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Tang hui yao
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ISBN: 7101007562 Year: 1998 Publisher: Beijing : Zhonghua shu ju,

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Book
Wu dai hui yao
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ISBN: 7101020496 Year: 1998 Publisher: Beijing : Zhonghua shu ju,

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China --- History


Book
The translatability of revolution : Guo Moruo and twentieth-century Chinese culture
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ISBN: 9781684175918 9780674987180 Year: 2018 Publisher: Cambridge Harvard University Asia Center

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"The first comprehensive study of the writer, politician, and Marxist historian Guo Moruo, this book explores the dynamics of translation, revolution, and historical imagination in twentieth-century Chinese culture. Leaping between different genres of Guo's works, it interrogates the linkage between translation and historical imagination"--Provided by the publisher.


Book
The Translatability of Revolution
Authors: ---
ISBN: 1684175917 9781684175918 Year: 2018 Publisher: Boston Leiden Boston

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"The first comprehensive study of the writer, politician, and Marxist historian Guo Moruo, this book explores the dynamics of translation, revolution, and historical imagination in twentieth-century Chinese culture. Leaping between different genres of Guo's works, it interrogates the linkage between translation and historical imagination"--Provided by the publisher.


Book
The Large Dam Dilemma : An Exploration of the Impacts of Hydro Projects on People and the Environment in China
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 9400776292 9400776306 Year: 2014 Publisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer,

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Large dam construction has significant environmental and social impacts at different scales. As the largest developing country in the world, China has built about half of the world’s large dams, and more are expected to be built over the next two decades to meet the country’s rapidly growing demand for energy. This book summarizes and updates information about the history, distribution, functions, and impacts of large dams, both globally and at China’s national level. It then addresses the environmental and social-economic impacts of large dams in China with particular emphasis on the impacts of large dams on relocated people and associated compensation policies. Lastly, it introduces an integrated ecological and socio-economic study conducted in areas affected by dams along the Upper Mekong River, China. This book has the following three goals. The first goal is to summarize and update information on large dams globally and at China’s national level (Ch. 2). We examine large dam problems from different perspectives, ranging from their spatial and temporal distributions and their environmental and social impacts, to discussions and debates centered on them. We also incorporate the results of an empirical investigation of the environmental and socio-economic impacts of large dams on the Upper Mekong River, China, and draw conclusions out of the analysis (Chs.3 & 4). Our second goal is to provide an analysis framework to help understand the environmental and social-economic impacts of dam construction and the resulting environmental degradations and social inequities at different scales (Chs.3 & 4), as well as to offer recommendations for mitigating these impacts within China’s socio-political context (Ch. 5). The significant environmental effects resulting from dam construction include damage to ecological integrity and loss of biological diversity. The most significant social consequences brought by dam projects are their negative impacts on relocated people. Our analysis framework provides approaches to help comprehensively understand these impacts. Our third goal is to provide clues and suggestions for further studies of large dam problems both globally and in China (Ch. 5). The construction of large dams is proceeding rapidly in different parts of the world despite the heated debates on whether they should be built at all. The decision-making process related to building large dams involves considerations of economic viability, environmental sustainability, and social equity. Therefore, interdisciplinary collaborations are required in large dam research and development projects in order to reconcile the interests of different stakeholders and avoid harming ecosystems, biodiversity, and human welfare. Overall, we hope our book facilitates future examinations of large dams by providing summaries of existing data and research related to large dams, and offering a framework for better understanding and analyzing their environmental and social impacts.

The Large Dam Dilemma : An Exploration of the Impacts of Hydro Projects on People and the Environment in China
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 9789400776302 Year: 2014 Publisher: Dordrecht Springer Netherlands


Digital
The Large Dam Dilemma : An Exploration of the Impacts of Hydro Projects on People and the Environment in China
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 9789400776302 Year: 2014 Publisher: Dordrecht Springer Netherlands

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Abstract

Large dam construction has significant environmental and social impacts at different scales. As the largest developing country in the world, China has built about half of the world’s large dams, and more are expected to be built over the next two decades to meet the country’s rapidly growing demand for energy. This book summarizes and updates information about the history, distribution, functions, and impacts of large dams, both globally and at China’s national level. It then addresses the environmental and social-economic impacts of large dams in China with particular emphasis on the impacts of large dams on relocated people and associated compensation policies. Lastly, it introduces an integrated ecological and socio-economic study conducted in areas affected by dams along the Upper Mekong River, China. This book has the following three goals. The first goal is to summarize and update information on large dams globally and at China’s national level (Ch. 2). We examine large dam problems from different perspectives, ranging from their spatial and temporal distributions and their environmental and social impacts, to discussions and debates centered on them. We also incorporate the results of an empirical investigation of the environmental and socio-economic impacts of large dams on the Upper Mekong River, China, and draw conclusions out of the analysis (Chs.3 & 4). Our second goal is to provide an analysis framework to help understand the environmental and social-economic impacts of dam construction and the resulting environmental degradations and social inequities at different scales (Chs.3 & 4), as well as to offer recommendations for mitigating these impacts within China’s socio-political context (Ch. 5). The significant environmental effects resulting from dam construction include damage to ecological integrity and loss of biological diversity. The most significant social consequences brought by dam projects are their negative impacts on relocated people. Our analysis framework provides approaches to help comprehensively understand these impacts. Our third goal is to provide clues and suggestions for further studies of large dam problems both globally and in China (Ch. 5). The construction of large dams is proceeding rapidly in different parts of the world despite the heated debates on whether they should be built at all. The decision-making process related to building large dams involves considerations of economic viability, environmental sustainability, and social equity. Therefore, interdisciplinary collaborations are required in large dam research and development projects in order to reconcile the interests of different stakeholders and avoid harming ecosystems, biodiversity, and human welfare. Overall, we hope our book facilitates future examinations of large dams by providing summaries of existing data and research related to large dams, and offering a framework for better understanding and analyzing their environmental and social impacts.

Multimodal interface for human-machine communication
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 9812778543 9789812778543 9789810245948 9789812778543 9810245947 Year: 2002 Publisher: Singapore River Edge, N.J. World Scientific

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With the advance of speech, image and video technology, human-computer interaction (HCI) will reach a new phase. In recent years, HCI has been extended to human-machine communication (HMC) and the perceptual user interface (PUI). The final goal in HMC is that the communication between humans and machines is similar to human-to-human communication. Moreover, the machine can support human-to-human communication (e.g. an interface for the disabled). For this reason, various aspects of human communication are to be considered in HMC. The HMC interface, called a multimodal interface, includes dif


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故宮學術季刊

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Dissertation
Quantitative Spoken language Understanding
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2024 Publisher: Leuven KU Leuven. Faculteit Ingenieurswetenschappen

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Spoken Language Understanding systems play an ever increasing role in our lives, from the voice assistants in our phones to smart homes, their presence is ever more relevant. However, there is a lack of spoken language understanding systems built specifically on tasks that involve numbers. Hence, the goal of this thesis is to build such a system. Following recent trends in speech understanding research, this model will be built with an end-to-end approach. This simply means that instead of converting the audio input to a textual transcription and then inferring meaning from this transcription, this work aims to build a model that takes the audio input and outputs the semantics, or meaning, of said audio, bypassing any intermediate text representations. To achieve our goal we will use a dataset of voice commands where every command contains one or more numbers. These commands can be one of four types: setting an alarm, setting a timer, asking for a unit conversion (e.g. from feet to meters) or asking about simple arithmetic operations (i.e. adding, subtraction, multiplication or division). The data is divided between Real speakers and Synthetic speakers. Our system will have an encoder-decoder architecture. In the encoder the audio inputs will be converted to a high-level representation. For this we use the encoder of a pre-trained model, i.e. a model trained on large amounts of data for multi-task purposes, that can provide features from our audio inputs. The other component, the decoder, is where the features from the decoder are fine-tuned. In practice, this is where the specificities of the tasks present in our data will be learned. Several decoders were tried with the Capsule Network decoder achieving good results for low quantities of data and with less parameters than the other decoders. Another important aspect of our system was finding a good way to represent the numbers. Usually, spoken language understanding systems rely on two parts: first discerning the type of task, known as intent detection, and then understanding the particularities of the task by matching a series of slot, known as slot filling. Normally, in slot filling there is one label for each of the slot possibilities, this approach is not possible with numbers given the sheer amount of possibilities. Thus, a new slot list was created where the numbers were decomposed in digits, this way accounting for all possibilities while keeping a restricted number of slots. The results of our models were satisfactory, beating the baselines that were set and achieving results similar to the current benchmark on the dataset used. The slot filling technique to handle the numbers worked well overall with the some exceptions in cases where some digits occurred sparsely in the training data.

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