Results 231 to 240 of about 130,049 (284)
Winds of change: meteorological influences on Strokkur's geyser eruptions, Iceland. [PDF]
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Proceedings of the 9th international conference on Multimodal interfaces, 2007
The rapid development of large interactive wall displays has been accompanied by research on methods that allow people to interact with the display at a distance. The basic method for target acquisition is by ray casting a cursor from one's pointing finger or hand position; the problem is that selection is slow and error-prone with small targets.
Edward Tse, Mark Hancock, Saul Greenberg
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The rapid development of large interactive wall displays has been accompanied by research on methods that allow people to interact with the display at a distance. The basic method for target acquisition is by ray casting a cursor from one's pointing finger or hand position; the problem is that selection is slow and error-prone with small targets.
Edward Tse, Mark Hancock, Saul Greenberg
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Membrane-filter bubble-point test
American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy, 2008In a recent article on caspofungin acetate compatibility, the bubble-point test of filter membranes—used to collect precipitates—was described as resistance felt on a syringe plunger in response to hand-applied air pressure.[1][1] The correct bubble-point test employs a gauge to verify ...
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Proceedings of the 2013 conference on Computer supported cooperative work companion, 2013
Broadcast media are declining in their power to decide which issues and viewpoints will reach large audiences. But new information filters are appearing, in the guise of recommender systems, aggregators, search engines, feed ranking algorithms, and the sites we bookmark and the people and organizations we choose to follow on Twitter.
Paul Resnick +4 more
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Broadcast media are declining in their power to decide which issues and viewpoints will reach large audiences. But new information filters are appearing, in the guise of recommender systems, aggregators, search engines, feed ranking algorithms, and the sites we bookmark and the people and organizations we choose to follow on Twitter.
Paul Resnick +4 more
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Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2013
We investigated participants' preferential selection of information and their attitude moderation in an online environment. Results showed that even when opposing views were presented side-to-side, people would still preferentially select information that reinforced their existing attitudes.
Q. Vera Liao, Wai-Tat Fu
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We investigated participants' preferential selection of information and their attitude moderation in an online environment. Results showed that even when opposing views were presented side-to-side, people would still preferentially select information that reinforced their existing attitudes.
Q. Vera Liao, Wai-Tat Fu
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Political filter bubbles and fragmented publics
2023This chapter asks to what extent citizens encounter sufficient, and sufficiently diverse, political content on digital media. Although the affordances of many digital platforms facilitate selective exposure, potentially leading users to avoid content they dislike or disagree with, other affordances facilitate serendipitous encounters with unsearched ...
Cristian Vaccari, Augusto Valeriani
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Proceedings of the 23rd international conference on World wide web, 2014
Eli Pariser coined the term 'filter bubble' to describe the potential for online personalization to effectively isolate people from a diversity of viewpoints or content. Online recommender systems - built on algorithms that attempt to predict which items users will most enjoy consuming - are one family of technologies that potentially suffers from this
Tien T. Nguyen +4 more
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Eli Pariser coined the term 'filter bubble' to describe the potential for online personalization to effectively isolate people from a diversity of viewpoints or content. Online recommender systems - built on algorithms that attempt to predict which items users will most enjoy consuming - are one family of technologies that potentially suffers from this
Tien T. Nguyen +4 more
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Google Scholar's Filter Bubble
2017This chapter investigates the allegation that popular online search engine Google applies algorithms to personalise search results therefore yielding different results for the exact same search terms. It specifically examines whether the same alleged filter bubble applies to Google's academic product: Google Scholar.
Ke Yu, Nazeem Mustapha, Nadeem Oozeer
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