“Ebooks for the Classroom+” at University of South Florida Libraries: A Case Study of Database Management

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 95-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiying Mi ◽  
Bonita M. Pollock
2021 ◽  
Vol 126 (3) ◽  
pp. 2311-2327
Author(s):  
Yuto Chikazawa ◽  
Marie Katsurai ◽  
Ikki Ohmukai

AbstractResearchers often use their native languages to present and exchange ideas. To construct an individual author’s complete profile, a list of their English and non-English academic publications must be constructed. This paper presents a practical approach for multilingual author matching across different academic databases. Our approach automatically links the academic records of a target database to a researcher identifier of a source database. First, we extracted a comprehensive set of records in the target database, whose author names were identical to the researcher names in the source database. Then, we calculated multiple author similarity measures, which can be adopted in certain entity pairs from different language databases. Finally, we aggregated the measures to output an improved score that indicates the likelihood of each record as being the researcher’s work. Our method was found to be easy to implement, and its performance was evaluated in real database management settings. Experiments were conducted using DBLP and PubMed as the target English databases. As the Japanese database, KAKEN was the source for identifying researcher information. The results demonstrated each similarity measure’s performance, from which we observed that the score aggregation achieved stable performance. Our method can lessen human efforts to associate various scholarly contributions.


2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 133-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tuangthong Patcharaprutipakorn ◽  
◽  
Direk Thongaraim ◽  
Nujcha Thatreenaranon

2005 ◽  
Vol 131 (4) ◽  
pp. 247-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. Wasantha Lal ◽  
Randy Van Zee ◽  
Mark Belnap
Keyword(s):  

10.28945/3751 ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 009-029
Author(s):  
Robert W Hammond

There is no one best course through a Doctorate of Business Administration program but there are paths that maximize your time and value. Some people will wander through the research wilderness until having an epiphany, while others will treat the program like a journey-man and “do the work”, and still others will panic at the end of the third semester and “have to pick a topic for the dissertation”. If you enter the program with even a general idea of your research interest, then there is a different approach. Rob Hammond is a member of the inaugural cohort of the Muma College of Business DBA program at the University of South Florida. For almost 30 years he has worked in and around sales, marketing and product in large corporations. Rob witnessed enormous waste in sales training and thought it could be done differently. This was his topic of interest. Rob also had an idea from his experiences of what might be causing the issue. About half way through the first semester, Rob was picking the next paper topic and decided that he would adopt the strategy that he would try to find a way to advance his understanding of his research area in every class. This strategy became the navigation beacon for his DBA journey. This case is documenting this strategy along with a collection of his experiences from the DBA program for the readers in hopes that it may provide future students a few more restful nights as they begin their own academic journeys.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 661
Author(s):  
Mahyar Ghorbanzadeh ◽  
Linoj Vijayan ◽  
Jieya Yang ◽  
Eren Erman Ozguven ◽  
Wenrui Huang ◽  
...  

Hurricane Irma, in 2017, made an unusual landfall in South Florida and the unpredictability of the hurricane’s path challenged the evacuation process seriously and left many evacuees clueless. It was likely to hit Southeast Florida but suddenly shifted its path to the west coast of the peninsula, where the evacuation process had to change immediately without any time for individual decision-making. As such, this study aimed to develop a methodology to integrate evacuation and storm surge modeling with a case study analysis of Irma hitting Southeast Florida. For this purpose, a coupled storm surge and wave finite element model (ADCIRC+SWAN) was used to determine the inundation zones and roadways with higher inundation risk in Broward, Miami-Dade, and Palm Beach counties in Southeast Florida. This was fed into the evacuation modeling to estimate the regional clearance times and shelter availability in the selected counties. Findings show that it takes approximately three days to safely evacuate the populations in the study area. Modeling such integrated simulations before the hurricane hit the state could provide the information people in hurricane-prone areas need to decide to evacuate or not before the mandatory evacuation order is given.


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