scholarly journals Graph Visualization of the Characteristics of Complex Objects on the Example of the Analysis of Politicians

2020 ◽  
pp. short8-1-short8-9
Author(s):  
Mikhail Ulizko ◽  
Evgeniy Antonov ◽  
Alexey Artamonov ◽  
Rufina Tukumbetova

The paper considers the task of analyzing complex interconnected objects using graph construction. There is no unified tool for constructing graphs. Some solutions can build graphs limited by the number of nodes, while others do not visually display data. The Gephi application was used to construct graphs for the research. Gephi has great functionality for building and analyzing graphs. The subject of research is a politician with a certain set of characteristics. In the paper an algorithm that enables to automate data collection on politicians was developed. One of the main methods of data collecting on the Internet is web scraping. Web scraping software may access the World Wide Web directly using the HTTP, or through a web browser. While web scraping can be done manually by a software user, the term typically refers to automated processes implemented using a software agent. The data was necessary for constructing graphs and their analysis. The use of graphs enables to see various types of relationships, including mediate. This methodology enables to change the attitude towards the analysis of multidi-mensional objects.

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 2103-2105

Web scraping is also known as data scraping and it is used for extracting data from sites. The software used for this may directly access the World Wide Web by using the Hypertext Transfer Protocol or by using a web browser. Over the years, due to advancements in web development and its technology, various frameworks have come in use and almost all of websites are dynamic with their content being served from CMS. This makes it tough to extract data since there is no common template for extracting data. Hence, we use RSS. Rich Site Summary is a kind of timeline allowing users and also applications to gain access to the updates on websites in a standardized, computer-readable format. This project combines the use of RSS to extract data from websites and serve users in a robust and easy way. The differentiation is that this project uses server side caching to serve users almost instantaneously without the need to perform data extraction from the requested site all over again. This is done using Redis and Django.


2018 ◽  
Vol 31 (5) ◽  
pp. 154-182
Author(s):  
Cadence Kinsey

This article analyses Camille Henrot’s 2013 film Grosse Fatigue in relation to the histories of hypermedia and modes of interaction with the World Wide Web. It considers the development of non-hierarchical systems for the organisation of information, and uses Grosse Fatigue to draw comparisons between the Web, the natural history museum and the archive. At stake in focusing on the way in which information is organised through hypermedia is the question of subjectivity, and this article argues that such systems are made ‘user-friendly’ by appearing to accommodate intuitive processes of information retrieval, reflecting the subject back to itself as autonomous. This produces an ideology of individualism which belies the forms of heteronomy that in fact shape and structure access to information online in significant ways. At the heart of this argument is an attention to the visual, and the significance of art as an immanent mode of analysis. Through the themes of transparency and opacity, and order and chaos, the article thus proposes a defining dynamic between autonomy and automation as a model for understanding the contemporary subject.


1964 ◽  
Vol 54 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 33-40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fergus Millar

No analysis of the political character of the Empire can avoid the question of finance. The various sources of revenue of the Emperor and the res publica, the role of the private wealth of the Emperor, the nature of his control over public funds, the question of how and when various public revenues were taken by him—a satisfactory political interpretation of the early Empire must take account of all these.This article attempts merely to take a second preliminary step towards such an interpretation. Its aim is to set out as clearly as possible the evidence as to the nature of the Aerarium and the functions of its officials, and, above all, to avoid the anachronistic approach which our language itself so readily invites. Not all anachronistic views of the subject have had the beautiful obviousness of Ramsay's contribution: even to speak of the ‘world-wide financial administration’ of the Aerarium will prove to be misleading.


2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 2057-2061
Author(s):  
Madhurima Hooda ◽  
Amandeep Kaur ◽  
Madhulika Bhadauria

The World Wide Web is used by millions of people everyday for various purposes including email, reading news, downloading music, online shopping or simply accessing information about anything. Using a standard web browser, the user can access information stored on Web servers situated anywhere on the globe. This gives the illusion that all this information is situated locally on the user’s computer. In reality, the Web represents a huge distributed system that appears as a single resource to the user available at the click of a button. This paper gives an overview of distributed systems in current IT sector. Distributed systems are everywhere. The internet enable users throughout the world to access its services wherever they may be located [1]. Each organization manages an intranet, which provides local services for local users and generally provides services to other users in the internet. Small distributed systems can be constructed from mobile computers and other small computational devices that are attached to a wireless network.


1984 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 167-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Moore

On 4 February 1976 the Federal Military Government of Nigeria promulgated Decree No. 6, initiating the removal of the national capital from Lagos to Abuja. Thus Nigeria followed Brazil, Botswana, Malawi, Pakistan, and Tanzania to become the most recent developing country to arrange for a transfer of its centre of government. The proliferation of new capitals constructed in the twentieth century has captured the world-wide attention of geographers, architects, planners, and demographers, but the literature on the subject examines these projects almost exclusively with a focus on planning for national development. This viewpoint too often neglects politics as the paramount force in the relocation of a nation's capital city.


2007 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 639-644 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carmen Maria Casquel Monti Juliani ◽  
Paulina Kurcgant

This study aimed to describe the development stages of software about Nursing Staff Scale, created to support teaching of the subject, as well as to serve as a consultation instrument for professional nurses, since it joins labor legislation, testimonies and simulation. The adopted methodology consisted of the planning and developmental phases, with various stages and professionals, as detailed in the article. Although the need for continuous updating of the system is recognized, the availability of a resource that is easily accessed through the world wide web is considered an advance in teaching and in nurses' management practice.


2013 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 93-110
Author(s):  
Roger Clarke

The World Wide Web arrived just as connections to the Internet were broadening from academe to the public generally. The Web was designed to support user-performed publishing and access to documents in both textual and graphical forms. That capability was quickly supplemented by means to discover content. The web browser was the ‘killer app’ associated with the explosion of the Internet into the wider world during the mid- 1990s. The technology was developed in 1990 by an Englishman, supported by a Belgian, working in Switzerland, but with the locus soon migrating to Illinois and then to Massachusetts in 1994. Australians were not significant contributors to the original technology, but were among the pioneers in its application. This paper traces the story of the Web in Australia from its beginnings in 1992, up to 1995, identifying key players and what they did, set within the broader context, and reflecting the insights of the theories of innovation and innovation diffusion.


2008 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 7
Author(s):  
Russell Renhard ◽  
Steve Einfeld

This is the first occasion the Journal has published a special issue on safety and quality in primary health, although of course individual articles on the subject have appeared in its pages. The timing of the issue reflects significant world-wide interest evidenced in a growth of specialist safety and quality-related journals, conferences, World Health Organization programs, as well as policy initiatives by governments all over the world.


2021 ◽  
Vol 69 (4. ksz.) ◽  
pp. 121-124
Author(s):  
Viktor Németh

The MIT Press Essential Knowledge series provides the reader with accessible, concise, yet interesting and completely up-to-date information. Each part was written by excellent experts on the subject, in a language understood by non-experts, too. In this way, the current research data and results in the field of each topic can be really used. Nowadays, it is not easy to find in the endless set of information obtainable on the World Wide Web those that essentially provide the fundamental knowledge on a particular topic. The MIT series fill a gap in this. The topic of the present volume of the series is the anticorruption, as a world phenomenon, its current development and situation. And the topicality of the current theme is perhaps duly justified by the following World Bank estimate: “Much of the globe is infected with corruption, sapping as much as 3 percent of annual per capita GDP in large swathes of Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Even North America is hardly immune. The World Bank says that $1 trillion or more is lost each year to corruption, globally.” (Rotberg, 2020).


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1962 ◽  
Vol 29 (6) ◽  
pp. 910-910
Author(s):  
Myron E. Wegman

This book represents an interesting and very useful compilation of the proceedings of an international conference on the subject, held in Washington, August 21-24, 1960, under the auspices of the Committee on Protein Malnutrition of the Food and Nutrition Board and the Nutrition Study Section of the National Institutes of Health. The book contains all the original papers presented as well as the discussion following each presentation. Participants were those co-operating in the world-wide program conducted by the Committee on Protein Malnutrition in order to develop protein products from indigenous sources, which could be inexpensive and meet the needs of infants.


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