scholarly journals Principal sequence pattern analysis: a new approach to classifying the evolution of atmospheric systems

2001 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-217 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosa H. Compagnucci ◽  
Diego Araneo ◽  
Pablo O. Canziani
Author(s):  
Patrick Hanks ◽  
Wulin Ma

Abstract This article presents an interview with Professor Patrick Hanks, a British lexicographer and corpus linguist, who proposes a new approach – a corpus-driven, phraseological approach – to lexicography. Hanks has developed a procedure called Corpus Pattern Analysis (CPA), which is the foundation of The Pattern Dictionary of English Verbs (in progress). The basic aim of CPA is to explore the relationship between word meaning and patterns of word use. Hanks maintains that the verb is ‘the pivot of the clause’. Verb meanings – or, rather, the meanings of clauses – are mapped onto phraseological patterns, rather than just being listed for words in isolation. Associated with this is the Theory of Norms and Exploitations (TNE), which was discussed in his monograph published by MIT Press in 2013. In this interview, Professor Hanks outlines his vision of a phraseological dictionary of the future (an alternative to WordNet). He discusses meaning and grammar in the light of Corpus Pattern Analysis. Specifically, he explains the procedure of Corpus Pattern Analysis, and the objectives of the Pattern Dictionary of English Verbs (PDEV), including the light that such work can shed on the relationship between language and logic. He discusses the relationship between PDEV and English grammar, his evaluation of generative linguistics, and his views on Noam Chomsky. He also highlights the contributions made by linguists of the past to the understanding of the nature of meaning in language. He goes on to suggest that any new bilingual dictionary with Chinese as a source language should be based on careful analyses of actual language use, both in Chinese and in the various target languages.


Author(s):  
Made Windu Antara Kesiman ◽  
I Made Dendi Maysanjaya ◽  
I Made Ardwi Pradnyana ◽  
I Made Gede Sunarya ◽  
Putu Hendra Suputra

2012 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 499-513 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanne Karstedt

Mass violence and genocidal events are presently characterized by new patterns that clearly set them apart from previous genocides and mass atrocities. These changes in the nature of mass atrocity events have necessarily shifted perspectives and conceptualizations of genocide and mass atrocities. Gerlach’s (2006, 2010) concept of ‘extremely violent societies’ seeks to deconstruct conventional understandings of genocidal mass violence and to re-contextualize it within a larger framework of conflict and in the ‘grassroots nature’ of other types of violence from which these events emerge. Based on his concept, I constructed a ‘Violent Societies Index’ (VSI), which offers a new approach to the multifaceted nature of contemporary mass violence and provides a new tool for a contextual and pattern analysis: it is the ‘how’ of extreme levels of violence that is addressed rather than the ‘why’.


2008 ◽  
Vol 381-382 ◽  
pp. 267-270
Author(s):  
Ryszard Jabłoński ◽  
J. Mąkowski

In laser-scanning measurement of cylindrical objects extremely complex interfering signals occur. They are due to superimposition of: reflected, unobstructed and scattered light. The proportions between these components vary in time and also the total intensity distribution changes. The considerations applying Fraunhofer theory are static and fragmentary, and may be concluded that the existing solutions for diffraction of 3D bodies do not fit to engineering applications. Having the above in view, the close analysis of detector signal was carried out. The obtained differential intensity characteristics allow to determine the important metrological qualities of diffraction field.


2014 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 435-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Carlos Peña ◽  
Montserrat Aran ◽  
José Miguel Raso ◽  
Nuria Pérez-Zanón

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