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Collective behaviour

Concepts of Materials Science, 2021
At each change of length-sale in a material new science emerges. The reductionist approach focuses on the atomic and electronic length scales in the belief that a fundamental understanding can be achieved only at this smallest scale.
Adrian P. Sutton
semanticscholar   +4 more sources

Collective behaviour can stabilize ecosystems

Nature Ecology & Evolution, 2021
Collective behaviour is common in bacteria, plants and animals, and therefore occurs across ecosystems, from biofilms to cities. With collective behaviour, social interactions among individuals propagate to affect the behaviour of groups, whereas group-level responses in turn affect individual behaviour.
B. Dalziel   +3 more
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

Collective Behaviour

The Probability Companion for Engineering and Computer Science, 2019
Charles Tilly   +2 more
semanticscholar   +2 more sources

Group anomaly detection for spatio-temporal collective behaviour scenarios in smart cities

IWCTS@SIGSPATIAL, 2022
Group anomaly detection in terms of detecting and predicting abnormal behaviour from entities as a group rather than as an individual, addresses a variety of challenges in spatio-temporal environments like e.g.
Andreas Lohrer   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Collective behaviour in high and low-level youth soccer teams

Science and medicine in football, 2021
Background An expert/non-expert paradigm often helps understand the underpinnings of sports expertise; however, this method is scarcely extended to the complexities of collective behaviour in youth soccer.
J. O’Brien-Smith   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Collective Magnetic Behaviour

2021
The mechanisms responsible for magnetic interaction between nanoparticles are described and modelled in the previous chapter of this book. Here, the collective superspin glass state resulting from such interaction is discussed, using a collection of experimental results.
Roland Mathieu, Per Nordblad
openaire   +1 more source

Collecting behavioural data

Industrial and Commercial Training, 1971
AS TRAINING IS NOTHING LESS THAN A BID TO CONTROL learning, the implication for trainers is inescapable: if we want to establish control over the learning process, then we need, as a basic requirement, to measure what is being learned in any training situation we care to design — we need to measure as best we can the behaviour changes brought about by ...
MICHAEL J COLBERT BOAC   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

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