The integrated WRF/urban modelling system: development, evaluation, and applications to urban environmental problems

2011 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 273-288 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fei Chen ◽  
Hiroyuki Kusaka ◽  
Robert Bornstein ◽  
Jason Ching ◽  
C. S. B. Grimmond ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Muazzan Binsaleh ◽  
Shahizan Hassan

There are several methodologies, including traditional and agile methodologies, being utilized in current systems development. However, it could be argued that existing development methodologies may not be suitable for mobile commerce applications, as these applications are utilized in different contexts from fixed e-commerce applications. This study proposes a system development methodology for mobile commerce applications. In order to achieve this aim, four objectives are proposed: investigating existing systems development methodologies used to develop mobile commence applications, identifying strengths and weaknesses of existing development methodologies, construction of a suitable methodology for mobile commerce applications, and testing for its applicability and practicality. The research methodology used in the study is the design research, which includes the steps of awareness of problems, suggestion, development, evaluation and conclusion. However, this paper only focuses on the first two phases of the whole study, which are awareness of the problem and making suggestions, while the evaluation and conclusion will be conducted as future works.


2015 ◽  
Vol 155 (2) ◽  
pp. 369-369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiachuan Yang ◽  
Zhi-Hua Wang ◽  
Fei Chen ◽  
Shiguang Miao ◽  
Mukul Tewari ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Suguru Ishizaki ◽  
David Kaufer

This chapter presents a corpus-based text analysis tool along with a research approach to conducting a rhetorical analysis of individual text as well as text collections. The motivation for our computational approach, the system development, evaluation, and research and educational applications are discussed. The tool, called DocuScope, supports both quantitative and quantitatively-informed qualitative analyses of rhetorical strategies found in a broad range of textual artifacts, using a standard home-grown dictionary consisting of more than 40 million unique patterns of English that are classified into over 100 rhetorical functions. DocuScope also provides an authoring environment allowing investigators to build their own customized dictionaries according to their own language theories. Research published with both the standard and customized dictionaries is discussed, as well as tradeoffs, limitations, and directions for the future.


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