scholarly journals Complex System Approaches to Genetic Analysis

Author(s):  
Melanie A. Wilson ◽  
James W. Baurley ◽  
Duncan C. Thomas ◽  
David V. Conti
Author(s):  
Aleksandr N. Piftankin ◽  
◽  
Anastasiia V. Polovinkina ◽  
Tatiana E. Kuznetsova ◽  
◽  
...  

The article deals with approaches to complex system development, including C4I systems (Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence) in terms of various approaches suggested for civilian systems. It substantiates the relevance of dual-purpose systems and possible types of subscribers interacting with C4I system. Approaches to software engineering for such systems during analyzing the subject area and designing are suggested. The article considers an algorithm of arranging software functions in hierarchical order based on dendritic method; it also gives an example of algorithm for software engineering and the procedure of using patterns in the systems of situation awareness, and operational and technical readiness as an example. Unlike most of open publishers in this field, the article suggests approaches, which allow using hierarchical clustering in software decomposition.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Berezowski ◽  
Simon R. Rüegg ◽  
Céline Faverjon

2009 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Galea ◽  
M. Riddle ◽  
G. A Kaplan

2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jude Stansfield ◽  
Nick Cavill ◽  
Louise Marshall ◽  
Claire Robson ◽  
Harry Rutter

PurposeThis paper aims to use systems mapping as a tool to develop an organisation-wide approach to public mental health to inform strategic direction within a national public health agency. Design/methodology/approachTwo workshops were facilitated with internal staff from a wide range of public health policy teams working in small groups to produce paper-based maps. These were collated and refined by the project team and digitised. FindingsThe approach engaged a range of teams in forming a shared understanding and producing a complex system map of the influences on population mental health and well-being, where current policy initiatives were addressing them and what the gaps and priorities were. Participants valued the approach which led to further study and organisational commitment to the whole system working as part of national public mental health strategy. Research limitations/implicationsThe approach was limited to internal stakeholders and wider engagement with other sectors and community members would help further the application of complex system approaches to public mental health. Originality/valueIt was a valuable process for developing a whole-organisation approach and stimulating thinking and practice in complex system approaches. The paper provides a practical example of how to apply systems mapping and its benefits for organising public mental health practice.


1990 ◽  
Vol 17 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 211-229
Author(s):  
Solomon I. Sara

Summary Phonetics and Phonology have had noticeable developments in the last forty years: phonetics from the articulatory descriptions of sounds of Pike’s Phonetics (1943), to a physiological set of distinctive features of Chomsky & Halle’s The Sound Pattern of English (1968); the acoustic displays of Potter’s Visible Speech (1947) to a set of acoustic distinctive features in Jakobson, Fant, Halle’s Preliminaries (1951). Suprasegmental characterizations have developed from impressionistic labels of tone, stress, length and intonation to an experimentally quantifiable set of parameters characterizing these aspects of speech in a unified manner in Lehiste’s Suprasegmentals (1970). Phonology progressed from the autonomous to the integrated, and from the structural to the transformational/generative, from Pike’s Phonemics (1947), and Trubetzkoy’s Grundzüge (1939) to a complex system of levels/tiers/strata that represent speech in a more detailed, holistic and integrated manner. Current approaches recognize not only the features and segments of the speech continuum, but the rules that organize these into the phonological system. Approaches to the explanation of this organization have been many: the segmental/sequential approach of American phonemicists, Praguian phonologists and early generativists developed into a phonological component that consists of segments, organized into syllables that pattern into rhythmic feet which constitute the geometry of the sequence as a multi level/tier/stratum. These developments are all considered generative, but labelled Natural-Generative, Autosegmental-Genera-tive, Non-Linear-Generative, Metrical-Generative, etc. ‘Generative’ is kept to maintain the twin characteristics of being integrated and rule governed. There has been a shift in the paradigm: from segments to features and from structural to transformational with significant developments in both paradigms in the last forty years.


Author(s):  
R. A. Waugh ◽  
J. R. Sommer

Cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) is a complex system of intracellular tubules that, due to their small size and juxtaposition to such electron-dense structures as mitochondria and myofibrils, are often inconspicuous in conventionally prepared electron microscopic material. This study reports a method with which the SR is selectively “stained” which facilitates visualizationwith the transmission electron microscope.


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