in turn affect, are processes with mediated interactions. The independent open migration process with which is associated a random variable, the excitation, is such a process. This self-excited (conditionally) independent open migration process, with finite excitation, is related to a derived process, its piecewise-deterministic analogue. The correspondence gives insight into the process, as well as an equilibrium independence result. A simple example illustrates the presence of paroxysmal phenomena.
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16

Hussain, Syed Ishtiaq, Huma Javed, Tehseen Khan, Sara Shazad, and Falak Naz Khalil. "Native Process Migration in Wireless Sensor Networks." International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks 2015 (2015): 1–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/607143.

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This paper presents a novel architecture for native process migration (PM) in wireless sensor networks (WSNs) without the use of virtual execution environment. Resources in WSN are scarce; therefore creating virtual execution environment puts extra burden on already stringent resources. In addition, the proposed architecture is migrating with complete process instead of code only which also saves resources. The proposed architecture makes process migration decisions by continuously monitoring resources, such as remaining battery life and free memory space on a node. The architecture is suitable for networks with fewer expensive sensor nodes as it allows for better utilization of network resources. Transferring a live executing process from one node to another to meet processing demands dynamically improves fault tolerance, resource utilization, and network management in WSN. The architecture has been successfully tested and implemented on both COOJA simulator and a test bed of TelosB motes.
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17

Lyubitseva, Olha, and Iryna Kochetkova. "EDUCATIONAL MIGRATION: UKRAINE IN THE SYSTEM OF GENERAL TRENDS." GEOGRAPHY AND TOURISM, no. 64 (2021): 61–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/2308-135x.2021.64.61-69.

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Objectives of the article: to analyze the migration process in Ukraine in order to obtain education against the background of the global process in the educational sphere and the general migration process for compliance with general migration trends. The research methodology is based on the processing of analytical and statistical materials from various sources, both national and foreign, using methods of analysis, synthesis, statistical processing of information. Research results. It has been established that educational migrations are a dynamically developing process since the end of the twentieth century, to which more and more countries are joining. This trend is also inherent in Ukraine, where educational migration has been developing dynamically throughout the 21st century. The factors influencing the external mobility of students are the military-political and economic crisis. Students go to study mainly to neighboring countries. Educational migration processes from Ukraine in their dynamics and geography correspond to the trends characteristic of labor migrations. The geography of educational migrations to Ukraine is also expanding and flows are increasing, although they are much smaller in volume than educational flows from Ukraine. The scientific novelty of the research lies in the identification of correlations between the general trends of the migration process and educational migration. The practical significance of the results obtained is aimed at drawing attention to the problem of the outflow of youth, which is the demographic, labor and intellectual potential of the nation, abroad.
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18

Fisher, Ingrid E., and Marianne Bradford. "New York State Agencies: A Case Study for Analyzing the Process of Legacy System Migration: Part II." Journal of Information Systems 20, no. 1 (March 1, 2006): 139–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.2308/jis.2006.20.1.139.

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Part II of this case chronicles the actions and outcomes of the legacy system migrations of five New York State agencies. The case highlights the problems these agencies encountered in migrating from legacy systems to enterprise-wide systems built upon relational databases. The case also explores the additional complexities of legacy system migration under the unique legal and operational constraints of governmental entities. Investigated issues include business process management, technical and financial project feasibility, cost-benefit analyses, consultant management, and ERP implementations.
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19

Negi, Nalini Junko, Julia Clark Prickett, Adrianna Marie Overdorff, Jamie Roberts, and Rich Furman. "Return-migration to Mexico and the gendered transnational migration process." Psychology of Men & Masculinity 19, no. 3 (July 2018): 385–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/men0000106.

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20

Yang, Dongfang, Qi Wang, Dong Lin, Longlei Zhang, and Haixia Li. "Quantitative Hg Content Migration Process I. YangDongfang Migration Model Calculation." Journal of Physics: Conference Series 1635 (November 2020): 012082. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/1635/1/012082.

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21

Jacob, C., and J. Peccoud. "Estimation of the parameters of a branching process from migrating binomial observations." Advances in Applied Probability 30, no. 4 (December 1998): 948–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1239/aap/1035228202.

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This paper considers a branching process generated by an offspring distribution F with mean m < ∞ and variance σ2 < ∞ and such that, at each generation n, there is an observed δ-migration, according to a binomial law Bpvn*Nnbef which depends on the total population size Nnbef. The δ-migration is defined as an emigration, an immigration or a null migration, depending on the value of δ, which is assumed constant throughout the different generations. The process with δ-migration is a generation-dependent Galton-Watson process, whereas the observed process is not in general a martingale. Under the assumption that the process with δ-migration is supercritical, we generalize for the observed migrating process the results relative to the Galton-Watson supercritical case that concern the asymptotic behaviour of the process and the estimation of m and σ2, as n → ∞. Moreover, an asymptotic confidence interval of the initial population size is given.
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22

Jacob, C., and J. Peccoud. "Estimation of the parameters of a branching process from migrating binomial observations." Advances in Applied Probability 30, no. 04 (December 1998): 948–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0001867800008740.

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This paper considers a branching process generated by an offspring distribution F with mean m &lt; ∞ and variance σ2 &lt; ∞ and such that, at each generation n, there is an observed δ-migration, according to a binomial law B p v n *N n bef which depends on the total population size N n bef. The δ-migration is defined as an emigration, an immigration or a null migration, depending on the value of δ, which is assumed constant throughout the different generations. The process with δ-migration is a generation-dependent Galton-Watson process, whereas the observed process is not in general a martingale. Under the assumption that the process with δ-migration is supercritical, we generalize for the observed migrating process the results relative to the Galton-Watson supercritical case that concern the asymptotic behaviour of the process and the estimation of m and σ2, as n → ∞. Moreover, an asymptotic confidence interval of the initial population size is given.
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23

Rosengren, S., P. M. Henson, and G. S. Worthen. "Migration-associated volume changes in neutrophils facilitate the migratory process in vitro." American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology 267, no. 6 (December 1, 1994): C1623—C1632. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.1994.267.6.c1623.

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Neutrophil granulocytes, while migrating, undergo substantial shape changes from the round, resting state to a polarized phenotype. In the present study, we monitored cell volume changes in neutrophils migrating toward the chemotactic agent N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP) in collagen gels. Neutrophil volume was measured through optical sectioning on a confocal microscope and three-dimensional reconstruction. This method correlated well with Coulter counter volume measurements. Migrating neutrophils displayed a significant volume increase of 35-60%. The cell swelling appeared to depend on sodium/proton antiport activity because it was abrogated by amiloride and dimethyl-amiloride, inhibitors of the antiport, and by substitution of sodium in the buffers by choline, which is not transported by the antiport. Neutrophils exposed to FMLP gradients through impenetrable filters also displayed significant volume changes, whereas cells placed on similar filters in homogeneous concentrations of FMLP did not. This supports the notion of a differential volume response depending on the mode of presentation of the chemotactic agent. The role of volume increase in facilitating neutrophil migration was adduced by two lines of evidence: 1) hyposmolar swelling enhanced and hyperosmolar shrinking decreased neutrophil migration toward FMLP in Boyden chambers and 2) sodium/proton antiport inhibitors decreased neutrophil migration; however, this was reversed in hyposmolar buffers, which induced a volume increase similar to that seen in normal migrating cells. The migration-associated volume increase may be a crucial event for the ability of neutrophils to function as the first line of defense at sites of infection.
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24

Cannella, Emanuele, Onur Derin, Paolo Meloni, Giuseppe Tuveri, and Todor Stefanov. "Adaptivity Support for MPSoCs Based on Process Migration in Polyhedral Process Networks." VLSI Design 2012 (March 4, 2012): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/987209.

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System adaptivity is becoming an important feature of modern embedded multiprocessor systems. To achieve the goal of system adaptivity when executing Polyhedral Process Networks (PPNs) on a generic tiled Network-on-Chip (NoC) MPSoC platform, we propose an approach to enable the run-time migration of processes among the available platform resources. In our approach, process migration is allowed by a middleware layer which comprises two main components. The first component concerns the inter-tile data communication between processes. We develop and evaluate a number of different communication approaches which implement the semantics of the PPN model of computation on a generic NoC platform. The presented communication approaches do not depend on the mapping of processes and have been implemented on a Network-on-Chip multiprocessor platform prototyped on an FPGA. Their comparison in terms of the introduced overhead is presented in two case studies with different communication characteristics. The second middleware component allows the actual run-time migration of PPN processes. To this end, we propose and evaluate a process migration mechanism which leverages the PPN model of computation to guarantee a predictable and efficient migration procedure. The efficiency and applicability of the proposed migration mechanism is shown in a real-life case study.
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25

Lu, Junde, Ke Yao, and Furong Gao. "Process similarity and developing new process models through migration." AIChE Journal 55, no. 9 (September 2009): 2318–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/aic.11822.

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26

Pudryk, Denys, Aleksiy Kwilinski, and Anastasia Nazarenko. "COUNTRY BRAND IN THE MIGRATION PROCESS." Formation of Market Economy in Ukraine, no. 44 (December 29, 2020): 311–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/meu.2020.44.0.3453.

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27

Khelashvili, A. V. "MIGRATION PROCESS: STAGES OF RESIDENCE CHANGE." Habitus, no. 40 (2022): 29–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.32782/2663-5208.2022.40.4.

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28

Krell, Terence, and Jeffrey Gale. "E‐business migration: a process model." Journal of Organizational Change Management 18, no. 2 (April 2005): 117–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/09534810510589552.

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29

Fahmideh, Mahdi, Farhad Daneshgar, Fethi Rabhi, and Ghassan Beydoun. "A generic cloud migration process model." European Journal of Information Systems 28, no. 3 (October 14, 2018): 233–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0960085x.2018.1524417.

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30

Martinelli, G. "Gas Geochemistry and 222Rn Migration Process." Radiation Protection Dosimetry 78, no. 1 (July 1, 1998): 77–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.rpd.a032338.

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31

Maguire, Gerald Q., and Jonathan M. Smith. "Process migration: effects on scientific computation." ACM SIGPLAN Notices 23, no. 3 (March 1988): 102–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/43895.43906.

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32

Smith, Jonathan M. "A survey of process migration mechanisms." ACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review 22, no. 3 (July 1988): 28–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/47671.47673.

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33

Spanier, Ehud, and Bella S. Galil. "Lessepsian migration: a continuous biogeographical process." Endeavour 15, no. 3 (January 1991): 102–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0160-9327(91)90152-2.

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34

MASSEY, D. S., and F. G. ESPANA. "The Social Process of International Migration." Science 237, no. 4816 (August 14, 1987): 733–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.237.4816.733.

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35

Diamantides, N. D. "International Migration as a Dynamic Process." Kybernetes 23, no. 5 (July 1994): 37–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/03684929410064491.

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36

Smith, Peter, and Norman C. Hutchinson. "Heterogeneous process migration: the Tui system." Software: Practice and Experience 28, no. 6 (May 1998): 611–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1097-024x(199805)28:6<611::aid-spe169>3.0.co;2-f.

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37

Pięta, Sylwester. "It Systems Security Management in Migration Process." Foundations of Management 2, no. 2 (January 1, 2010): 63–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10238-012-0029-4.

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It Systems Security Management in Migration Process This paper looks at the issue of IT systems migration as well as problems related to security policy in migration processes. Problem of migration is viewed in a broad context of changes which occur during construction or modernization of an IT system. Migration projects were classified against the background of wide spectrum of informatization strategy issues and sources of threats to information security were pointed out. Also, guidelines for improvement of security in migration process were presented.
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38

Góis, Pedro, and José Carlos Marques. "Portuguese intra-EU migration. The dynamics of an ongoing migration process." Ethnic and Racial Studies 43, no. 14 (June 16, 2020): 2551–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2020.1772989.

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39

Yang, Dongfang, Longlei Zhang, Qi Wang, Dong Lin, and Haixia Li. "Quantitative Hg Content Migration Process II. Yang Dongfang Migration Model Application." Journal of Physics: Conference Series 1635 (November 2020): 012090. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/1635/1/012090.

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40

Wang, Chao, Frank Mueller, Christian Engelmann, and Stephen L. Scott. "Proactive process-level live migration and back migration in HPC environments." Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing 72, no. 2 (February 2012): 254–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpdc.2011.10.009.

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41

Lalić Novak, Goranka, and Teo Giljević. "Migration and Asylum Governance in CEE Countries: Between Historical Legacies and the Europeanisation Process." Hrvatska i komparativna javna uprava 22, no. 1 (May 2, 2022): 97–128. http://dx.doi.org/10.31297/hkju.22.1.3.

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Migration patterns in post-socialist Central and Eastern Europe countries were different when compared to old EU member states. During the period after WWII until 1990, those patterns involved primarily migration to and from other CEE countries (and the Soviet Union). In former Yugoslavia, a less oppressive regime, together with a high demand for workers in Western European countries, opened up space for rather massive labour emigration during 1960s and 1970s. After the collapse of previous regimes and during the transition period in the 1990s, CEE countries experienced an increase in immigration; however, relatively small numbers of immigrants have been arriving from outside Europe. At the same time, under the EU accession requirements, those countries had to quickly develop migration policies and align their legislation with acquis communautaire on migration and border security. The mass migrations in 2015 and 2016 opened a new chapter regarding migration and asylum governance in CEE countries. Some of them, such as Visegrad countries, strongly opposed the EU initiatives in the area of migration and asylum, which influenced their relations with EU institutions but also other member states. The paper aims to explore the relationship between the transition and Europeanisation on one side, and the development of migration and asylum governance on the other side in CEE countries, based on the path-dependency approach. The paper focuses on the question to what extent (post)socialist factors influence national migration and asylum governance and policies which are at the same time governed by the EU regulatory framework. It is debated whether the effectiveness of the transfer of values and norms relating to migration during the accession process has been replaced by a “national turn” after joining the EU.
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42

Emmer, P. C. "Intercontinental migration as a world historical process." European Review 1, no. 1 (January 1993): 66–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1062798700000399.

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Human migration has a long and complicated history. A survey of the various migration streams reveals that between 1492 and the present, Europeans have benefitted in much greater numbers from the ‘migration escape hatch’ than have Africans and Asians.
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43

Thorpe, Holly, and Belinda Wheaton. "Young Gazan Refugees, Sport and Social Media: Understanding Migration as a Process of Becoming." International Migration Review 55, no. 3 (February 4, 2021): 902–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0197918320988247.

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Located at the intersection of two key literatures—refugee and sport migration studies—this article offers original insights into the lived and embodied experiences of young men migrating from Gaza to Europe. Drawing upon interviews with young Gazan men throughout the migration process and upon digital ethnography conducted from 2013 to 2018, it explains how these men used their physical prowess in the informal sport of parkour, combined with digital entrepreneurialism, to navigate alternative routes of migration to Europe. In prioritizing the young men’s narratives and offering rich empirical insight into the creative actions and strategic decisions made by youth at various stages throughout migration journeys, we challenge dominant portrayals of young refugees as “victims.” Migration is, thus, revealed as an ongoing and multi-dimensional process of becoming that operates within and across physical and digital spaces and over time. The first to evidence the struggles, creativity, and agency of Gazan youth in their efforts to escape lives of conflict and poverty, the article also prompts conceptual and methodological questions for youth and sport migration research. In particular, it highlights the need to explore the possibilities of digital methodologies for understanding the experiences of those in “hard to reach” places and those “on the move.”
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Deshmukh, Om. "Data Migration Techniques across DBMS by Using Metadata." International Journal for Research in Applied Science and Engineering Technology 10, no. 12 (December 31, 2022): 457–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.22214/ijraset.2022.47846.

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Abstract: The data migration process is usually needed when there is a change in system, format, or storage type. Currently, there are several techniques and tools for migrating data, for example, CSV files, ODBC, SQL Dump, and so on. Inappropriately not all of these techniques can be implemented for migrating data between two different DBMS. This research describes a data migration technique that can be used to migrate data across DBMS. The data migration technique described makes use of existing metadata in each DBMS. The data migration process described here goes through three stages, namely capture, convert and construct. A prototype was built to test this data migration technique. By using the HR schema, cross-DBMS data migration trials were carried out between Oracle and MySQL. Using this technique, full-schema data migration takes an average of 20.43 seconds from Oracle DBMS to MySQL and 12.96 seconds for the reverse scenario. As for partial data migration, it takes an average of 5.95 seconds from Oracle DBMS to MySQL and 2.19 seconds for the reverse scenario
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45

Vukcevic, Nemanja. "Migration and religiousness." Вестник Пермского университета. Философия. Психология. Социология, no. 3 (2020): 486–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.17072/2078-7898/2020-3-486-493.

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The subject of the research is the relationship between the phenomena of religion and migrations. The problem of their interaction has been inherent in human society since the ancient times; this problem is relevant one in nova days too. The consequences and prospects of development of this complex phenomenon in contemporary society are not sufficiently examined in science yet, especially in Sociology. In the paper, the role of religion in migration processes is studied based on the analysis of various sources, synthesis, induction, analogy, and abstraction. In course of research were analyzed numerous religious treatises, fiction works and classical sociological works, as well as works by foreign and Russian contemporary academic authors. The paper notes that the migration discourse has now shifted from the geographic and demographic to the socio-political domain. Religion has begun to play an important role at all stages of migration, both from the perspective of neoliberal and humanistic approaches. The paper aims to identify the role of the religious factor in the migration process and the role and logic of migration not only in inter-faith but also in intra-faith relations. It is shown that migration either serves as a catalyst for religious feelings and behavior or it strengthens the existing religious identity of migrants and enhances the quality of their religious feelings. The study highlights the need to improve the legislative framework of religious freedom, but also raises the question of how far religious communities can go in the process of advancing religious practice. In this regard, migrations often become a challenge for a secular state. Therefore, it is concluded that only an integrated approach would contribute to solving this problem.
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46

Tabor, Aidan S., and Taciano L. Milfont. "Migration change model: Exploring the process of migration on a psychological level." International Journal of Intercultural Relations 35, no. 6 (November 2011): 818–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijintrel.2010.11.013.

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47

Singh, Vandana. "Open source integrated library systems migration: Librarians share the lessons learnt." Journal of Librarianship and Information Science 51, no. 2 (August 10, 2017): 346–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0961000617709059.

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To better understand how libraries experience the process of migrating to open source software integrated library systems (OSS ILSs), nine librarians from libraries of multiple types and sizes were interviewed. All these libraries are in the United States and these librarians had participated in surveys and interviews about open source software integrated library systems with the research team in past years and at the time of the interview were at different stages of migration to open source software integrated library systems, from contemplating migration to completed migration. The librarians answered questions about their open source software integrated library systems on topics such as the migration process, technical support, adaptation process, and lessons and advice from the overall experience. The in-depth responses provide valuable insights on the process of migration to help libraries understand the challenges and benefits of open source software integrated library systems and are presented in this paper.
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48

Cui, Yan Yan, Yu Yang, and Guang Xue Chen. "Study on the Migration Process of Food Packaging Materials." Applied Mechanics and Materials 469 (November 2013): 436–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.469.436.

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With the rapid development of materials science, polymers are widely used in food packaging. Because the polymer modification process can lead to the formation of low molecular weight compounds, these substances which migrate from packaging materials to food bring many hidden dangers to food safety and threaten peoples health. In order to ensure the safety of food packaging materials, it is necessary to completely study and discuss the migration process of low molecular weight compounds, and then take effective methods to control the pollutants. The real process of polymer components in food package migration is quite complex, which is affected by many non-ideal factors. If we simply analysis the migration model, the actual results could not be got. We use migration model combining with the methods of modern analysis instruments on the basis of migration model, the model will have more practical application. The paper is based on migration theory and migration model. Under the existing experimental conditions, truly simulate the migration process of food packaging materials by using modern analytical measurement instruments and experimental simulation tools. Combine the theory and practice, analyze the migration and migration influencing factors of PS extract from qualitative and quantitative aspects. It is of great practical significance in solving the food safety problems which caused by migration from food packaging materials.
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49

Notohara, Morihiro. "The structured coalescent process with weak migration." Journal of Applied Probability 38, no. 1 (March 2001): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1239/jap/996986639.

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The aim of this paper is to study genealogical processes in a geographically structured population with weak migration. The coalescence time for sampled genes from different colonies diverges to infinity as the migration rates among colonies are close to zero. We investigate the moment generating functions of the coalescence time, the number of segregating sites and the number of allele types in sampled genes when there is low migration. Employing a perturbation method, we obtain a system of recurrence relations for the approximate solutions of these moment generating functions and solve them in some cases.
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Notohara, Morihiro. "The structured coalescent process with weak migration." Journal of Applied Probability 38, no. 01 (March 2001): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021900200018465.

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The aim of this paper is to study genealogical processes in a geographically structured population with weak migration. The coalescence time for sampled genes from different colonies diverges to infinity as the migration rates among colonies are close to zero. We investigate the moment generating functions of the coalescence time, the number of segregating sites and the number of allele types in sampled genes when there is low migration. Employing a perturbation method, we obtain a system of recurrence relations for the approximate solutions of these moment generating functions and solve them in some cases.
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