Academic literature on the topic 'Time and space in literature'

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Journal articles on the topic "Time and space in literature"

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Duck, L. A. "Space in Time." American Literature 78, no. 4 (December 1, 2006): 709–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00029831-78-4-709.

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Stuart-Smith, Sue. "Time in Literature." Group Analysis 36, no. 2 (June 2003): 218–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0533316403036002006.

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The subject of Time is one of the great themes of Literature. It is intrinsic to so many aspects of what it is to be human - the transience of beauty, loss and mourning, the importance of memory, hopes for the future and the nature of the creative act itself. Within a short space of time, it can only be possible to touch on some aspects of its representation in Western literature and for the most part I will focus on poetry.
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Barkan, Leonard. "Time, Space, And Burgundy." Yale Review 92, no. 1 (June 28, 2008): 109–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.0044-0124.2004.00786.x.

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Segal, Dmitri. "Literature and History: Riddles in Space and Time." Russian Literature 32, no. 4 (November 1992): 417–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0304-3479(92)90038-g.

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AMELINO-CAMELIA, GIOVANNI, NICCOLÒ LORET, GIANLUCA MANDANICI, and FLAVIO MERCATI. "GRAVITY IN QUANTUM SPACE–TIME." International Journal of Modern Physics D 19, no. 14 (December 2010): 2385–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0218271810018451.

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The literature on quantum-gravity-inspired scenarios for the quantization of space–time has so far focused on particle-physics-like studies. This is partly justified by the present limitations of our understanding of quantum gravity theories, but we here argue that valuable insight can be gained through semi-heuristic analyses of the implications for gravitational phenomena of some results obtained in the quantum space–time literature. In particular, we show that the types of description of particle propagation that emerged in certain quantum space–time frameworks have striking implications for gravitational collapse and for the behavior of gravity at large distances.
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Kobro, Katarzyna, and Władysław Strzemiński. "Composing Space/Calculating Space-Time Rhythms." October 156 (May 2016): 12–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/octo_a_00251.

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In this treatise, Katarzyna Kobro and Władysław Strzemiński distinguish between the condition of painting (which features a picture on a support with physical imits) and of sculpture (which involves space, which is limitless) and propose that the ways in which each medium determines its own essence must be fundamentally different. While painting relies on what would later be called “deductive structure,” in sculpture the issue is how to relate the object to space. After conducting a chronological examination of the different ways in which the sculptural object has related to space (in the Ancient, Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque epochs), Kobro and Strzemiński propose various ways in which sculpture can not only relate to space but to “unite” with it via such solutions as polychrony and a disjunctive syntax through which the object itself eludes the perception of its identity.
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Sergeant, David. "Fictions of Time and Space." Twentieth-Century Literature 67, no. 2 (June 1, 2021): 139–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/0041462x-9084315.

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This essay argues for a fuller recognition of the key transitional status of The Four-Gated City (1969) in Doris Lessing’s career. As an attempt to recalibrate the basic coordinates of the realist inheritance, the novel develops a strongly spatial narrative mode that coincides with a desire to write a utopian collective. This is confirmed both by previously unstudied draft material for Briefing for a Descent into Hell (1971) and the published texts that followed. However, in The Four-Gated City this attempt to break from the destructive globalization of the postwar era becomes deeply problematic through its handling of history and time. Examining this struggle in Lessing’s writing can shed light on how the interplay of space and time informs the intertwined histories of realism and modernism in twentieth-century fiction, and on how Lessing’s work contributes to current debates about possible futures for the novel.
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Amin, Mehul R., and Sameer D. Trapasiya. "Space Time Coding Scheme for MIMO system-Literature Survey." Procedia Engineering 38 (2012): 3509–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.proeng.2012.06.405.

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Wiley, Michael. "Wordsworth's Spots of Time in Space and Time." Wordsworth Circle 46, no. 1 (January 2015): 52–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/twc24888104.

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MURAWSKI, ELISABETH. "THE KING OF TIME AND SPACE." Yale Review 98, no. 4 (September 27, 2010): 49–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9736.2010.00662.x.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Time and space in literature"

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Scheel, Kathleen Mary. "Space, time and the pilgrimage in modernist literature /." Burnaby B.C. : Simon Fraser University, 2005. http://ir.lib.sfu.ca/handle/1892/2076.

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Cook, Jordan Ellington. "Space, Time, and the Self in 20th Century Literature." University of Toledo / OhioLINK, 2018. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=toledo1525456817163611.

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Romanow, Rebecca Fine. "The postcolonial body in queer space and time /." View online ; access limited to URI, 2006. http://0-digitalcommons.uri.edu.helin.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI3225329.

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Smethurst, Paul. "Space, time and place in the postmodern novel." Thesis, Birkbeck (University of London), 1996. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.309297.

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Saleh, Mohamed Zainab. "Story, time, and space : structure and three graphic novels /." South Hadley, Mass. : [s.n.], 2008. http://ada.mtholyoke.edu/setr/websrc/pdfs/mhc/2008/267.pdf.

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Sugden, Edward. "American literature and global time, 1812-59." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2012. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:0c1a68fe-2e17-48bd-851b-00133ca256f0.

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American Literature and Global Time, 1812-59 explores the effects of the early stages of globalization on time consciousness in antebellum American literature and non-fiction. It argues that oceanic trade, extracontinental imperialism, immigration, and Pacific exploration all affected how antebellum Americans configured their national pasts, presents, and futures. The ensuing pluralisation of time that followed disallowed cogent conceptions of national identity. It analyses transnational geographies to examine how they transmit heterogeneous times. The project’s interest is in U.S. national sites that counterintuitively acted as fulcrums for the importations of foreign times and non-U.S. sites that interacted with and modified the homogenous progressive time of nationalism. As such, my project seeks to combine the transnational and temporal turns. It argues that the ethnic, racial, and geographic contestation emphasized by transnational critics found parallels in how antebellum Americans conceived of time. Conversely, it suggests that there were profound links between globalization and the sorts of instabilities in time identified by the critics of the temporal turn. Over its course my project identifies a series of “global times” that came into being in the years between the War of 1812 and the discovery of petroleum in 1859. These fall under three broad headings. First, what I term, entangled times that came about as a result of the movement of ships across borders and different social contexts; secondly, foreign local times that re-set the clock of imperialism and national progress; and, thirdly, a huge mass of reconfigurations in the origins and futures of the still-young United States.
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Bullock, Kurt E. "Narrative space and time : the rhetoric of disruption in the short-story form." Virtual Press, 2001. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1213154.

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This study traces spatial and temporal disturbances in the modem short story structure. Edgar Allan Poe's "indefinitiveness" and Kenneth Burke's "actualization" serve as historical foundations for this investigation, which leads to contemporary frameworks proposed by such theorists as Gerard Genette, Umberto Eco, Wolfgang Iser, Paul Ricoeur, Peter Brooks, James Phelan, and Susan Sniader Lanser. In particular, I explore how effect operates as a predominant concern of short fiction. Short fiction is a rhetorical interaction encumbered by spatial and temporal constraints, and its narrative teleology is necessarily disrupted by rhetorical techniques. Narrative's boundaries are purposefully violated, its tempo twisted and contorted, exposing a purposeful tension in the rhetorical engagement of author, text and reader. Instabilities crafted within the text disrupt time-space expectations of readers.Importantly, effect is perceived as a rhetorical device within short fiction, and so in this study the text serves as a site of transference privileging equally writer and reader. Conditions of possibility and understanding are invested in the text by the author through techniques of spatial disruption and temporal discontinuity, and then reinvested in the reader by the narrative through the text's generation of uncertainty. Short fiction serves as an invitation by the author for the reader to construct explanations; devices work to disrupt the time-space constraints of the genre, establishing as they do a narrative contract between author and reader that is resolved in and from the text.Burke considers this to be shaping prose fiction to the author's purposes, an act which "involves desires and their appeasements" - and one which purposefully aims for a particular effect. But what are the limits of purposefulness in short fiction? I examine both textual effect and reader affect, relying particularly on Iser and Eco, and turn to Brooks in conclusion to summarize the role of desire in and from the text, and to Phelan to critique the place of rhetoric in establishing and maintaining that desire. My analysis discloses that time-space disruption, employed as a rhetorical strategy by short story writers, serves to heighten rather than threaten the mediated engagement of writer/text/reader in short fiction, producing a measured effect.
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Choy, Gregory. "Sites of function in Asian American literature : tropics of place, agents of space /." Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/9454.

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William, Jennifer Marston. "Zeiträume : time, space, and metaphor in German-language novels of the twentieth century /." The Ohio State University, 2002. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1486462702467453.

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Cleary, Emma. "Jazz-shaped bodies : mapping city space, time, and sound in black transnational literature." Thesis, Staffordshire University, 2014. http://eprints.staffs.ac.uk/2205/.

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“Jazz-Shaped Bodies” addresses representations of the city in black transnational literature, with a focus on sonic schemas and mapping. Drawing on cultural geography, posthumanist thought, and the discourse of diaspora, the thesis examines the extent to which the urban landscape is figured as a panoptic structure in twentieth and twenty-first century diasporic texts, and how the mimetic function of artistic performance challenges this structure. Through comparative analysis of works emerging from and/or invested with sites in American, Canadian, and Caribbean landscapes, the study develops accretively and is structured thematically, tracing how selected texts: map the socio-spatial dialectic through visual and sonic schemas; develop the metaphorical use of the phonograph in the folding of space and time; revive ancestral memory and renew an engagement with the landscape; negotiate and transcend shifting national, cultural, and geographical borderlines and boundaries that seek to encode and enclose black subjectivity. The project focuses on literary works such as James Baldwin’s intimate cartographies of New York in Another Country (1962), Earl Lovelace’s carnivalising of city space in The Dragon Can’t Dance (1979), Toni Morrison’s creative blending of the sounds of black music in Jazz (1992), and the postbody poetics of Wayde Compton’s Performance Bond (2004), among other texts that enact crossings of, or otherwise pierce, binaries and borderlines, innovating portals for alternative interpellation and subverting racially hegemonic visual regimes concretised in the architecture of the city. An examination of the specificity of the cityscape against the wider arc of transnationalism establishes how African American, AfroCaribbean, and Black Canadian texts share and exchange touchstones such as jazz, kinesis, liminality, and hauntedness, while remaining sensitive to the distinct sociohistorical contexts and intensities at each locus, underscoring the significance of rendition — of body, space, time, and sound — to black transnational writing.
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Books on the topic "Time and space in literature"

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Gribbin, John R. Time & space. London: Dorling Kindersley, 1994.

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Gribbin, John R. Time & space. London: Dorling Kindersley, 2000.

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Gribbin, John R. Time & space. London: Dorling Kindersley, 2000.

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Space and time. Mankato, MN: Creative Education, 2012.

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Transgression: Identity, space, time. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008.

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1956-, Carroll Caroline, ed. Space & time. Grand Rapids, Mich: ZonderKidz, 2005.

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Gribbin, John R. Time and space. Toronto: Stoddart, 1994.

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Mike, Goldsmith. Space. Orlando, Fla: Ripley Pub., 2009.

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Mike, Goldsmith. Space. Orlando, Fla: Ripley Pub., 2009.

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Rau, Dana Meachen. Space and time. New York: Marshall Cavendish Benchmark, 2008.

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Book chapters on the topic "Time and space in literature"

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Green, Andrew. "London in space and time." In International Perspectives on the Teaching of Literature in Schools, 44–54. Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2018.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315396460-5.

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Weber, Ryan R. "Introduction: Traversing Time, Place, and Space." In Cosmopolitanism and Transatlantic Circles in Music and Literature, 1–34. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-01860-3_1.

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Hones, Sheila. "Sound and Rhythm in Literary Space-Time." In The Routledge Handbook of Literature and Space, 106–13. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2017.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315745978-10.

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Zitzlsperger, Ulrike. "Berlin: Flesh and Stone, Space and Time." In The Palgrave Handbook of Literature and the City, 165–82. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-54911-2_10.

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François, Liesbeth. "Excavating Time: Literary Archeologies of the Present." In Subterranean Space in Contemporary Mexico City Literature, 155–95. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-69456-2_5.

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Schildgen, Brenda Deen, and Ralph Hexter. "Reading the Past Across Space and Time: Receptions and World Literature." In Reading the Past Across Space and Time, 1–19. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-55885-5_1.

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Hernández, Isabel. "Space, Time, Memory: Magical Realism and Postcolonialism in Hugo Loetscher’s Prose." In World Literature and the Postcolonial, 119–35. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-61785-4_8.

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Vanem, Erik. "Literature Survey on Stochastic Wave Models." In Bayesian Hierarchical Space-Time Models with Application to Significant Wave Height, 25–63. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-30253-4_2.

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Georgiadis, Sokratis. "Giedion, Sigfried: Space, Time and Architecture." In Kindlers Literatur Lexikon (KLL), 1–2. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05728-0_11017-1.

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Cenedese, Marta-Laura. "Introduction: Creative Encounters Over Time and Space—Writers, Readers and Researchers." In Palgrave Studies in Modern European Literature, 1–26. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-44203-3_1.

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Conference papers on the topic "Time and space in literature"

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Lu, Zhang. "THE INTERTEXTUALITY OF RUSSIAN LITERATURE AND RUSSIAN PAINTING IN THE 19TH CENTURY." In INNOVATIONS IN THE SOCIOCULTURAL SPACE. Amur State University, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.22250/iss.2020.21.

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The background color of Russian literature and Russian painting art in the 19th century is gloomy and heavy, and there exists text intertextuality between them, which is different from single text and single painting. Literary words and painting invisible words quote, permeate, insinuate and rewrite each other. Literature is the writing of painting, and painting is the color of literature. The main line of literature development and the main line of painting development seem to be twisted together like a rope, presenting spiral development, closely linked, complementary and inseparable.The same value orientation and aesthetic purpose have intertextuality, mutual influence, mutual interaction and mutual transformation, no matter in creation method, theme, artistic style or creation background. Direct description or sharp pen, or by the protagonist of indirect irony, using realistic and critical realism creation method, revealing the tsarist autocracy savage, dissatisfaction with the reality in protest of rebellion, as well as being bullied and oppressed pain and struggle, at the same time reflects the immortality of the Russian national literature and art achievement.
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Gao, Qingbin, Umut Zalluhoglu, and Nejat Olgac. "Equivalency of Stability Transitions Between the SDS (Spectral Delay Space) and DS (Delay Space)." In ASME 2013 Dynamic Systems and Control Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/dscc2013-3703.

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It has been shown that the stability of LTI time-delayed systems with respect to the delays can be analyzed in two equivalent domains: (i) delay space (DS) and (ii) spectral delay space (SDS). Considering a broad class of linear time-invariant time delay systems with multiple delays, the equivalency of the stability transitions along the transition boundaries is studied in both spaces. For this we follow two corresponding radial lines in DS and SDS, and prove for the first time in literature that they are equivalent. This property enables us to extract local stability transition features within the SDS without going back to the DS. The main advantage of remaining in SDS is that, one can avoid a non-linear transition from kernel hypercurves to offspring hypercurves in DS. Instead the potential stability switching curves in SDS are generated simply by stacking a finite dimensional cube called the building block (BB) along the axes. A case study is presented within the report to visualize this property.
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Vanem, Erik. "Stochastic Models for Long-Term Prediction of Extreme Waves: A Literature Survey." In ASME 2010 29th International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering. ASMEDC, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/omae2010-20076.

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This paper presents a literature survey on time-dependent statistical modelling of extreme waves. The focus is twofold: on statistical modelling of extreme waves and time-dependent statistical modelling. The first part will consist of a thorough literature review of statistical modelling of extreme waves and wave parameters. The second part will focus on statistical modelling of time- and space-dependent variables in a more general sense, and will focus on the methodology and models used also in other relevant application areas. It was found that limited effort has been put on developing statistical models for waves incorporating spatial and long-term temporal variability and it is suggested that model improvements could be achieved by adopting approaches from other application areas. Finally, a review of projections of future extreme wave climate is presented.
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Malá, Markéta. "English and Czech children’s literature: A contrastive corpus-driven phraseological approach." In Eighth Brno Conference on Linguistics Studies in English. Brno: Masaryk University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p210-9767-2020-8.

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The paper explores the recurrent linguistic patterns in English and Czech children’s narrative fiction and their textual functions. It combines contrastive phraseological research with corpus-driven methods, taking frequency lists and n-grams as its starting points. The analysis focuses on the domains of time, space and body language. The results reveal register-specific recurrent linguistic patterns which play a role in the constitution of the fictional world of children’s literature, specifying its temporal and spatial characteristics, and relating to the communication among the protagonists. The method used also points out typological differences between the patterns employed in the two languages, and the limitations of the n-gram based approach.
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Belapurkar, Rohit K., and Rama K. Yedavalli. "LQR Control Design of Discrete-Time Networked Cascade Control Systems With Time Delay." In ASME 2011 Dynamic Systems and Control Conference and Bath/ASME Symposium on Fluid Power and Motion Control. ASMEDC, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/dscc2011-6129.

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Series cascade control systems, in which, the output of one process drives a second process are studied extensively in literature. Traditional control design methods based on transfer function approach are used for design of cascade control systems with disturbances in inner loop and time delays in outer loop process. Design of current turboshaft engine control systems are based on cascade control system framework. Next generation aircraft engine control systems are based on distributed architecture, in which, communication constraints like time delays can degrade control system performance. Stability of networked cascade control systems for turboshaft engines in a state space framework is analyzed in the presence of time delays. Two architectures of networked cascade control systems are presented. Stability conditions for discrete-time cascade control systems are presented for each of the architecture with time delays which are more than the sampling time.
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Duarte, Tiago, Marco Alves, Jason Jonkman, and António Sarmento. "State-Space Realization of the Wave-Radiation Force Within FAST." In ASME 2013 32nd International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/omae2013-10375.

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Several methods have been proposed in the literature to find a state-space model for the wave-radiation forces. In this paper, we compared four methods, two in the frequency domain and two in the time domain. The frequency-response function and the impulse response of the resulting state-space models were compared against those derived from the numerical code WAMIT. A new state-space module was implemented within FAST, an offshore wind turbine computer-aided engineering tool, and we compared the results against the previously implemented numerical convolution method. The results agreed between the two methods, with a significant reduction in required computational time when using the new state-space module.
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L .Vinagreiro, Michel Andre, Edson C. Kitani, Armando Antonio M. Lagana, and Leopoldo R. Yoshioka. "Using Multilinear Feature Space to Accelerate CNN Classification." In 2nd International Conference on Machine Learning &Trends (MLT 2021). AIRCC Publishing Corporation, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5121/csit.2021.111109.

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Computer vision plays a crucial role in ADAS security and navigation, as most systems are based on deep CNN architectures the computational resource to run a CNN algorithm is demanding. Therefore, the methods to speed up computation have become a relevant research issue. Even though several works on acceleration techniques found in the literature have not yet been achieved satisfactory results for embedded real-time system applications. This paper presents an alternative approach based on the Multilinear Feature Space (MFS) method resorting to transfer learning from large CNN architectures. The proposed method uses CNNs to generate feature maps, although it does not work as complexity reduction approach. When the training process ends, the generated maps are used to create vector feature space. We use this new vector space to make projections of any new sample in order to classify them. Our method, named MFS-CNN, uses the transfer learning from pre trained CNN to reduce the classification time of new sample image, with minimal loss in accuracy. Our method uses the VGG-16 model as the base CNN architecture for experiments; however, the method works with any similar CNN model. Using the well-known Vehicle Image Database and the German Traffic Sign Recognition Benchmark we compared the classification time of original VGG-16 model with the MFS-CNN method and our method is, on average, 17 times faster. The fast classification time reduces the computational and memories demand in embedded applications that requires a large CNN architecture.
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Green, Scott A., Mark Billinghurst, XiaoQi Chen, and J. Geoffrey Chase. "Human Robot Collaboration: An Augmented Reality Approach—A Literature Review and Analysis." In ASME 2007 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. ASMEDC, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2007-34227.

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Future space exploration will demand the cultivation of human-robotic systems, however, little attention has been paid to the development of human-robot teams. Current methods for autonomous plan creation are often complex and difficult to use. So a system is needed that enables humans and robotic systems to naturally and effectively collaborate. Effective collaboration takes place when the participants are able to communicate in a natural and effective manner. Grounding, the common understanding between conversational participants, shared spatial referencing and situational awareness, are crucial components of communication and collaboration. This paper briefly reviews the fields of human-robot interaction and Augmented Reality (AR), the overlaying of computer graphics onto the real worldview. The strengths of AR are discussed and how they might be used for more effective human-robot collaboration is described. Then a description of an architecture that we have developed is given that uses AR as a means for real time understanding of the shared spatial scene. This architecture enables grounding and enhances situational awareness, thus laying the necessary groundwork for natural and effective human-robot collaboration.
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Vinod-Buchinger, Aditya, and Sam Griffiths. "Spatial cultures of Soho, London. Exploring the evolution of space, culture and society of London's infamous cultural quarter." In Post-Oil City Planning for Urban Green Deals Virtual Congress. ISOCARP, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/sxol5829.

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Space as affording social interaction is highly debated subject among various epistemic disciplines. This research contributes to the discussion by shedding light on urban culture and community organisation in spatialised ways. Providing a case of London’s famous cultural quarter, Soho, the research investigates the physical and cultural representation of the neighbourhood and relates it to the evolving socio-spatial logic of the area. Utilising analytical methods of space syntax and its network graph theories that are based on the human perception of space, the research narrates the evolution in spatial configuration and its implication on Soho’s social morphology. The method used examines the spatial changes over time to evaluate the shifting identity of the area that was in the past an immigrant quarter and presently a celebrated gay village. The approach, therefore, combines analytical methods, such as network analysis, historical morphology analysis and distribution of land uses over time, with empirical methods, such as observations, auto-ethnography, literature, and photographs. Dataset comprises of street network graphs, historical maps, and street telephone and trade directories, as well as a list of literature, and data collected by the author through surveys. Soho’s cosmopolitanism and its ability to reinvent over time, when viewed through the prism of spatial cultures, help understand the potential of urban fabric in maintaining a time-space relationship and organisation of community life. Social research often tends to overlook the relationship between people and culture with their physical environment, where they manifest through the various practices and occupational distribution. In the case of Soho, the research found that there was a clear distribution of specific communities along specific streets over a certain period in the history. The gay bars were situated along Rupert and Old Compton Street, whereas the Jewish and Irish traders were established on Berwick Street, and so on. Upon spatial analysis of Soho and its surrounding areas, it was found that the streets of Soho were unlike that of its surrounding neighbourhoods. In Soho, the streets were organised with a certain level of hierarchy, and this hierarchy also shifted over time. This impacted the distribution of landuses within the area over time. Street hierarchy was measured through mathematical modelling of streets as derived by space syntax. In doing so, the research enabled viewing spaces and communities as evolving in parallel over time. In conclusion, by mapping the activities and the spatiality of Soho’s various cultural inhabitants over three historical periods and connecting these changes to the changing spatial morphology of the region, the research highlighted the importance of space in establishing the evolving nature of Soho. Such changes are visible in both symbolic and functional ways, from the location of a Govinda temple on a Soho square street, to the rise and fall of culture specific landuses such as gay bars on Old Compton Street. The research concludes by highlighting gentrification as an example of this time-space relation and addresses the research gap of studying spaces for its ability to afford changeability over time.
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Mourelatos, Zissimos P., Monica Majcher, Vijitashwa Pandey, and Igor Baseski. "Time-Dependent Reliability Analysis Using the Total Probability Theorem." In ASME 2014 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2014-35078.

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A new reliability analysis method is proposed for time-dependent problems with limit-state functions of input random variables, input random processes and explicit in time using the total probability theorem and the concept of composite limit state. The input random processes are assumed Gaussian. They are expressed in terms of standard normal variables using a spectral decomposition method. The total probability theorem is employed to calculate the time-dependent probability of failure using a time-dependent conditional probability which is computed accurately and efficiently in the standard normal space using FORM and a composite limit state of linear instantaneous limit states. If the dimensionality of the total probability theorem integral (equal to the number of input random variables) is small, we can easily calculate it using Gauss quadrature numerical integration. Otherwise, simple Monte Carlo simulation or adaptive importance sampling is used based on a pre-built Kriging metamodel of the conditional probability. An example from the literature on the design of a hydrokinetic turbine blade under time-dependent river flow load demonstrates all developments.
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Reports on the topic "Time and space in literature"

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Talbot, Pierre J. Photonics Space Time Processing. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, April 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada325865.

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Rockwell, Donald. Space-Time Imaging Systems. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, February 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada584973.

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Souder, Jeffrey K. Space, Time and Force: Relationships in Cyber Space. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, February 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada389919.

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Anderson, Eric, Sergio Rebelo, and Arlene Wong. Markups Across Space and Time. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, March 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w24434.

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Sundgren, Bo. Communicating in time and space. Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR), 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.3886/ddiothertopics03.

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Ehsanipour, Tina, and Florencia Gomez Zaccarelli. Exploring Coaching for Powerful Technology Use in Education. Digital Promise, July 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.51388/20.500.12265/47.

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This literature review, published in partnership with Stanford University’s Center to Support Excellence in Teaching, summarizes findings from existing research on teacher coaching and explores the following questions: What is the role of technology in the 21st century classroom? How do we best provide teachers with the time, support, and space to learn how to use new technological tools and resources effectively and to support deeper learning?
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Francis, Neville, Michael T. Owyang, and Daniel Soques. Business Cycles Across Space and Time. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.20955/wp.2019.010.

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Alvaro, Peter, William R. Marczak, Neil Conway, Joseph M. Hellerstein, David Maier, and Russell C. Sears. Dedalus: Datalog in Time and Space. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, December 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada538767.

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9

Chew, G. F. Space and time from quantum mechanics. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), September 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/10163929.

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Chew, G. F. Space and time from quantum mechanics. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), September 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/6077034.

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