scholarly journals MirrorME: implementation of an IoT based smart mirror through facial recognition and personalized information recommendation algorithm

Author(s):  
Khandaker Mohammad Mohi Uddin ◽  
Samrat Kumar Dey ◽  
Gias Uddin Parvez ◽  
Ayesha Siddika Mukta ◽  
Uzzal Kumar Acharjee
2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shudong Liu ◽  
Xiangwu Meng

Recently, many researches on information (e.g., POI, ADs) recommendation based on location have been done in both research and industry. In this paper, we firstly construct a region-based location graph (RLG), in which region node respectively connects with user node and business information node, and then we propose a location-based recommendation algorithm based on RLG, which can combine with user short-ranged mobility formed by daily activity and long-distance mobility formed by social network ties and sequentially can recommend local business information and long-distance business information to users. Moreover, it can combine user-based collaborative filtering with item-based collaborative filtering, and it can alleviate cold start problem which traditional recommender systems often suffer from. Empirical studies from large-scale real-world data from Yelp demonstrate that our method outperforms other methods on the aspect of recommendation accuracy.


Author(s):  
Chrisanthi Nega

Abstract. Four experiments were conducted investigating the effect of size congruency on facial recognition memory, measured by remember, know and guess responses. Different study times were employed, that is extremely short (300 and 700 ms), short (1,000 ms), and long times (5,000 ms). With the short study time (1,000 ms) size congruency occurred in knowing. With the long study time the effect of size congruency occurred in remembering. These results support the distinctiveness/fluency account of remembering and knowing as well as the memory systems account, since the size congruency effect that occurred in knowing under conditions that facilitated perceptual fluency also occurred independently in remembering under conditions that facilitated elaborative encoding. They do not support the idea that remember and know responses reflect differences in trace strength.


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