Results 191 to 200 of about 4,373 (234)

On Exponential‐Family INGARCH Models

open access: yesJournal of Time Series Analysis, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT A range of integer‐valued generalised autoregressive conditional heteroscedastic (INGARCH) models have been proposed in the literature, including those based on conditional Poisson, negative binomial and Conway‐Maxwell‐Poisson distributions. This note considers a larger class of exponential‐family INGARCH models, showing that maximum empirical
Alan Huang   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Fixing disconnects: Exploring the emergence of principled adaptations in a competency‐based curriculum

open access: yesMedical Education, Volume 59, Issue 4, Page 428-438, April 2025.
Abstract Purpose Competency‐based medical education (CBME) promises to improve medical education through curricular reforms to support learner development. This intention may be at risk in the case of a Canadian approach to CBME called Competence by Design (CBD), since there have been negative impacts on residents. According to Joseph Schwab, teachers,
Mary C. Ott   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Navigating early career intentions: A qualitative study of influences on specialty choices for medical students

open access: yesMedical Education, Volume 60, Issue 7, Page 792-800, July 2026.
Abstract Background Medical students' career intentions and choices are shaped early in their education, at a time when their interaction with various specialties and professional influences is both formative and essential. Despite this being a pivotal period, the literature offers limited insights into what drives students' specialty choices during ...
Tim Dubé   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

The roots of resistance: An institutional ethnography of faculty opposition to social justice curricula in undergraduate medical education

open access: yesMedical Education, EarlyView.
Abstract Introduction Augmenting training on the social and structural determinants of health in medical education is essential for addressing health disparities and fulfilling medical schools' accreditation‐mandated social accountability obligations.
Allison Brown   +5 more
wiley   +1 more source

‘Just a checkbox’: Growth mindset and feedback in resident experiences with EPA assessments

open access: yesMedical Education, EarlyView.
Abstract Introduction There have been consistent reports of tension between the dual goals of assessment of learning and assessment for learning in competency‐based medical education. This is exemplified by assessments of Entrustable Professional Activities where trainees report a focus on assessment of learning and engaging in performance‐oriented ...
Amanda Hempel   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Gricean metacommunication

open access: yesMind &Language, EarlyView.
Three main approaches exist for finessing the cognitive demands of Grice's model of communication (a notorious problem): namely, deflationism, modularity, and interpretivism. Here, I consider each in light of human metacommunication, a phenomenon that has been neglected in foundational discussions of Gricean communication.
Ronald J. Planer
wiley   +1 more source

Does Non‐Idealism Entail Particularism?

open access: yes
Journal of Social Philosophy, EarlyView.
John Lawless
wiley   +1 more source

“This is the Work I'm Most Proud of”: K‐Pop Fandom and Children's Multilingual Literacy Practices

open access: yesThe Modern Language Journal, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT This paper examines how children's affective investments in K‐pop generated sustained multilingual literacy practices in an arts‐based bookmaking project. Drawing on Pennycook's concept of language assemblages and Norton's investment framework, and informed by Paris and Alim's distinction between heritage and community practices, we analyse ...
Julie Choi, Rafaela Cleeve Gerkens
wiley   +1 more source

A note on the recursive enumerability of some classes of recursively enumerable languages

Information Sciences, 1978
Abstract An elementary proof is presented for the fact that the class of infinite recursive languages is not recursively enumerable. Its relevance for contemporary linguistics and computer science is explained.
Peter van Emde Boas, Paul M. B. Vitányi
openaire   +4 more sources

Fuzzy grammars and recursively enumerable fuzzy languages

Information Sciences, 1992
A fuzzy language ( \(L\)-language) is treated as an \(L\)-subset of \(A^*\) with \(A^*\) being a free monoid of an alphabet defined over a finite set \(A\). The main result of the paper states that if \(L\) is finite then an \(L\)-language is generated by an \(L\)-grammar if and only if it is a recursively enumerable \(L\)-subset.
Giangiacomo Gerla
openaire   +4 more sources

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