Results 201 to 210 of about 17,642 (312)

Modelling Suicide‐Related Communication Dynamics: A Socio‐Cybernetic Framework for Governance

open access: yesSystems Research and Behavioral Science, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Suicide‐related phenomena (SPS) are often approached through individual‐level risk factors or moral framings, yet their population‐level dynamics depend critically on how ‘suicide’ becomes observable, circulates and is governed across functionally differentiated systems.
Enrique Fernández Vilas, Juan R. Coca
wiley   +1 more source

Admission Possible

open access: yesPlastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1999
openaire   +3 more sources

A Novel Approach to Energy Management in Electric Steelworks

open access: yessteel research international, EarlyView.
Feed‐forward neural networks are exploited to estimate electric energy consumptions of the electric arc furnace and ladle furnace processes. The models are used to optimize production schedule so that more energy intensive grades are produced when the cost of energy is lower.
Valentina Colla   +12 more
wiley   +1 more source

Black Hole Boundary Behaviour as Admissibility Collapse

open access: yes
This paper interprets black hole boundary behaviour through the admissibility framework of the Paton System. Rather than treating black holes solely as extreme gravitational objects defined by singularities or horizon conditions, the admissibility ...
Paton, Andrew John
core  

Incremental upper bound modeling of concrete failures in timber‐concrete notched connections

open access: yesStructural Concrete, EarlyView.
Abstract This paper introduces a novel theoretical framework for developing incremental upper bound solutions, which is applied to predict the response of two local concrete failures in timber‐concrete composite (TCC) decks with notched connections. The new approach enables a prediction of the capacity at the onset of failure as well as the entire post‐
Peter K. Rasmussen   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Admissibility vs Truth in Scientific Explanation

open access: yes
Scientific explanations are typically assessed in terms of truth, correctness, or predictive adequacy. However, many failures in scientific practice arise not from falsehood, but from the continued use of otherwise correct models outside the conditions ...
Paton, Andrew
core  

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