Francophone Minorities: From a Homogeneous Representation to the Construction of a Plural Identity

2007 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 371-385 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josée Bergeron
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harisu Abdullahi Shehu ◽  
William Browne ◽  
Hedwig Eisenbarth

Emotion recognition has become an increasingly important area of research due to the increasing number of CCTV cameras in the past few years. Deep network-based methods have made impressive progress in performing emotion recognition-based tasks, achieving high performance on many datasets and their related competitions such as the ImageNet challenge. However, deep networks are vulnerable to adversarial attacks. Due to their homogeneous representation of knowledge across all images, a small change to the input image made by an adversary might result in a large decrease in the accuracy of the algorithm. By detecting heterogeneous facial landmarks using the machine learning library Dlib we hypothesize we can build robustness to adversarial attacks. The residual neural network (ResNet) model has been used as an example of a deep learning model. While the accuracy achieved by ResNet showed a decrease of up to 22%, our proposed approach has shown strong resistance to an attack and showed only a little (< 0.3%) or no decrease when the attack is launched on the data. Furthermore, the proposed approach has shown considerably less execution time compared to the ResNet model.


2020 ◽  
Vol 79 (27-28) ◽  
pp. 20079-20105
Author(s):  
Lei Tan ◽  
Chunfang Yang ◽  
Fenlin Liu ◽  
Xiangyang Luo ◽  
Baojun Qi ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-65
Author(s):  
Ergun Cakal

Abstract State accommodation of plural identity has remained very much subject to the contestations of a majority/minority paradigm, through which autonomy and tolerance are still negotiated and filtered. These social reconfigurations, including those oriented towards internal self-determination and minority rights regimes, reveal glimpses of a dark neo-colonial underbelly to state rule. A comparison between the Ottoman millet system and the Israeli control system illustrates that imperial modes of ‘divide and rule’, or ‘segmented pluralism’, continue to operate, and are sometimes even enhanced, through the deployment of minority rights. Using a selective Marxist reading, this paper will initially explore the parallels between imperial and modern state rule in the face of pluralism before discussing the methods used for hegemony-maintenance, including: segmentation; dependence; and cooptation. Finally, a socio-legal discussion on the ways in which the forces of hegemony are heavily guised and sustained will follow.


Author(s):  
Otávio Sertã ◽  
Rafael Fumis ◽  
Adrian Connaire ◽  
John Smyth ◽  
Rafael Tanaka ◽  
...  

During installation and operation a flexible pipe may be subjected to high compressive forces, high cyclic curvatures and external pressures leading to high reverse end-cap loads. Under such loading conditions, which occur particularly in the touchdown region for deep water applications, the limiting condition for the flexible pipe can be the compressive stability of the tensile armour wires. Two potential instability modes are possible: radial mode (birdcaging) and lateral mode (lateral wire disorganization). Previous work on the subject has established the key factors which influence the onset of each buckling mode [1],[2],[3] and [4]. In order to ensure the feasibility of flexible designs for applications with increasing water depth, it is important to improve the knowledge of the mechanisms which can lead to instability of armour wires and enhance the ability to predict with greater assurance, the particular conditions which increase the risk of wire instability. The focus of this work is the comparison of finite element prediction of radial buckling (birdcaging) with physical testing results under loading states that lead a pipe to birdcaging failure. The numerical model incorporates all tensile armor wires and their interactions with each other and adjacent layers. The outer sheath and reinforcing tape layers are explicitly represented, while the inner layers of the pipe (pressure armour and carcass sheath) are idealized using a homogeneous representation. The model also incorporates the effects of manufacturing pre-tension and hoop strength in the anti-birdcaging tape layers which are critical determinants for the onset of buckling. A key aspect of the method presented is the means by which the loading is applied. Specifically, the modeling handles the simultaneous and controlled application of end rotations, axial compression and radial resistance of the tapes through to the point of tape failure, pipe ovalisation and subsequent radial displacement and buckling of individual wires. In summary, in this paper a solid modeling approach is presented, which is compared with full a scale sample test data, that enables the simulation of a flexible pipe undergoing large combined compression, curvatures and pressure loading.


2006 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 124-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. E. Tatevossian ◽  
A. Ugalde ◽  
Zh. Ya. Aptekman ◽  
A. E. Petrosyan

Author(s):  
Eugenio Martínez-Falero ◽  
Concepción González-García ◽  
Antonio García-Abril ◽  
Esperanza Ayuga-Téllez

This paper formulates a new strategy for participatory forest management consisting of encouraging public participation as long as it increases empathy among participants. The strategy requires the homogeneous representation of the opinion of a participant (i.e. to determine how they assess a forest plan and identify the best one). Utility assessments are prepared for participants through pair-comparisons between meaningful points in the territory and from value functions based on forest indicators. The best plan is designed by applying combinatorial optimization algorithms to the utility of a participant. The calculating of empathy -of one participant relative to another - is based on the equivalence of their respective utilities when the current forest plan is modified. This involves calculating the opinions that are due to systematic changes in the collective plan for those participants that each participant supposes will affect the utility of the other participants. Calculating empathy also requires knowing the interactions among participants, which have been incorporated through agent-based simulation models. Application of the above methodology has confirmed the association between increases in empathy and convergence of opinions in different scenarios: well and medium-informed participants and with and without interaction among them, which verifies the proposed strategy. In addition, this strategy is easily integrated into available information systems and its outcomes show advantages over current participatory applications.


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 49-72
Author(s):  
Caroline Fache ◽  
Linsey Sainte-Claire

‘Integration’ expects immigrants to conform to a certain idea of Frenchness. While ‘integration’ has been and continues to be the watchword in French politics, recent directors contend that new and decolonized French identities are formed through different mechanisms. This article argues that Lucien Jean-Baptiste and Philippe Larue in 30° Couleur present a protagonist of Martinican descent who comes to terms with his previously compartmentalized Frenchness through a process that this research conceives as a process of dis-integration, challenging the perceived notion that ‘integration’ is the only valid path to being French. The process of dis-integration has three fundamental steps: (1) the physical dissociation of the protagonist from his space of integration, (2) the rediscovery and reconnection with a deep part of his identity that he had (un)consciously repressed and subsequently erased and (3) the acceptance of his double or plural identity and the creation of a space where these identities can co-exist without dominating or annihilating one another.


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