Railway capacity estimation considering vehicle circulation: Integrated timetable and vehicles scheduling on hybrid time-space networks

2021 ◽  
Vol 124 ◽  
pp. 102961
Author(s):  
Zhengwen Liao ◽  
Haiying Li ◽  
Jianrui Miao ◽  
Francesco Corman
2002 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 505-524 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gary Bridge ◽  
Sophie Watson

Over the last decade we have seen a notable shift in the urban Society literature from discourses of division to discourses of difference. This shift has opened up new ways of understanding the complexities of city life and the formation of heterogeneous subjectivities and identities in the spaces of the city. There has been, we argue, a worrying tendency in this process to lose an analysis of the workings of power, While early Marxist, feminist and race/ethnicity debates were firmly located within a framework which highlighted power, post-structuralist debates have operated with a more fluid notion of power, which at times has become so fluid as to evaporate into thin air. Our intention here in to re-emphasise the significance of power while holding on to the concept of difference. We do this by using the notion of power networks that operate at different temporal and spatial scales. These give the city contrasting spatialities and temporalities that overlap one another. The city is seen as a palimpsest of time-space networks that capture some of the presence of difference as well as suggesting its absences. These time-space networks of power are considered in the material, perceived and imaginary realms in relation to bodies, interests and symbols.


2002 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 505-524 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gary Bridge ◽  
Sophie Watson

Over the last decade we have seen a notable shift in the urban sociology literature from discourses of division to discourses of difference. This shift has opened up new ways of understanding the complexities of city life and the formation of heterogeneous subjectivities and identities in the spaces of the city. There has been, we argue, a worrying tendency in this process to lose an analysis of the workings of power. While early Marxist, feminist and race/ethnicity debates were firmly located within a framework which highlighted power, post-structuralist debates have operated with a more fluid notion of power, which at times has become so fluid as to evaporate into thin air. Our intention here is to re-emphasise the significance of power while holding on to the concept of difference. We do this by using the notion of power networks that operate at different temporal and spatial scales. These give the city contrasting spatialities and temporalities that overlap one another. The city is seen as a palimpsest of time-space networks that capture some of the ‘presence of difference’ as well as suggesting its absences. These time-space networks of power are considered in the material, perceived and imaginary realms in relation to bodies, interests and symbols.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Rizkallah ◽  
Hassan Amoud ◽  
Matteo Fraschini ◽  
Fabrice Wendling ◽  
Mahmoud Hassan

AbstractElectro-encephalography (EEG) source connectivity is an emerging approach to estimate brain networks with high time/space resolution. Here, we aim to evaluate the effect of different functional connectivity (FC) methods on the EEG-source space networks at rest. The two main families of FC methods tested are: i) the FC methods that do not remove the zero-lag connectivity including the Phase Locking Value (PLV) and the Amplitude Envelope Correlation (AEC) and ii) the FC methods that remove the zero-lag connections such as the Phase Lag Index (PLI) and orthogonalisation approach combined with PLV (PLVorth) and AEC (AECorth). Methods are evaluated on resting state dense-EEG signals recorded from 20 healthy participants. Networks obtained by each FC method are compared with fMRI networks at rest (from the Human Connectome Project -HCP-, N=487). Results show low correlations for all the FC methods, however PLV and AEC networks are significantly correlated with fMRI networks (ρ = 0.12, p = 1.93×10−8 and ρ = 0.06, p = 0.007, respectively), while other methods are not. These observations are consistent for each EEG frequency bands and for different FC matrices threshold. Furthermore, the effect of electrode density was also tested using four EEG montages (dense-EEG 256 electrodes, 128, 64 and 32 electrodes). Results show no significant differences between the four EEG montages in terms of correlations with the fMRI networks. Our main message here is to be careful when selecting the FC methods and mainly those that remove the zero-lag connections as they can affect the network characteristics. More comparative studies (based on simulation and real data) are still needed in order to make EEG source connectivity a mature technique to address questions in cognitive and clinical neuroscience.


2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ursina Teuscher ◽  
David Brang ◽  
Lee Edwards ◽  
Marguerite McQuire ◽  
Vilayanur S. Ramachandran ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Hoang Nhu Dong ◽  
Hoang Nam Nguyen ◽  
Hoang Trong Minh ◽  
Takahiko Saba

Femtocell networks have been proposed for indoor communications as the extension of cellular networks for enhancing coverage performance. Because femtocells have small coverage radius, typically from 15 to 30 meters, a femtocell user (FU) walking at low speed can still make several femtocell-to-femtocell handovers during its connection. When performing a femtocell-to-femtocell handover, femtocell selection used to select the target handover femtocell has to be able not only to reduce unnecessary handovers and but also to support FU’s quality of service (QoS). In the paper, we propose a femtocell selection scheme for femtocell-tofemtocell handover, named Mobility Prediction and Capacity Estimation based scheme (MPCE-based scheme), which has the advantages of the mobility prediction and femtocell’s available capacity estimation methods. Performance results obtained by computer simulation show that the proposed MPCE-based scheme can reduce unnecessary femtocell-tofemtocell handovers, maintain low data delay and improve the throughput of femtocell users. DOI: 10.32913/rd-ict.vol3.no14.536


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