Results 261 to 270 of about 236,517 (308)
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Personality Features in Essential Hyperhidrosis
The International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine, 1981The psychological aspects of essential hyperhidrosis, while long recognized, have been minimally investigated. This study compares the personality features of hyperhidrotic subjects to those of normal subjects and persons suffering from dermatological disorders of nonpsychogenic etiology, using the Shanan Sentence Completion Technique, Stein Self ...
B, Lerer, J, Jacobowitz, A, Wahba
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Person Features and Pronominal Anaphora
Linguistic Inquiry, 2011This article aims at clarifying the role of person at the interface between syntax and the interpretive systems. We argue that first person interpretations of third person pronouns (de se readings) stem from the option of leaving the referential index underspecified on the pronoun, thus accounting for the interplay of this phenomenon with the ...
Delfitto D, Fiorin G
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Unsupervised Personalized Feature Selection
Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2018Feature selection is effective in preparing high-dimensional data for a variety of learning tasks such as classification, clustering and anomaly detection. A vast majority of existing feature selection methods assume that all instances share some common patterns manifested in a subset of shared features.
Jundong Li +3 more
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On-the-fly feature importance mining for person re-identification [PDF]
State-of-the-art person re-identification methods seek robust person matching through combining various feature types. Often, these features are implicitly assigned with generic weights, which are assumed to be universally and equally good for all ...
Chunxiao Liu +2 more
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Features of borderline personality and violence
Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1993This study tested the hypothesis that borderline personality characterizes extreme violence by assessing features of borderline and schizotypal personality in three groups: Murderers, Violent, and Nonviolent adult offenders. Murderers had higher borderline personality scores than nonviolent offenders (p < .04).
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Personality features of obsessive-compulsive disorder
American Journal of Psychiatry, 1988The authors evaluated personality dysfunction in 23 patients with primary obsessive-compulsive disorder and an age- and sex-matched group of patients with major depressive disorder. There were no significant differences between the two patient groups with respect to mean personality trait scores or the frequency or type of personality disorder ...
R T, Joffe, R P, Swinson, J J, Regan
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Common personality features in neurotic disorder
British Journal of Medical Psychology, 1986The personality characteristics of 77 patients seen in general practice with a Catego diagnosis of anxiety state (including phobic state) or depressive neurosis derived from the Present State Examination were compared with those in 77 normal subjects chosen at random from the list of the same general practitioner. Each patient was matched with a normal
P, Tyrer, P R, Casey, N, Seivewright
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Color and texture features for person recognition
2004 IEEE International Joint Conference on Neural Networks (IEEE Cat. No.04CH37541), 2005The need for automatic visual surveillance is increasing and the research on person recognition systems is more and more supported. As many biometric recognition methods, e.g. face recognition, are based on quite high camera resolutions which are not available in many situations, we examine features as well as classifier techniques for full body ...
Michael Hähnel +2 more
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Cognitive features of borderline personality disorder
American Journal of Psychiatry, 1990Of 50 patients with borderline personality disorder, 100% reported disturbed but nonpsychotic thought, 40% (N = 20) reported quasi-psychotic thought, and none reported true psychotic thought during the past 2 years; only 14% (N = 7) reported ever experiencing true psychotic thought.
M C, Zanarini +2 more
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