scholarly journals Tourism and environment in cyberworld of cyber society

2021 ◽  
pp. 295-303
Author(s):  
Ksenofon Krisafi ◽  
Jonida Vila

The nature is the origin of being. This is one of the reason why mostly the imagine of nature are present in any web-page. Searching and navigating on network we often are like tourist or better virtual tourist which explore unreachable real beauty of the moment. On it’s own human being desire to upgrade the state of his evolution. In nowadays we apprehend the motion of our everyday life through the mass use of Artificial Intelligence device which are influence by the rule created on the parallel dimension the cyber-world. The cyber-world is a dimension where each of us becomes part of the cyber-society that indicate much faster and foster the opinion which afterward will be spread through the words or news in the real life time. Aware for the multidimensional evolution of the science, we can benefit from facilitated opportunities and at the same time to have much more possibilities for reflecting our actions in positive light.

2020 ◽  
pp. 1199-1212
Author(s):  
Syeda Erfana Zohora ◽  
A. M. Khan ◽  
Arvind K. Srivastava ◽  
Nhu Gia Nguyen ◽  
Nilanjan Dey

In the last few decades there has been a tremendous amount of research on synthetic emotional intelligence related to affective computing that has significantly advanced from the technological point of view that refers to academic studies, systematic learning and developing knowledge and affective technology to a extensive area of real life time systems coupled with their applications. The objective of this paper is to present a general idea on the area of emotional intelligence in affective computing. The overview of the state of the art in emotional intelligence comprises of basic definitions and terminology, a study of current technological scenario. The paper also proposes research activities with a detailed study of ethical issues, challenges with importance on affective computing. Lastly, we present a broad area of applications such as interactive learning emotional systems, modeling emotional agents with an intention of employing these agents in human computer interactions as well as in education.


2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (06) ◽  
pp. 1960007
Author(s):  
Panagiotis Symeonidis ◽  
Ludovik Coba ◽  
Markus Zanker

Collaborative filtering techniques have been studied extensively during the last decade. Many open source packages (Apache Mahout, LensKit, MyMediaLite, rrecsys etc.) have implemented them, but typically the top-N recommendation lists are only based on a highest predicted ratings approach. However, exploiting frequencies in the user/item neighborhood for the formation of the top-N recommendation lists has been shown to provide superior accuracy results in offline simulations. In addition, most open source packages use a time-independent evaluation protocol to test the quality of recommendations, which may result to misleading conclusions since it cannot simulate well the real-life systems, which are strongly related to the time dimension. In this paper, we have therefore implemented the time-aware evaluation protocol to the open source recommendation package for the R language — denoted rrecsys — and compare its performance across open source packages for reasons of replicability. Our experimental results clearly demonstrate that using the most frequent items in neighborhood approach significantly outperforms the highest predicted rating approach on three public datasets. Moreover, the time-aware evaluation protocol has been shown to be more adequate for capturing the life-time effectiveness of recommender systems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tianyun Wang

With the advances of science and technology, artificial intelligence has become a part of our daily life. The 2014 film Her tells a romance story between a human and artificial intelligence operating system. The story unfolds as main character Theodore gradually develops doubts towards nature of his AI lover and himself as a human being. The article writes that this film is about identify crisis in our everyday life. Using postmodern theories, this article analyses the scripts and mise-en-scène of the film and discusses the identity crisis of the main character. In the end, the article points out that, just like individuals in the postmodern reality, the identity crisis of main character derives from the cyberspace new norms that boundaries between men and women, human and machines are blurred. It is an end of dichotomy self-identification. Each individual is unique in the postmodern society. The identity should be constructed in the contexts of each individual. 


10.26524/cm87 ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Touseef Ahmed ◽  
Rizwan U

In this paper, new moment inequality is derived for Bivariate Renewal New Better than Used (BRNBU) ageing class of life-time distribution. This inequality demonstrates that if the mean life is finite, then all higher order moments exist. Based on the Moment inequality, new testing procedures for testing bivariate exponentiality against BRNBU ageing class of life-time distribution is introduced.The asymptotic normality of the test statistic and its consistency are studied. Using Monte Carlo Method, critical values of the proposed test are calculated for  n= 5(5)100  and tabulated. Finally, the theoretical results are applied to analyze real-life data sets.


AI Magazine ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allen Newell

Births are always interesting affairs. According to some, births are always traumatic — a shock to come from the womb to the new world. The birth we give witness to here is that of a new society, the American Association for Artificial Intelligence — AAAI. It has not seemed to me traumatic, but rather almost wholly benign. In a world where not much is benign at the moment, such an event is devoutly to be cherished. The proper topic for this initial message is talk about beginnings and circumstances, goals and aims, character and style. My premier duty as president of AAAI, it appears, will be to give a presidential address at the upcoming annual meeting. Specific precedents being absent, I need to give thought to what belongs in an AAAI presidential address. But one thing I already know: That talk should be devoted to our science, not our society. It should be substantive , not procedural. It should look inward at the state of what we know about intelligence and computers, not outward at our place in the larger society. It is in this message that earthly matters belong.


2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Syeda Erfana Zohora ◽  
A. M. Khan ◽  
Arvind K. Srivastava ◽  
Nhu Gia Nguyen ◽  
Nilanjan Dey

In the last few decades there has been a tremendous amount of research on synthetic emotional intelligence related to affective computing that has significantly advanced from the technological point of view that refers to academic studies, systematic learning and developing knowledge and affective technology to a extensive area of real life time systems coupled with their applications. The objective of this paper is to present a general idea on the area of emotional intelligence in affective computing. The overview of the state of the art in emotional intelligence comprises of basic definitions and terminology, a study of current technological scenario. The paper also proposes research activities with a detailed study of ethical issues, challenges with importance on affective computing. Lastly, we present a broad area of applications such as interactive learning emotional systems, modeling emotional agents with an intention of employing these agents in human computer interactions as well as in education.


Fascism ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-107
Author(s):  
Guy Lanoue

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Italy experienced a series of crises when its precarious postwar political compromise was challenged by the effects of decades of structural corruption. The author was offered unsolicited narratives of the prewar and especially wartime Fascist period. Surprisingly, many of these stories cast Fascists and their Nazi political allies in a positive light. Here, the author argues that these favourable views of a bleak period are linked to the disenchantment and diffidence many felt (and continue to feel) toward the state and its institutions, and that these stories are not nostalgic expressions of fascist sympathies. Instead, they stress how people managed the micro-details of everyday life to gain small, individual victories against wartime degradations that would otherwise transform them into powerless victims. Even today, these expressions of individual agency reinforce shared notions that there is alternative to the institutional culture of an inefficient and oppressive state.


2013 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 161-183
Author(s):  
Mary L. Mullen

This article considers the politics and aesthetics of the colonial Bildungsroman by reading George Moore's often-overlooked novel A Drama in Muslin (1886). It argues that the colonial Bildungsroman does not simply register difference from the metropolitan novel of development or express tension between the core and periphery, as Jed Esty suggests, but rather can imagine a heterogeneous historical time that does not find its end in the nation-state. A Drama in Muslin combines naturalist and realist modes, and moves between Ireland and England to construct a form of untimely development that emphasises political processes (dissent, negotiation) rather than political forms (the state, the nation). Ultimately, the messy, discordant history represented in the novel shows the political potential of anachronism as it celebrates the untimeliness of everyday life.


2019 ◽  
Vol 60 ◽  
pp. 424-428
Author(s):  
Alexandra I. Vakulinskaya

This publication is devoted to one of the episodes of I. A. Ilyin’s activity in the period “between two revolutions”. Before the October revolution, the young philosopher was inspired by the events of February 1917 and devoted a lot of time to speeches and publications on the possibility of building a new order in the state. The published archive text indicates that the development of Ilyin’s doctrine “on legal consciousness” falls precisely at this tragic moment in the history of Russia.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (10-2) ◽  
pp. 86-98
Author(s):  
Ivan Popov

The paper deals with the organization and decisions of the conference of the Minister-Presidents of German lands in Munich on June 6-7, 1947, which became the one and only meeting of the heads of the state governments of the western and eastern occupation zones before the division of Germany. The conference was the first experience of national positioning of the regional elite and clearly demonstrated that by the middle of 1947, not only between the allies, but also among German politicians, the incompatibility of perspectives of further constitutional development was existent and all the basic conditions for the division of Germany became ripe. Munich was the last significant demonstration of this disunity and the moment of the final turn towards the three-zone orientation of the West German elite.


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