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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
61

Eye movement measurement for clinical applications using pattern recognition

甄榮輝, Yan, Wing-fai. January 1988 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Electrical Engineering / Master / Master of Philosophy
62

OPTIMIZATION AND STOCHASTIC APPROXIMATION TECHNIQUES APPLIED TO UNSUPERVISED LEARNING

McClellan, Richard Paul, 1944- January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
63

AUTOMATIC RECOGNITION OF PICTORIAL-PATTERNS BY DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS AND CLASSIFICATION

Todd, Henry Swan, 1933- January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
64

Pattern recognition by simulating parallel plane threshold devices

Barr, James Robert, 1936- January 1965 (has links)
No description available.
65

Probabilistic second level continuous evaluator of adaptive pattern recognizers

Stratton, William Roland, 1939- January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
66

A comparison of size and shape of certain commercially available dress patterns

Disney, Phyllis Ann, 1934- January 1961 (has links)
No description available.
67

Feature extraction and evaluation for cervical cell recognition

Cahn, Robert L. January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
68

Combined top-down and bottom-up algorithms for using context in text recognition

Bouchard, Diana C. January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
69

Subversion, transcendence, and rejection history in the fiction of contemporary Chinese avant-garde writers Su Tong, Yu Hua, and Ge Fei

Yu, Zhansui 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis explores the different patterns of history presented in the fiction of the three major contemporary Chinese avant-garde writers Su Tong, Yu Hua, and Ge Fei as well as their respective views of history. Based on detailed case studies of the three writers, the thesis examines the complicated and intertwined relationships of contemporary Chinese avant-garde fiction with previous Chinese traditions—Confucian, the May Fourth, and Communist—and with foreign influences. It also assesses the overall literary achievement of Chinese avant-garde fiction, its position in the history of modern Chinese literature, and its impact on the Chinese writers of later generations. Unlike most previous research on this subject, which overemphasizes the "alien" nature of Chinese avant-garde fiction or its discontinuity with Chinese tradition, this thesis aims at a more balanced investigation. Not only is the "newness" of Chinese avant-garde fiction deeply explored, its "Chineseness" or its profound continuity with Chinese literary and cultural conventions is also carefully examined. By comparison, the thesis attaches more importance to the "Chineseness" of Chinese avant-garde fiction. My analysis demonstrates that, while Su Tong aims at the total subversion of the Communist interpretation of the Chinese revolution and history, while Yu Hua attemptsto transcend the Maoist materialistic view of history through reincorporating subjectivity into historical interpretation, Ge Fei totally rejects the conceptualization of history and the underlying rationalistic assumption of human experience as a perceptible and understandable unity.
70

A reexamination of the role of the hippocampus in object-recognition memory using neurotoxic lesions and ischemia in rats

Duva, Christopher Adam 11 1900 (has links)
Paradoxical results on object-recognition delayed nonmatching-to-sample (DNMS) tasks have been found in monkeys and rats that receive either partial, ischemia-induced hippocampal lesions or complete hippocampal ablation. Ischemia results in severe DNMS impairments, which have been attributed to circumscribed CA1 cell loss. However, ablation studies indicate that the hippocampus plays only a minimal role in the performance of the DNMS task. Two hypotheses have been proposed to account for these discrepant findings (Bachevalier & Mishkin, 1989). First, the "hippocampal interference" hypothesis posits that following ischemia, the partially damaged hippocampus may disrupt activity in extrahippocampal structures that are important for object-recognition memory. Second, previously undetected ischemia-induced extrahippocampal damage may be responsible for the DNMS impairments attributed to CA1 cell loss. To test the "hippocampal interference" hypothesis, the effect of partial NMDAinduced lesions of the dorsal hippocampus were investigated on DNMS performance in rats. These lesions damaged much of the same area, the CA1, as did ischemia; but did so without depriving the entire forebrain of oxygen, thereby reducing the possibility of extrahippocampal damage. In Experiment 1, rats were trained on the DNMS task prior to receiving an NMDA-lesion. Postoperatively, these rats reacquired the nonmatching rule at a rate equivalent to controls and were unimpaired in performance at delays up to 300 s. In Experiment 2, naive rats were given NMDA-lesions and then trained on DNMS. These rats acquired the DNMS rule at a rate equivalent to controls and performed normally at delays up to 300 s. These findings suggest that interference from a partially damaged hippocampus cannot account for the ischemia-induced DNMS impairments and that they are more likely produced by extrahippocampal neuropathology. In Experiment 3, rats from the previous study were tested on the Morris water-maze. Compared to sham-lesioned animals, rats with partial lesions of the dorsal hippocampus were impaired in the acquisition of the water-maze task. Thus, subtotal NMDA-lesions of the hippocampus impaired spatial memory while leaving nonspatial memory intact. Mumby et al. (1992b) suggested that the ischemia-induced extrahippocampal damage underlying the DNMS deficits is mediated or produced by the postischemic hippocampus. To test this idea, preoperatively trained rats in Experiment 4 were subject to cerebral ischemia followed within 1hr by hippocampal aspiration lesions. It was hypothesized that ablation soon after ischemia would block the damage putatively produced by the postischemic hippocampus and thereby prevent the development of postoperative DNMS deficits. Unlike "ischemia-only" rats, the rats with the combined lesion were able to reacquire the nonmatching rule at a normal rate and performed normally at delays up to 300 s. Thus, hippocampectomy soon after ischemia eliminated the pathogenic process that lead to ischemia-induced DNMS deficits. Experiment 5 investigated the role of ischemiainduced CA1 cell death as a factor in the production of extrahippocampal neuropathology. Naive rats were given NMDA-lesions of the dorsal hippocampus followed 3 weeks later by cerebral ischemia. If the ischemia-induced CA1 neurotoxicity is responsible for producing extrahippocampal damage then preischemic ablation should attenuate this process and prevent the development of DNMS impairments. This did not occur: Rats with the combined lesion were as impaired as the "ischemia-only" rats in the acquisition of the DNMS task. This suggests that the ischemia-induced pathogenic processes that result in extrahippocampal neuropathology comprise more than CA1 neurotoxicity. The findings presented in this thesis are consistent with the idea that ischemiainduced DNMS deficits in rats are the result of extrahippocampal damage mediated or produced by the postischemic hippocampus. The discussion focuses on three main points: 1) How might the post-ischemic hippocampus be involved in the production of extrahippocampal neuropathology? 2) In what brain region(s) might this damage be occurring? 3) What anatomical, molecular, or functional neuropathology might ischemia produce in extrahippocampal brain regions? The results are also discussed in terms of a specialized role for the hippocampus in mnemonic functions and the recently emphasized importance of the rhinal cortex in object-recognition memory.

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