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Empreendedorismo e capital humano no desenvolvimento local : o caso de Lajes – PERANGEL JUNIOR, João Francisco Lins Brayner 09 March 2009 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2009-03-09 / The aim of this dissertation was to identify the relationship and importance of human capital with entrepreneurship and its resulting importance to the creation of wealth and promotion of local development. The research was developed in Lajes, a rural community located in the municipality of Caruaru, in the state of Pernambuco, whose economic activities are now predominantly urban. Theoretical frameworks on non-agricultural activities were considered, namely those of Schumpeter. An analysis of the sources of the economic development process was also taken into account in relation to the entrepreneurship behavior of the community and policies and strategies for local development were also considered. This way, the basic research problem was posed as the productive activity of a rural community which was mainly agricultural and became transformed, by the influence of technology and innovation, in an entrepreneurship community, producing petty commodity products for the urban market, mainly textile final products. This community differentiation led to the creation of wealth and contributed to the improvement of its well being and the promotion of local development without, reference made, the apparatus of state policies. / O objetivo deste estudo foi identificar a relação e importância do capital humano associado ao empreendedorismo, a influência dessa relação na geração de riquezas e conseqüente desenvolvimento local. A pesquisa foi desenvolvida em Lajes, comunidade localizada no Segundo Distrito municipal de Caruaru–PE, situado na zona rural do município, cujas atividades empreendedoras são predominantemente não-agrícolas. Foram consideradas abordagens teóricas sobre atividades não-agrícolas, como também enfoques do conhecimento e empreendedorismo, sobretudo em Schumpeter. Foi fomentada uma análise sobre desenvolvimento econômico através do comportamento empreendedor de uma comunidade e algumas reflexões sobre políticas públicas no aspecto do desenvolvimento local. Desta forma, o problema foi identificado através da observação da atividade produtiva de uma comunidade situada na zona rural, originalmente agrícola que passa a adotar através da aquisição de conhecimento e revelação da capacidade empreendedora, a identificação de oportunidade com uma atividade não-agrícola, qual seja a produção de confecções, e que assim consegue gerar riqueza e melhoria na qualidade de vida. Por fim, verificou-se que pode haver desenvolvimento local, inclusive com a ausência de políticas públicas.
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Toward Knowledge-Centric Natural Language Processing: Acquisition, Representation, Transfer, and ReasoningZhen, Wang January 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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Aspectos econômicos e sociais do desenvolvimento científico e tecnológico brasileiro e o critério jurídico de apropriação do conhecimento humanoSilva, Thiago de Carvalho e Silva e 04 April 2013 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2013-04-04 / Man has always searched answers to the fundamental questions of his existence, in attempt to
satiate his innate curiosity, which, in the course of human history, has led to apprehension and
accumulation of his knowledge. The man s inventive spirit stems from such curiosity and
attempt to dominate the aspects of nature, which provided the evolution of techniques and
professions until the moment that was allowed to speak about according to the considerable
evolution - scientific and technological development. In this process, the participation of the
private sector was crucial, with robust reversal of capital in favor of development, once the
technology by itself became an important asset in the globalized scenario. Thus, the protection
of professional inventors and innovators has become an urgent pressing against the potential
investors of funds applied in the innovation process, balancing the relationship between
capital and holder of knowledge (far beyond from the classical relationship capital/labor),
through the intervention of the State in compliance of its primary obligation to encourage and
promote Brazilian scientific and technological development, as the existing provision in the
caput of Article 218 of the Brazilian Federal Constitution of October 5th, 1988 ("CF/88 ). In
this perspective, arises the problem of effectiveness of the social right that belongs to man and
to all men. The problem about the criterion used for the appropriation of human knowledge in
the laws that regulate the matter related to the scientific and technological development in
Brazil presents itself bruising, demanding that the relationship between the employer-creator
and the employee receives such State interference through public policies to encourage
technological innovation that aim the concretion of the social right to share the scientific and
technological development provided in favor of the employees in §4th of article 218 of CF/88 / tentativa de saciar sua curiosidade inata, a qual, no transcorrer da história humana, levou-o à
apreensão e acumulação do próprio conhecimento. O espírito inventivo do homem decorre
desta curiosidade e da tentativa de dominar os aspectos da natureza, o que proporcionou a
evolução das técnicas e dos ofícios até o momento em que se permitiu falar - dada a evolução
considerável - em desenvolvimento científico e tecnológico. Neste processo, a participação da
iniciativa privada foi determinante, com inversão robusta de capital em favor do
desenvolvimento, vez que a própria tecnologia tornou-se um bem importante no cenário
globalizado. Assim, tornou-se premente a necessidade de proteção dos profissionais
inventores e inovadores face aos eventuais investidores de recursos aplicados no processo de
inovação, equilibrando a relação entre o capital e o detentor do conhecimento (já muito além
da clássica relação capital/trabalho), pela via da intervenção do Estado no cumprimento de
sua obrigação primária de incentivar e promover o desenvolvimento científico e tecnológico
brasileiro, tal qual a previsão existente no caput do artigo 218 da Constituição Federal de 5 de
outubro de 1988 ( CF/88). Nesta perspectiva, surge o problema da efetividade do direito
social de partilhar do desenvolvimento científico e tecnológico que pertence ao Homem e a
todos os homens. O problema sobre o critério utilizado para a apropriação do conhecimento
humano nas legislações que regem a matéria atinente ao desenvolvimento científico e
tecnológico no Brasil apresenta-se de forma contundente, a exigir que a relação entre o
empregado-criador e o empregador receba a referida interferência do Estado através de
políticas públicas de incentivo à inovação tecnológica que visem à concretização do direito
social de partilhar do desenvolvimento científico e tecnológico previsto em favor dos
empregados no §4º do artigo 218 da CF/88
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The Role of High-Level Reasoning and Rule-Based Representations in the Inverse Base-Rate EffectWennerholm, Pia January 2001 (has links)
<p>The inverse base-rate effect is the observation that on certain occasions people classify new objects as belonging to rare base-rate categories rather than common ones (e.g., D. L. Medin & S. M. Edelson, 1988). This finding is inconsistent with normative prescriptions of rationality, and provides an anomaly for current theories of human knowledge representation, such as the exemplar-based models of categorization, which predict a consistent use of base-rates (e.g., D. L. Medin & M. M. Schaffer, 1978). This thesis presents a novel explanation of the inverse base-rate effect. The proposal is that participants sometimes eliminate category options that are inconsistent with well-supported inference rules. These assumptions contrast with those by attentional theory (J. K. Kruschke, in press), according to which the inverse base-rate effect is the outcome of rapid attention shifts operating on cue-category associations. Study I, II, and III verified seven qualitative predictions derived from the eliminative inference idea. None of these phenomena can be explained by attentional theory. The most important of these findings were that elimination of well-known, common categories mediate the inverse base-rate effect rather than the strongest cue-category associations (Study I), that only participants with a rule-based mode of generalization exhibit the inverse base-rate effect (Study II), and that rapid attentional shifts per se do not accelerate learning, but rather decelerate it (Study III). In addition, Study I provided a quantitative implementation of the eliminative inference idea, ELMO, that demonstrated that this high-level reasoning process can produce the basic pattern of base-rate effects in the inverse base-rate design. Taken together, as an account of the inverse base-rate effect the empirical evidence of this thesis suggest that rule-based elimination is a powerful component of the inverse base-rate effect. But previous studies have indicated that attentional shifts affect the inverse base-rate effect, too. Therefore, a complete account of the inverse base-rate effect needs to integrate inductive and eliminative inferences operating on rule-based representations with attentional shifts. The Discussion of this thesis propose a number of suggestions for such integrative work. </p>
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The Role of High-Level Reasoning and Rule-Based Representations in the Inverse Base-Rate EffectWennerholm, Pia January 2001 (has links)
The inverse base-rate effect is the observation that on certain occasions people classify new objects as belonging to rare base-rate categories rather than common ones (e.g., D. L. Medin & S. M. Edelson, 1988). This finding is inconsistent with normative prescriptions of rationality, and provides an anomaly for current theories of human knowledge representation, such as the exemplar-based models of categorization, which predict a consistent use of base-rates (e.g., D. L. Medin & M. M. Schaffer, 1978). This thesis presents a novel explanation of the inverse base-rate effect. The proposal is that participants sometimes eliminate category options that are inconsistent with well-supported inference rules. These assumptions contrast with those by attentional theory (J. K. Kruschke, in press), according to which the inverse base-rate effect is the outcome of rapid attention shifts operating on cue-category associations. Study I, II, and III verified seven qualitative predictions derived from the eliminative inference idea. None of these phenomena can be explained by attentional theory. The most important of these findings were that elimination of well-known, common categories mediate the inverse base-rate effect rather than the strongest cue-category associations (Study I), that only participants with a rule-based mode of generalization exhibit the inverse base-rate effect (Study II), and that rapid attentional shifts per se do not accelerate learning, but rather decelerate it (Study III). In addition, Study I provided a quantitative implementation of the eliminative inference idea, ELMO, that demonstrated that this high-level reasoning process can produce the basic pattern of base-rate effects in the inverse base-rate design. Taken together, as an account of the inverse base-rate effect the empirical evidence of this thesis suggest that rule-based elimination is a powerful component of the inverse base-rate effect. But previous studies have indicated that attentional shifts affect the inverse base-rate effect, too. Therefore, a complete account of the inverse base-rate effect needs to integrate inductive and eliminative inferences operating on rule-based representations with attentional shifts. The Discussion of this thesis propose a number of suggestions for such integrative work.
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The biodynamics of knowledge creation : an archaeological, behavioural and neurological account of the creation of human knowledgeChristie, Warren James Alexander 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil (Information Science))--Stellenbosch University, 2008. / This thesis explores phenomena surrounding the creation of knowledge, employing a multidisciplinary
approach.
To start with a view on the physical location of knowledge is discussed. This helps highlight the
problem of defining knowledge and simultaneously introduces a set of fundamental and conceptual
questions about the phenomena surrounding the creation of knowledge . The set of questions are then
focussed on the process of knowledge creation.
The investigation starts in the field of archaeology, in particular at the dawn of modern civilisation,
with views on the earliest forms of knowledge creation. From there the investigation moves on to
aspects of contemporary neurology. This allows for a comparison between humans from the ancient
past with humans of today thereby identifying a neurological link between these periods.
Based on current research within the field of behavioural neurology it is posed that knowledge creation
is a process initiated by the impact of electromagnetic fields on the brain. A review of the medical
research within the neurological sciences on the effects of electromagnetic field stimulation shows it to
be effective as a treatment modality, a behavioural modifier, a suppressor and facilitator of cognition,
as well as a sensory modulator.
The interaction of the brain with electromagnetic fields is shown as a form of transduction similar to
that of regular sensory transduction. Since the transduction of electromagnetic stimuli can functionally
modulate sensory reception, cognition, behaviour and some neurological conditions, the creation of
sensory perception, cognition, behaviour and neurological conditions (all phenomena surrounding
knowledge creation) can be shown as functionally dependant on the electro-chemical process of
ferromagnetic transduction (magneto reception). The ferromagnetic transduction model may then be
seen as the sensory mechanism that initiates and modulates the process of knowledge creation. The
modulation of this process is revealed cognitively in savants, behaviourally in some of the greatest
thinkers in history and on a planetary scale as a force of nature. The implications of these findings is
that if the keys to the creation of knowledge have been found, great care needs to be taken when
deciding to implement any type of artificial or natural modulation to neural firing rates not only
because of the total effect modulation can have on the individual but also because of the social
consequences resulting from those who wish to socially discriminate according to the ability of and
beliefs arising from the knowledge creating process.
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