Academic literature on the topic 'Thai (Siamese)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Thai (Siamese)"

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Thepboriruk, Kanjana Hubik. "Dressing Thai." Journal of Applied History 2, no. 1-2 (2020): 112–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/25895893-bja10007.

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Abstract Public attire and policies governing it have been a reoccurring feature of Siamese/Thai nation building since the nineteenth century. Clothing has been political instruments for rulers and regime in raising the global status of Siam and Siamese Kings, transforming the Kingdom of Siam into the Nation of Thailand, reviving the popularity of the monarchy, promoting national unity, and provoking political opponents. Their collective efforts during the past one and half century gradually normalised the policing of Thai bodies and increased the state control of public attire in service of t
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Terwiel, B. J. "Kaempfer and Thai history: the documents behind the printed texts." Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland 121, no. 1 (1989): 64–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0035869x00167875.

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The 39-year old Engelbert Kaempfer sighted the Siamese coast on 1 June 1690, and on 7 June his ship entered the river Chao Phraya, and reached the Dutch residence “Amsterdam”. Three days later he arrived in the Thai capital, Ayutthaya. Almost a month later, on 4 July, Kaempfer's boat began its journey downriver, spending some days loading goods at “Amsterdam”, and on 10 July he left Siamese territory, continuing his journey to Japan.
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YOUNG, Millie. "Siamese Cats - Analysis of Six Thai Independent Animators." Cartoon and Animation Studies 45 (December 31, 2016): 367–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.7230/koscas.2016.45.367.

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Raksamani, Adis Idris. "The Siamese Concept of Muslims through Mural Paintings." Manusya: Journal of Humanities 22, no. 1 (2019): 1–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/26659077-02201001.

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The objective of this study is to examine the purpose and meaning of portrayals of Muslims in the Thai traditional art and architecture of temples and palaces. The focus is on the Siamese concepts of Muslims and the features of Muslims that Siamese people in the past intended to communicate to Siamese society. The study deals with the concept and design of painting found in Thai traditional mural paintings. The findings reveal that the portrayals of Muslims in the mural paintings represent the symbolic meanings which can be traced according 4 chronicle stages as follows: 1. The otherness of Mu
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LEONHARDT, NIC. "‘From the Land of the White Elephant through the Gay Cities of Europe and America’: Re-routing the World Tour of the Boosra Mahin Siamese Theatre Troupe (1900)." Theatre Research International 40, no. 2 (2015): 140–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307883315000024.

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Bangkok, Singapore, Paris, Vienna, Berlin, St Petersburg – some thirty performers of the Boosra Mahin Siamese Theatrical Troupe toured the world in 1900. Daily newspapers enthusiastically reported on the unprecedented shows of the performers ‘from the land of the white elephant’. After they disappeared from the map of theatre history, in 2010 Thai choreographer Pichet Klunchun ‘revives’ the troupe in his performance Nijinsky Siam. He follows their October 1900 St Petersburg show – the very performance attended by choreographer Mikhail Fokine and costume designer Léon Bakst, who later worked cl
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Laulertvorakul, Anant. "Paṭhamasambodhi in Nine Languages: Their Relation and Evolution". MANUSYA 6, № 1 (2003): 11–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/26659077-00601002.

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Paṭhamasambodhi is widespread in at least 5 countries in Southeast Asia. Hundreds of manuscripts and not less than 10 versions have been discovered. They are composed in 4 languages: Pāli, Mon, Cambodian and Tai, including Tai vernaculars: Siamese Thai, Northern Thai Northeastern Thai, Lao, Tai Lue, and Tai Khoeun. The styles of composition dramatically vary between detailed enumeration and concision, prose and verse, translation in the style of nissaya and non-nissaya, single language and dual languages—Pāli and another language. The comparative study of the different versions, with emphasis
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Awirutthiyothin, Tamjai. "The Status of /-w-/: A Perspective From Khamphuan - A Thai Language Play." MANUSYA 9, no. 2 (2006): 66–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/26659077-00902004.

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This article aims to show how to understand a language phenomenon through the language play of the Thai. The data is based on Tamjai (2003): Mechanisms and Patterns of Reversed Speech in Bangkok Thai, Northern Thai, Northeastern Thai, and Southern Thai Dialects. There are 334 utterances used to analyze the status of /-w-/ The Thai speakers of three dialects, Bangkok Thai, Northern Thai, and Southern Thai dialect speakers, interpreted the status of /-w-/ in five different types when reversed the utterances. Firstly, the second phoneme of an initial cluster: /-w-/ Secondly, the single phoneme of
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Simmonds, E. H. S. "A letter in Thai from Thalang in 1777." Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 50, no. 3 (1987): 529–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0041977x00039501.

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The subject of this communication is a letter in Thai (Siamese), dated the equivalent of 1777, to Francis Light who occupied the island of Penang as agent of the East India Company in 1786 and became its first Superintendent. Light had been a trader on the coast since about 1771 where he was particularly concerned with Kedah and with the island of Thalang (Salang)usually known to Europeans as Junk Ceylon. His sphere of activity extended westward to the ports of the Coromandel coast and to Bengal and eastward as for as Bangkok. At the date in question thecapital of Siam was at Thonburi on the w
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Guy, John. "The Dorothy and Horace Quaritch Wales Bequest — A Note." Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 5, no. 1 (1995): 91–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1356186300013511.

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The Royal Asiatic Society has recently been a beneficiary from the estate of Mrs Dorothy Wales, widow of H. G. Quaritch Wales, the erudite scholar of early Southeast Asian history who died in 1981. The occasion of this bequest, the contents of which are discussed in the Librarian's report herein (pp. 169–70), prompts this note on the contribution of Quaritch Wales to Southeast Asian studies.Quaritch Wales was born in 1900 and educated at Charterhouse and Queens' College, Cambridge. He immediately embarked on a career in Southeast Asia, from which he was never to be deflected. At the age of 23
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Marcinkowski, M. Ismail. "The Iranian‐siamese connection: an Iranian community in the Thai kingdom of Ayutthaya." Iranian Studies 35, no. 1-3 (2002): 23–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00210860208702010.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Thai (Siamese)"

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Sinthuphan, Jirayudh. "Animation in Siamese-Thai puppet theatre." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2007. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.445455.

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Weerataweemat, Songyot. "Royal Buddhist architecture of the early Bangkok period : investigations in symbolic planning." Thesis, University of York, 1999. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/10861/.

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Phasuk, Santanee. "Some newly-discovered Siamese maps and their place in the history of Thai mapping and cartography." Thesis, SOAS, University of London, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.431198.

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Conjeaud, Michèle. "De l'usage de จะ (/cà?/) dans la langue siamoise". Paris, INALCO, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009INAL0002.

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La thèse aborde le morphème /cà?/ dans une optique totalement différente de toutes celles des études faites jusqu'à ce jour sur ce morphème, tant en ce qui concerne son objectif que la méthodologie utilisée. Le but poursuivi n'est pas de placer /cà?/ dans l'une des grandes catégories grammaticales Temps, Aspect ou Modalité, mais d'essayer de trouver les règles qui gouvernent ses multiples usages. La méthodologie choisie est issue de la Théorie des Opérations Prédicatives et Énonciatives (TOPE) développée par Antoine Culioli et appliquée pour la première fois au thaï. En outre, une approche par
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Books on the topic "Thai (Siamese)"

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Kanlayānaphong, ʻAngkhān. Angkarn Kalyanapong: A contemporary Siamese poet. Edited by Wright Michael. Sathirakoses-Nagapradipa Foundation, 1986.

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The legend of Siamese cats. White Lotus Press, 1998.

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Clutterbuck, Martin R. Siamese cats: Legends and reality. White Lotus, 2004.

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Krisadaolarn, Ronachai. Siamese coins: From Funan to the Fifth Reign. River Books, 2012.

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Clare, Rosenfield, Bailey Dorothy, and Wray Joe D, eds. Ten Lives of the Buddha: Siamese temple painting and Jataka tales. Weatherhill, 1996.

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1954-, Smyth David, ed. Thai in a week. Headway, 1990.

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Wičhittrānon, Sō̜. Pramūan sap witthayākān ʻAngkrit plǣ pen Thai: English-Siamese technical terms. Sō̜. Wičhittrānon, 1986.

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(Russia), Gosudarstvennyĭ Ėrmitazh. Siamskoe iskusstvo, XIV-XIX vekov: V sobranii Gosudarstvennogo Ermitazha = Siamese art of the 14th-19th centuries in the Hermitage. Gosudarstvennyĭ Ėrmitazh, 1997.

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Sivarsksa, Sulak. Siamese resurgence: A Thai Buddhist voice on Asia and a world of change. Asian Cultural Forum on Development, 1985.

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Siamese resurgence: A Thai Buddhist voice on Asia and a world of change. Asian Cultural Forum on Development, 1985.

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Book chapters on the topic "Thai (Siamese)"

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Chantavanich, Supang, and Anusorn Limmanee. "From Siamese-Chinese to Chinese-Thai: Political Conditions and Identity Shifts among the Chinese in Thailand." In Ethnic Chinese as Southeast Asians. Palgrave Macmillan US, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-07635-9_7.

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Tonsakulrungruang, Khemthong. "Buddhist Influence on the Ancient Siamese Legal System, from Ayutthaya to the Twenty-First Century." In Thai Legal History. Cambridge University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108914369.006.

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Malitz, David M. "The Franco-Siamese War and the Russo-Japanese War." In Racial Difference and the Colonial Wars of 19th Century Southeast Asia. Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463723725_ch04.

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The adoption of the ambiguous yet politically powerful idea of ‘race’ in Siam during the late nineteenth and early twentieth century was shaped in a contradictory manner by two colonial wars. In the aftermath of the Franco- Siamese War of 1893 the idea of a Thai ‘race’ was promoted to differentiate the populations under Siamese and French rule. After the Russo-Japanese War and increasing criticism from an emergent Siamese middle class, the kingdom’s ruling class embraced Orientalist stereotypes to argue against the suitability of constitutional governance for the Siamese due to their being ‘Asians’. In consequence, before the Siamese Revolution of 1932, the elite of the absolute monarchy argued simultaneously that the Siamese were racially different from their neighbours but fundamentally alike to all ‘Orientals’.
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"THE SIAMESE ADMINISTRATIVE ÉLITE IN THE EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY AND THE HISTORICAL ORIGINS OF UNDERDEVELOPMENT IN SIAM*." In Lai Su Thai. Routledge, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203990582-16.

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Peleggi, Maurizio. "A Museum and an Art History for the Thai Nation." In Monastery, Monument, Museum. University of Hawai'i Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21313/hawaii/9780824866068.003.0006.

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Chapter 5 carries on from the previous chapter by detailing the assemblage of the Bangkok National Museum’s collection along with the formulation in the 1920s of a stylistic classification of antiquities that has since become canonical. The chapter examines the underlying assumptions of the art historical classification elaborated by Prince Damrong Rachanubhap (“the father of Thai history”) and the French scholar George Coedes, fouding director of the Siamese Archaeological Service.
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Pearson, Trais. "Conclusion." In Sovereign Necropolis. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501740152.003.0008.

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This concluding chapter discusses the brief rise and fall of forensic medical authority in Siam and how it might have corresponded with the arrival of a new paradigm of state consideration for the dead. In the ensuing years, concerns over obtaining justice for Siamese subjects in the plural legal arena created by extraterritorial law gave way dramatically to a new fixation on the threat of contagious disease in an increasingly interconnected world. The chapter shows how the threat of such diseases helped the Siamese state to establish new procedures for recording every death within the capital city along with its cause. In the larger context, the chapter addresses the issue of sovereignty as foreign imperialism and Siamese political authority struggled to keep up with the complications surrounding the legal status of the dead. In doing so, the chapter reveals the Siamese capital to be a city crowded with actors and forms of agency that do not figure in normative accounts of Thai history.
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Pearson, Trais. "Incisions and Inscriptions." In Sovereign Necropolis. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501740152.003.0007.

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This chapter follows the dead body as it moved out of the public spaces of vernacular forensics and into the sequestered space of medicolegal science, the morgue. It attends to the efforts of the Siamese state to implement medicolegal science in the form of autopsies (incisions) capable of producing forms of documentary evidence (inscriptions) that foreign consular courts would recognize in the prosecution of foreign residents accused of having harmed Siamese subjects. Engaging with science studies scholarship on the work of mediation, the chapter focuses on the collaborative work of Dr. P. A. Nightingale, a British physician in the employ of the Siamese state, and Mo (Dr.) Meng Yim, his Sino-Thai assistant and translator. It discovers in the documentary fruits of their collaborative labor, the death certificate, a “boundary object” capable of entertaining discordant forms of knowledge. It became a testament to the emergence of a new form of necropolitics in Siam.
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Padoongpatt, Mark. "“One Night in Bangkok”." In Flavors of Empire. University of California Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520293731.003.0002.

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This chapter explores the blossoming of America's fascination with Thai cuisine during the Cold War. The informal postwar U.S. empire in Thailand vacillated between "hard" and "soft" power, consisting of state-sponsored dictatorships, militarization, modernization projects, and cultural diplomacy. The chapter traces how this neocolonial relationship established circuits of exchange between the two countries, making it possible for thousands of ordinary Americans (non-state actors) to go to Thailand and participate in U.S. global expansion through culinary tourism. Many, especially white women, treated Thai foodways as a window into Thai history and culture and into the psyche of the Thai people. The chapter argues that these culinary tourists constructed an idealized image of Thailand and a neocolonial Thai subject by writing "Siamese" cookbooks and teaching cooking classes to suburban homemakers back in Los Angeles, whetting Americans' appetite for an exotic Other’s cuisine.
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Pearson, Trais. "Introduction." In Sovereign Necropolis. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501740152.003.0001.

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This introductory chapter briefly discusses the major themes of this book. It argues that the investigation of unnatural death was an early—and unlikely—site of direct interaction between the state and its subjects. Furthermore, the chapter illustrates how the emergence of a necropolitical regime at the turn of the twentieth century offered a troubling rebuke to the master narrative of modern Thai historiography: namely, the doctrine of Siamese/Thai exceptionalism. Thailand's status as the only nation-state in Southeast Asia to avoid direct control by European imperial power marks it as a singular state with an exceptional past. And it is within this context that the chapter addresses certain morbid subjects—alluding not merely to death but also to the social, cultural, and political lives of the dead.
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"7. From Siamese-Chinese to Chinese-Thai: Political Conditions and Identity Shifts among the Chinese in Thailand." In Ethnic Chinese as Southeast Asians. ISEAS Publishing, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1355/9789814379533-009.

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Conference papers on the topic "Thai (Siamese)"

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Promrit, Nuttachot, Sajjaporn Waijanya, and Kran Thaweesith. "The Evaluation of Thai Poem's Content Consistency using Siamese Network." In NLPIR 2019: 2019 the 3rd International Conference on Natural Language Processing and Information Retrieval. ACM, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3342827.3342855.

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Lei, Peng, Fuxin Li, and Sinisa Todorovic. "Boundary Flow: A Siamese Network that Predicts Boundary Motion Without Training on Motion." In 2018 IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cvpr.2018.00346.

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Huang, Lingcao, and Lin Liu. "Detecting Changes of Retrogressive Thaw Slumps from Satellite Images Using Siamese Neural Network." In IGARSS 2020 - 2020 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium. IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/igarss39084.2020.9323780.

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Peng, Jinlong, Zhengkai Jiang, Yueyang Gu, et al. "SiamRCR: Reciprocal Classification and Regression for Visual Object Tracking." In Thirtieth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence {IJCAI-21}. International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2021/132.

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Recently, most siamese network based trackers locate targets via object classification and bounding-box regression. Generally, they select the bounding-box with maximum classification confidence as the final prediction. This strategy may miss the right result due to the accuracy misalignment between classification and regression. In this paper, we propose a novel siamese tracking algorithm called SiamRCR, addressing this problem with a simple, light and effective solution. It builds reciprocal links between classification and regression branches, which can dynamically re-weight their losses fo
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Veretnikov, A. A., O. N. Konyaeva, and V. A. Tolkachѐv. "Age-related incidence of calculus diagnosis in purebreds dogs and cats at home." In SCIENCE OF RUSSIA: GOALS AND OBJECTIVES. L-Journal, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18411/sr-10-12-2020-42.

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A study of the age-related incidence of calculus diagnosis in certain breeds of dogs and cats was carried out. Because of the research, it was found that at all ages taken into account; dogs are most susceptible to animals of the Chihuahua Hua, Cocker Spaniel and Spitz breeds, and in cats - animals of the Scottish, British and Siamese breeds.
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Chen, Xi, Hao Zhai, Danqian Liu, et al. "SiamBOMB: A Real-time AI-based System for Home-cage Animal Tracking, Segmentation and Behavioral Analysis." In Twenty-Ninth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Seventeenth Pacific Rim International Conference on Artificial Intelligence {IJCAI-PRICAI-20}. International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2020/776.

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Biologists often need to handle numerous video-based home-cage animal behavior analysis tasks that require massive workloads. Therefore, we develop an AI-based multi-species tracking and segmentation system, SiamBOMB, for real-time and automatic home-cage animal behavioral analysis. In this system, a background-enhanced Siamese-based network with replaceable modular design ensures the flexibility and generalizability of the system, and a user-friendly interface makes it convenient to use for biologists. This real-time AI system will effectively reduce the burden on biologists.
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Park, Donghyeon, Keonwoo Kim, Yonggyu Park, Jungwoon Shin, and Jaewoo Kang. "KitcheNette: Predicting and Ranking Food Ingredient Pairings using Siamese Neural Network." In Twenty-Eighth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence {IJCAI-19}. International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2019/822.

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As a vast number of ingredients exist in the culinary world, there are countless food ingredient pairings, but only a small number of pairings have been adopted by chefs and studied by food researchers. In this work, we propose KitcheNette which is a model that predicts food ingredient pairing scores and recommends optimal ingredient pairings. KitcheNette employs Siamese neural networks and is trained on our annotated dataset containing 300K scores of pairings generated from numerous ingredients in food recipes. As the results demonstrate, our model not only outperforms other baseline models,
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Du, Yu, Yongkang Wong, Wenguang Jin, et al. "Semi-Supervised Learning for Surface EMG-based Gesture Recognition." In Twenty-Sixth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence. International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2017/225.

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Conventionally, gesture recognition based on non-intrusive muscle-computer interfaces required a strongly-supervised learning algorithm and a large amount of labeled training signals of surface electromyography (sEMG). In this work, we show that temporal relationship of sEMG signals and data glove provides implicit supervisory signal for learning the gesture recognition model. To demonstrate this, we present a semi-supervised learning framework with a novel Siamese architecture for sEMG-based gesture recognition. Specifically, we employ auxiliary tasks to learn visual representation; predictin
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Kumar, Sachin, Soumen Chakrabarti, and Shourya Roy. "Earth Mover's Distance Pooling over Siamese LSTMs for Automatic Short Answer Grading." In Twenty-Sixth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence. International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2017/284.

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Automatic short answer grading (ASAG) can reduce tedium for instructors, but is complicated by free-form student inputs. An important ASAG task is to assign ordinal scores to student answers, given some “model” or ideal answers. Here we introduce a novel framework for ASAG by cascading three neural building blocks: Siamese bidirectional LSTMs applied to a model and a student answer, a novel pooling layer based on earth-mover distance (EMD) across all hidden states from both LSTMs, and a flexible final regression layer to output scores. On standard ASAG data sets, our system shows substantial r
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Lan, Meng, Yipeng Zhang, Qinning Xu, and Lefei Zhang. "E3SN: Efficient End-to-End Siamese Network for Video Object Segmentation." In Twenty-Ninth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Seventeenth Pacific Rim International Conference on Artificial Intelligence {IJCAI-PRICAI-20}. International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2020/98.

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In the semi-supervised video object segmentation (VOS) field, SiamMask has achieved competitive accuracy and the fastest running speed. However, the two-stage training procedure requires additional manual intervention, and using only single-level features does not maximize the rich hierarchical feature information. This paper proposes an efficient end-to-end Siamese network for VOS. In particular, a supervised sampling strategy is designed to optimize the training procedure. Such an optimization facilitates the training of the entire model in an end-to-end manner. Moreover, a multilevel featur
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