Results 291 to 300 of about 127,295 (353)

Abstracts of Recent Articles on Mathematical Topics in Other Periodicals

open access: closedThe Mathematics Teacher, 1935
An enthusiastic analysis of the important rĂ´le that mathematics has played in the intellectual history of mankind. The author regrets the diminished time devoted to its study in the elementary school and high school. He is however opposed to the demathematization of algebra and geometry that is commonly practiced to meet the needs of the great mass of ...
Nathan Lazar
  +6 more sources

Mental illness topics in popular periodicals

open access: closedCommunity Mental Health Journal, 1992
Recent emphases on educating the general public about mental illness have included the encouragement of the publication of plainly written, lay-oriented information about mental disorders and their treatment in popular periodicals. To examine the extent to which coverage of mental health topics in popular magazines is being accomplished, the present ...
Otto F. Wahl, Arthur Lincoln Kaye
openalex   +4 more sources

Generalized Periodic Discharges: A Topical Review

Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology, 2018
Summary: Generalized periodic discharges (GPDs) are generalized discharges that recur with a relatively uniform morphology and duration. They have a quantifiable interdischarge interval. Over the past decade, our understanding of these waveforms has improved considerably.
Aatif M. Husain   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

LPTA: A Probabilistic Model for Latent Periodic Topic Analysis [PDF]

open access: possible2011 IEEE 11th International Conference on Data Mining, 2011
This paper studies the problem of latent periodic topic analysis from time stamped documents. The examples of time stamped documents include news articles, sales records, financial reports, TV programs, and more recently, posts from social media websites such as Flickr, Twitter, and Face book.
Jiawei Han   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Torpedo: topic periodicity discovery from text data [PDF]

open access: possibleSPIE Proceedings, 2015
Although history may not repeat itself, many human activities are inherently periodic, recurring daily, weekly, monthly, yearly or following some other periods. Such recurring activities may not repeat the same set of keywords, but they do share similar topics.
Jiawei Han, Jingjing Wang, Hongbo Deng
openaire   +1 more source

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