Journal articles on the topic 'Cricket Data processing'

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1

Fernandez-Cassi, X., A. Supeanu, M. Vaga, A. Jansson, S. Boqvist, and I. Vagsholm. "The house cricket (Acheta domesticus) as a novel food: a risk profile." Journal of Insects as Food and Feed 5, no. 2 (April 3, 2019): 137–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.3920/jiff2018.0021.

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Novel foods represent sustainable alternatives to traditional farming and conventional foodstuffs. The house cricket (Acheta domesticus) is considered as one of the most promising reared insects due to their attractive nutritional profile and lower feed conversion ratio compared to other animals. However, putative health hazards associated with consumption of crickets have previously not been investigated. The present study assesses the risks of A. domesticus reared in closed systems controlled by the implementation of hazard analysis and critical control points and good farming practices. Due to the novelty of the topic, data scarcity has been a limiting factor, hence comparative evidence from closely related species belonging to the order Orthoptera (e.g. grasshoppers, locusts, and other cricket species) have been included. The present risk profile identified as main hazards: (1) high total counts of aerobic bacteria; (2) presence of spore-forming bacteria post thermal processing; (3) accumulation of cadmium and other heavy metals; and (4) a possible increase of allergenic reactions due to exposure to insects and insect derived products. Important data gaps regarding edible crickets and their safety as novel foods have been highlighted in the future perspective section, representing aims for future research. Identified data gaps include: (1) farming conditions of the insects being studied; (2) data on the impact of thermal processing of the products prior to consumption; (3) fungal communities and mycotoxins-producing fungi in reared crickets; and (4) heavy metals not fully assessed (chromium, aluminium and arsenic) and other chemical hazards produced during processing (i.e. heterocyclic aromatic amines, acrylamide). The present risk profile explores food safety risks related to consumption of A. domesticus, thereby constituting an example of chemical and microbial hazards risk profiling on edible insects, covering rearing to consumption.
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2

Dias, Pubudu, Séan R. Mitchell, and Andy R. Harland. "Novel Experimental Protocol to Capture Movement Data and Predict Shot Execution in Cricket Batting." Proceedings 49, no. 1 (June 15, 2020): 41. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2020049041.

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Shot execution in cricket batting is reliant on intricate movement patterns of crucial body segments. When there is a substantial amount of batting movement data available, supervised machine learning can be used to classify when a batting shot execution takes place in a cricket batting cycle. An automated approach to identify and assess cricket batting could be useful for the applications including performance evaluation, talent identification and injury prevention. Current evaluation of movements and shot execution are generally undertaken in an artificial environment with camera-based, motion tracking systems to collect batting movement data, which require careful preparation, data collection and post-processing, and risk changing the natural gameplay of a batsman. By training a model based on data obtained from a close representation of a cricket batting innings, supervised machine learning was found to be capable of reliably predicting cricket batting shot execution.
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3

Jakab, I., J. Tormási, V. Dhaygude, Zs Mednyánszky, L. Sipos, and I. Szedljak. "Cricket flour-laden millet flour blends' physical and chemical composition and adaptation in dried pasta products." Acta Alimentaria 49, no. 1 (March 2020): 4–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1556/066.2020.49.1.2.

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Increasing the protein and antioxidant content of food products is a constant challenge amongst researchers. Dried pasta products are popular amongst all groups of society. The most important factor in pasta processing is the quality of the flour. Millet (Panicum miliaceum) flour has high nutritional value, enriching it with cricket (Gryllus bimaculatus) flour is good choice to increase the quality of protein composition and antioxidant properties of products. Flour mixtures of millet and insect flours (5% and 10%) were analysed after mixing and pasta processing. Addition of wheat gluten improved both texture and nutrition value of pasta products. Total polyphenol content, antioxidant capacity, total protein content, free and total amino acid composition were studied. Quality analysis of dried pasta products were carried out according to Hungarian standards. Data was analysed with Kruskal-Wallis test, Dunn's pair-wise post hoc test was used with Bonferroni correction. The correlation was determined by Spearman's rank. Addition of cricket flour modified the pH, acid value, moisture content, and colour of the samples, these changes lasted during storage. Enrichment could increase the total phenol content significantly even at the low level of 10%. Heat treatment during pasta processing had negative effect on the antioxidant capacity except at higher cricket flour contents. Cricket flour's high protein content proportionately increased millet flour's, thus pasta products'. Dried pasta products passed all quality norms. Enrichment of millet flour with cricket flour is favourable from both nutritional and quality aspects.
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4

Reverberi, M. "Edible insects: cricket farming and processing as an emerging market." Journal of Insects as Food and Feed 6, no. 2 (April 8, 2020): 211–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.3920/jiff2019.0052.

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This article provides information on recent trends in cricket farming and processing in Asian and Western countries. Whilst eating insects collected from the wild has long been a common practice in many countries, farming and transforming insects into a food ingredient for packaged products is a new development. Particularly in North America and Europe, some new, small companies are transforming cricket (and mealworm) powder into packaged food (energy bars, pasta, and chips among the examples). Within this article, two contrasting farming systems are principally considered. On one hand is the Thai cricket farming model, based on micro-farms, in which the small farmers do not make the flour; this task instead being handled by specialised businesses. On the other hand, is the western farming model, in which farms are large, and the flour is produced by the very same factory-farm. Examples of this model are found in the Netherlands (Protifarm) and Canada (Entomofarm). Since insect powders (flour) in packaged foods represent a new category of food product, little market data and/or surveys are available. The products are often sold on small online shops, within the context of an informal business operations. As a consequence, some of the information in this article comes from informal sources or the direct experience of the author.
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5

Rull, Mateo, Jacob Solomon, and Nicolai Konow. "Elastic recoil action amplifies jaw closing speed in an aquatic feeding salamander." Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 287, no. 1927 (May 20, 2020): 20200428. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2020.0428.

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Tendon springs often influence locomotion by amplifying the speed and power of limb joint rotation. However, less is known about elastic recoil action in feeding systems, particularly for small aquatic animals. Here, we ask if elastic recoil amplifies the speed of gape closing during aquatic food processing in the Axolotl ( Ambystoma mexicanum ). We measure activation of the adductor mandibulae externus via electromyography and strain of the jaw adductor muscle–tendon unit (MTU), and gape kinematics via fluoromicrometry. The muscle is pre-activated coincident with gape opening, which causes MTU stretch. Activation lasts significantly shorter for fish than cricket processing, and muscle shortening during MTU lengthening yields significantly greater elastic strain for cricket processing. The speed of MTU shortening, which dictates the speed of gape closing is 2.5–4.4 times greater than the speed of the initial shortening of the muscle fascicles for fish and cricket gape cycles, respectively. These data demonstrate a clear role for elastic recoil, which may be unexpected for a MTU in a feeding system of a small, aquatic animal. Amplification of jaw-closing speed resulting from elastic recoil likely confers ecological advantages in reducing prey escape risks during food processing in a dense and viscous fluid environment.
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6

Awan, Mazhar Javed, Syed Arbaz Haider Gilani, Hamza Ramzan, Haitham Nobanee, Awais Yasin, Azlan Mohd Zain, and Rabia Javed. "Cricket Match Analytics Using the Big Data Approach." Electronics 10, no. 19 (September 26, 2021): 2350. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/electronics10192350.

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Cricket is one of the most liked, played, encouraged, and exciting sports in today’s time that requires a proper advancement with machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) to attain more accuracy. With the increasing number of matches with time, the data related to cricket matches and the individual player are increasing rapidly. Moreover, the need of using big data analytics and the opportunities of utilizing this big data effectively in many beneficial ways are also increasing, such as the selection process of players in the team, predicting the winner of the match, and many more future predictions using some machine learning models or big data techniques. We applied the machine learning linear regression model to predict the team scores without big data and the big data framework Spark ML. The experimental results are measured through accuracy, the root mean square error (RMSE), mean square error (MSE), and mean absolute error (MAE), respectively 95%, 30.2, 1350.34, and 28.2 after applying linear regression in Spark ML. Furthermore, our approach can be applied to other sports.
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7

Sivaramaraju, Vetukuri, Nilambar Sethi, and Renugunta Rajender. "Heuristics for Winner Prediction in International Cricket Matches." Statistics, Optimization & Information Computing 8, no. 2 (May 28, 2020): 602–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.19139/soic-2310-5070-648.

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Cricket is popularly known as the game of gentlemen. The game of cricket has been introduced to the World by England. Since the introduction till date, it has become the second most ever popular game. In this context, few a data mining and analytical techniques have been proposed for the same. In this work, two different scenario have been considered for the prediction of winning team based on several parameters. These scenario are taken for two different standard formats for the game namely, one day international (ODI) cricket and twenty-twenty cricket (T-20). The prediction approaches differ from each other based on the types of parameters considered and the corresponding functional strategies. The strategies proposed here adopts two different approaches. One approach is for the winner prediction for one-day matches and the other is for predicting the winner for a T-20 match. The approaches have been proposed separately for both the versions of the game pertaining to the intra-variability in the strategies adopted by a team and individuals for each. The proposed strategies for each of the two scenarios have been individually evaluated against existing benchmark works, and for each of the cases the duo of approaches have outperformed the rest in terms of the prediction accuracy. The novel heuristics proposed herewith reflects efficiency and accuracy with respect to prediction of cricket data.
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8

Maiyo, Nelly C., Fathiya M. Khamis, Michael W. Okoth, George O. Abong, Sevgan Subramanian, James P. Egonyu, Cheseto Xavier, et al. "Nutritional Quality of Four Novel Porridge Products Blended with Edible Cricket (Scapsipedus icipe) Meal for Food." Foods 11, no. 7 (April 5, 2022): 1047. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods11071047.

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Currently, no data exist on the utilization of the newly described cricket species (Scapsipedus icipe) meal as additive in food products, though they have high protein (57%) with 88% total digestibility as well as a variety of essential amino acids. This article presents the first report on the effects of processing techniques and the inclusion of cricket meal (CM) on the nutrient and antinutrient properties of four porridge products compared to a popularly consumed commercial porridge flour (CPF). Porridge enriched with CM had significantly higher protein (2-folds), crude fat (3.4–4-folds), and energy (1.1–1.2-folds) levels than the CPF. Fermented cereal porridge fortified with CM had all three types of omega-3 fatty acids compared to the others. The vitamin content across the different porridge products varied considerably. Germinated cereal porridge with CM had significantly higher iron content (19.5 mg/100 g). Zinc levels ranged from 3.1–3.7 mg/100 g across the various treatments. Total flavonoid content varied significantly in the different porridge products. The phytic acid degradation in germinated and fermented porridge products with CM was 67% and 33%, respectively. Thus, the fortification of porridge products with cricket and indigenous vegetable grain powder could be considered an appropriate preventive approach against malnutrition and to reduce incidences in many low-and middle-income countries.
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9

Jadhav, Varsha D., and Sachin N. Deshmukh. "Twitter Intention Classification Using Bayes Approach for Cricket Test Match Played Between India and South Africa 2015." International Journal of Rough Sets and Data Analysis 4, no. 2 (April 2017): 49–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijrsda.2017040104.

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Information retrieval and forecasting in real time is becoming the fastest and most efficient way to obtain useful knowledge of what is happening now, allowing organizations to react quickly when problem appears which help to improve their performance. There is enormous amount of data in the form of tweets. It builds data processing system that creates informative data about the cricket test matches. Using twitter data, the authors find the sentiments or polarity of fans posting tweets related to game. Polarity is given as positive, negative and neutral. The authors also analyze the feelings or emotions of people posting tweets. Emotions are given as anger, disgust, fear, joy, sadness, surprise and unknown. Machine learning algorithm (Bayes) using R technology shows the accuracy when trained with emotion data.
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10

Kostarakos, Konstantinos, and Berthold Hedwig. "Surface electrodes record and label brain neurons in insects." Journal of Neurophysiology 118, no. 5 (November 1, 2017): 2884–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00490.2017.

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We used suction electrodes to reliably record the activity of identified ascending auditory interneurons from the anterior surface of the brain in crickets. Electrodes were gently attached to the sheath covering the projection area of the ascending interneurons and the ringlike auditory neuropil in the protocerebrum. The specificity and selectivity of the recordings were determined by the precise electrode location, which could easily be changed without causing damage to the tissue. Different nonauditory fibers were recorded at other spots of the brain surface; stable recordings lasted for several hours. The same electrodes were used to deliver fluorescent tracers into the nervous system by means of electrophoresis. This allowed us to retrograde label the recorded auditory neurons and to reveal their cell body and dendritic structure in the first thoracic ganglion. By adjusting the amount of dye injected, we specifically stained the ringlike auditory neuropil in the brain, demonstrating the clusters of cell bodies contributing to it. Our data provide a proof that surface electrodes are a versatile tool to analyze neural processing in small brains of invertebrates. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We show that surface suction electrodes can be used to monitor the activity of auditory neurons in the cricket brain. They also allow delivering electrophoretically a fluorescent tracer to label the structure of the recorded neurons and the local neuropil to which the electrode was attached. This new extracellular recording and labeling technique is a versatile and useful method to explore neural processing in invertebrate sensory and motor systems.
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11

Das, Khushal, and Muhammad Awais. "A Predictive Analysis of PSL Match Winner Using Machine Learning Techniques." UMT Artificial Intelligence Review 1, no. 1 (June 30, 2021): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.32350/umtair.11.05.

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Cricket is one of the most celebrated open-air sports which have a huge amount of measurable information in the genuine world. As PSL games grow in popularity, the potential predictors influencing the outcome of the matches need to be investigated. The several years of PSL data containing the specifics of the player, match venue details, squads, ball-by-ball details, are taken and analyzed in this paper to draw different conclusions that offer assistance within the enhancement of a player’s execution. Through the expanding number of matches day by day, it has ended up troublesome to oversee or extricate valuable data from the accessible information of all the matches. This paper presents pre-processing of data, visualization, and prediction. It centers on measuring the result of Pakistan Super League (PSL) matches by applying the existing information mining algorithms. It includes factors like team1, team2, toss winner, toss decision, and predicts the match winner with the help of the Random Forest algorithm.
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12

Strambi, Colette, Myriam Cayre, David B. Sattelle, Roger Augier, Pierre Charpin, and Alain Strambi. "Immunocytochemical Mapping of an RDL-Like GABA Receptor Subunit and of GABA in Brain Structures Related to Learning and Memory in the Cricket Acheta domesticus." Learning & Memory 5, no. 1 (May 1, 1998): 78–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/lm.5.1.78.

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The distribution of putative RDL-like GABA receptors and of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in the brain of the adult house cricket Acheta domesticus was studied using specific antisera. Special attention was given to brain structures known to be related to learning and memory. The main immunostaining for the RDL-like GABA receptor was observed in mushroom bodies, in particular the upper part of mushroom body peduncle and the two arms of the posterior calyx. Weaker immunostaining was detected in the distal part of the peduncle and in the α and β lobes. The dorso- and ventrolateral protocerebrum neuropils appeared rich in RDL-like GABA receptors. Staining was also detected in the glomeruli of the antennal lobe, as well as in the ellipsoid body of the central complex. Many neurons clustered in groups exhibit GABA-like immunoreactivity. Tracts that were strongly immunostained innervated both the calyces and the lobes of mushroom bodies. The glomeruli of the antennal lobe, the ellipsoid body, as well as neuropils of the dorso- and ventrolateral protocerebrum were also rich in GABA-like immuno- reactivity. The data demonstrated a good correlation between the distribution of the GABA-like and of the RDL-like GABA receptor immunoreactivity. The prominent distribution of RDL-like GABA receptor subunits, in particular areas of mushroom bodies and antennal lobes, underlines the importance of inhibitory signals in information processing in these major integrative centers of the insect brain.
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13

Hedwig, Berthold, and Edith Julieta Sarmiento-Ponce. "Song pattern recognition in crickets based on a delay-line and coincidence-detector mechanism." Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 284, no. 1855 (May 24, 2017): 20170745. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2017.0745.

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Acoustic communication requires filter mechanisms to process and recognize key features of the perceived signals. We analysed such a filter mechanism in field crickets ( Gryllus bimaculatus ), which communicate with species-specific repetitive patterns of sound pulses and chirps. A delay-line and coincidence-detection mechanism, in which each sound pulse has an impact on the processing of the following pulse, is implicated to underlie the recognition of the species-specific pulse pattern. Based on this concept, we hypothesized that altering the duration of a single pulse or inter-pulse interval in three-pulse chirps will lead to different behavioural responses. Phonotaxis was tested in female crickets walking on a trackball exposed to different sound paradigms. Changing the duration of either the first, second or third pulse of the chirps led to three different characteristic tuning curves. Long first pulses decreased the phonotactic response whereas phonotaxis remained strong when the third pulse was long. Chirps with three pulses of increasing duration of 5, 20 and 50 ms elicited phonotaxis, but the chirps were not attractive when played in reverse order. This demonstrates specific, pulse duration-dependent effects while sequences of pulses are processed. The data are in agreement with a mechanism in which processing of a sound pulse has an effect on the processing of the subsequent pulse, as outlined in the flow of activity in a delay-line and coincidence-detector circuit. Additionally our data reveal a substantial increase in the gain of phonotaxis, when the number of pulses of a chirp is increased from two to three.
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Akullo, J., B. B. Obaa, J. Okwee Acai, D. Nakimbugwe, and J. G. Agea. "Knowledge, attitudes and practices on edible insects in Lango sub-region, northern Uganda." Journal of Insects as Food and Feed 3, no. 2 (June 16, 2017): 73–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.3920/jiff2016.0033.

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The study was done to determine the knowledge, attitude and practices towards edible insects, their consumption and practices of harvesting and processing in Lango sub-region, with the aim of increasing their consumption and improving nutrition of the people. Data was collected using semi structured questionnaires and focus group discussions. Common insect orders used as food in the area included: Isoptera (termites), Orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets), and Hymenoptera (honey bee broods). Winged termites (Macrotermes spp.), locally known as Ngwen was consumed by more than 97% of the respondents. Soldier termites (Syntermes soldiers), locally called okok, were consumed by 73% of the respondents and crickets (Brachytrupes spp.), locally known as odir, was consumed by 69% of respondents. These insects were seasonally abundant and consumed in households in seasons of availability. Winged and soldier termites were harvested by attraction to light at the termite mound and by ‘termite fishing’ technique, respectively. Grasshoppers were harvested by hand picking from cropland bushes. Women and children were more actively involved in collection of insects than men. Pan frying, roasting, boiling followed by sun drying were the most common methods of processing insects. Dried insects were either served as snacks or a side dish. A main dish locally known as alakena is prepared from freshly ground termites. Dried winged termites were preserved for consumption at a later date. Women and children consumed more edible insects than men. The results show that insects are important as a food resource to the rural poor. However, majority of the respondents did not know that insects are nutritious. Therefore there is need to popularise consumption of edible insects in and outside the subregion through research on nutritional values of insects and documenting the information and processing insects using modern techniques in order to increase its commercial value and availability of insect products in all seasons.
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Palacios Gimenez, Octavio Manuel, Vanessa Bellini Bardella, Bernardo Lemos, and Diogo Cavalcanti Cabral de Mello. "High-throughput sequencing data reveals evolutionary conservation and differential transcription of satellites DNA among crickets species (Orthoptera; Gryllinae)." Semina: Ciências Biológicas e da Saúde 38, no. 1supl (February 16, 2018): 184. http://dx.doi.org/10.5433/1679-0367.2017v38n1suplp184.

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Satellite DNA (satDNA) is a class of non-coding repetitive DNA abundant in most eukaryotic genomes. Mostly satDNAs constitute clustered arrays of tandemly repeated sequences located in the gene-poor heterochromatin of centromeres and telomeres. Moreover in some cases, they are also dispersed in eu/heterochromatin of sex chromosomes and as single or short arrays nearby protein-coding genes within euchromatin. Here we take advantages of DNA- and RNA-seq data from cricket’s species in order to perform a comparative analysis of content and expression of satDNAs. By graph-based clustering analysis of DNA-seq reads using RepeatExplorer software, dotplots analysis and FISH mapping we found that ~ 4% of the G. assimilis genome is represented by 13 A+T-rich satDNAs consisting of 11 well-defined families mainly located in the heterochromatic areas of chromosomes, and some of them able to form high-order repeats (HORs). In order to determine transcription profiles the raw RNA-seq reads from different tissues library of Gryllus species were mapped to each of the G. assimilis satDNAs using Bowtie2 and the method FPKM (fragments per kilo-base of transcript per million mapped reads) was used. The in silico transcriptional analysis of RNA-seq reads in G. assimilis, G. bimaculatus, G, firmus and G. rubens showed that some satDNAs are conserved in Gryllus species but differentially expressed in distinct tissues, sexes and besides tissue- and species-specific. In concordances with the transcriptional activity we found that G. assimilis satDNAs are also capable to adopt RNA secondary structures with well-defined helices ranging from 2 bp to 7 bp lengths. The folding possibility forming secondary structure helps to the satDNA dispersion along the genome by rolling-circle replication mechanism, in which circular monomer result from secondary structure RNA processing into linear monomers and subsequently circularization by a host-specific RNA ligase. The conservation of expression for different satDNAs in Gryllus species suggests a functional role for these sequences, as observed in other insects. Our data suggests functional roles of satDNAs for sexual differentiation at the chromatin levels, heterochromatin formation and centromeric function.
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Donahue, Mavis L., Carol M. Szymanski, and Christine Wujek Flores. "When "Emily Dickinson" Met "Steven Spielberg"." Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools 30, no. 3 (July 1999): 274–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/0161-1461.3003.274.

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Current research and theory on social information processing is used to frame the peer interactions of "Emily Dickinson," a 16-year-old girl with a long history of oral language problems and social isolation, but strong interests in literacy. In ongoing assessment that prioritized authentic and ecologically valid data collected in classroom settings, the Crick and Dodge (1994) model was used to guide an analysis of Emily’s social-cognitive abilities and disabilities during peer interaction. These observations revealed that Emily had evolved a social schema that strategically recruited her strong literacy interests and skills to initiate and mediate social interaction with peers. This suggests that literacy curricula may be a valuable site for assessing and scaffolding social/communication problem-solving in students with language disabilities.
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Nan, Adin Nunasikhah, and Dwi Juniati. "KLASIFIKASI JENIS JANGKRIK BERDASARKAN SUARA MENGGUNAKAN DIMENSI FRAKTAL METODE HIGUCHI DAN K-NEAREST NEIGHBOR (KNN)." MATHunesa: Jurnal Ilmiah Matematika 10, no. 1 (April 30, 2022): 199–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.26740/mathunesa.v10n1.p199-207.

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Abstrak Dalam taksonomi hewan, jangkrik merupakan famili dari Gryllidae yang menjadi anggota ordo Orthoptera. Jangkrik merupakan serangga yang berkerabat dengan belalang dan kecoa. Jangkrik juga dikenal dengan suaranya yang khas, yang mana suara ini hanya dihasilkan oleh jangkrik jantan sementara jangkrik betina tidak menghasilkan suara. Suara ini dihasilkan karena adanya gesekan antara kedua sayap bagian depan. Banyaknya jenis jangkrik dan tubuhnya yang sangat kecil membuatnya sulit untuk diklasifikasikan. Akan tetapi, setiap jenis jangkrik memiliki range frequency sinyal suara yang berbeda yang dikeluarkan setiap jenisnya. Dengan adanya dimensi fraktal dapat dilakukan analisis suara jangkrik berdasarkan suaranya. Pada penelitian ini akan diklasifikasikan jenis jangkrik dengan menggunakan metode Higuchi dan K- Nearest Neighbor (KNN). Data yang digunakan adalah 93 data suara yang diambil dari website Checklist Crickets Of Mexiko yaitu 30 data suara jangkrik lapangan (Grillinae), 23 data suara jangkrik bersisik (Mogoplistinae), 20 data suara jangkrik tanah (Nemobiinae) dan 20 data suara jangkrik pohon (Oechantinae). Langkah pertama yaitu pre-processing kemudian proses analisis pengenalan ciri suara menggunakan Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT) dengan tipe mother wavelet Daubechies 4 dengan dekomposisi 5 level. Selanjutnya mencari nilai dimensi fraktal menggunakan metode Higuchi. Setelah mendapat nilai dimensi fraktal data dibagi menjadi dua yaitu data train dan data test, kemudian diklasifikasikan dengan menggunakan metode KNN. Dari penelitian ini diperoleh hasil bahwa klasifikasi suara jangkrik dengan menggunakan dimensi fraktal metode Higuchi dengan nilai kmax adalah 60 dan K di KNN adalah 1, 3 dan 5 mendapat nilai akurasi tertinggi sebesar 90%. Hal ini menandakan bahwa 90% dari data suara jangkrik yang ada diprediksi benar ke masing-masing jenisnya sementara ada 10% dari data suara jangkrik yang ada diprediksi benar dalam jenis jangkrik yang berbeda. Kata Kunci: Jangkrik, Suara Jangkrik, dimensi fraktal metode Higuchi, KNN.
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Matandirotya, Newton R., Walter Leal Filho, Gaathier Mahed, Basil Maseko, and Cleophas V. Murandu. "Edible Insects Consumption in Africa towards Environmental Health and Sustainable Food Systems: A Bibliometric Study." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 22 (November 11, 2022): 14823. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192214823.

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Africa is home to an estimated wild edible insect population of 1000 species that offer an opportunity for sustainable food systems while also improving food and nutrition security on the continent. Edible insect consumption has been part of African communities for a long time and forms part of their diets and cuisines, particularly within low-income households with limited resources. The purpose of our study was to investigate and review the contribution that edible insects can make towards the realisation of sustainable food systems, and environmental/planetary health including the fulfilment of Sustainable Development Goal number 2 (zero hunger). Our study applied a bibliometric analysis approach using VOS Viewer, a data mining software. The study established that the consumption of edible insects is still widespread across many African countries and therefore can be used as an avenue for improving environmental health and enhancing food systems on the continent through a reduction in meat-based diets. This, in the long term, will also reduce the emission of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane from livestock production-related activities. Edible insects are also known to contain a high percentage nutrient content of proteins, fats and iron and, thus, can also play a vital role in reducing food insecurity and malnutrition, particularly within low-income households. Due to the existence of a high number of edible insect species on the continent, communities in Africa can easily access sources that can further be preserved using various indigenous techniques while also having minimal impact on the environment. In addition, being a source of nutritious food, edible insects can also be a source of establishing sustainable livelihoods, as well as being able to be commercialised, thus further creating employment opportunities and economic growth. Some of the notable edible insects in abundance on the continent include termites, ants, crickets and caterpillars. Our study recommends that Africa should commercialise edible insect production, in addition to preservation processing that leads to the eradication of perennial food insecurity and malnutrition and improves environmental health, as well as developing sustainable food systems. We also further recommend the establishment of food safety guidelines on edible insects as most African countries do not have such a plan in place currently.
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Tarozienė, V. "SKIRTINGUS NUSIKALTIMUS PADARIUSIŲ PILNAMEČIŲ NEUTRALIZACIJOS: ĮVAIROVĖ, PAPLITIMAS, SĄSAJOS SU KRIMINALINE PATIRTIMI." Psichologija 42 (January 1, 2010): 102–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.15388/psichol.2010.0.2568.

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Remiantis socialinės informacijos apdorojimo modeliu (Crick and Dodge, 1994), papildytu neutralizaCcijos procesu (Sykes and Matza, 1957), straipsnyje analizuojamos turtinius, mišrius, smurtinius ir neteisėto disponavimo nusikaltimus padariusių pilnamečių vyrų neutralizacijos: jų įvairovė ir paplitimas skirtingus nusikaltimus padariusių asmenų grupėse bei priklausomybė nuo nuteistųjų kriminalinės patirties. Neutralizacijos įvertintos smurto neutralizacijos skale (Agnew, 1994) (n = 161) ir analizuojant pusiau struktūruotus interviu apie tiriamųjų padarytą nusikaltimą (n = 67). Tyrimo rezultatai parodė, kad pilnamečių nuteistųjų neutralizacijų naudojimas susijęs su šių asmenų padaryto nusikaltimo pobūdžiu. Nusikaltimus, turinčius smurto komponentą (mišrius, smurtinius) padarę tiriamieji dažniausiai naudojo atsakomybės neigimo ir aukos neigimo neutralizacijas. Nusikaltimus be smurto komponento (turtinius, neteisėto disponavimo) padarę tiriamieji dažniausiai naudojo žalos neigimo neutralizacijas. Turtinius nusikaltimus padarę nuteistieji žalos neigimo neutralizacijas, o smurtinius nusikaltimus padarę asmenys – aukos neigimo neutralizacijas naudojo dažniau, negu kitus nusikaltimus padarę tiriamieji(p < 0,01). Nustatyta, kad pilnamečiai nuteistieji vienu metu gali naudoti keletą skirtingų neutralizacijų, ir tai, tikėtina, sustiprina neutralizacijos efektą. Tyrimo rezultatai atskleidė, kad neutralizacijų naudojimas nepriklauso nuo nuteistųjų kriminalinės patirties, taip pat nuo kriminalinės patirties ir padaryto nusikaltimo pobūdžio sąveikos.Pagrindiniai žodžiai: neutralizacija, nusikalstamas elgesys, kriminalinė patirtis.Neutralizations of adults committing different crimes:Variety, prevalence and connection with criminal experienceTarozienė V. SummaryThere is a lack of information about neutralizations used by adult criminals who have committed different crimes. Moreover, very little is known about the mechanism of neutralization establishment and changes of prevalence in groups of people with different criminal experience, and the available data are controversial. According to G.M.Sykes, D.Matza (1957), neutralizations are learned together with the conduct of crime and do not change in prevalence with increasing criminal experience. Other researchers conclude that with accumulation of antisocial experience, the need of neutralization reduces. The aim of this investigation was to identify neutralizations of adult convicts who have committed different crimes and to test the effect of criminal experience on neutralization. There were three goals of the recent study: 1) to identify the prevalence of neutralization in groups of adult convicts who committed property, violence, mixed (robberies) and illegal disposal crimes; 2) to compare the frequency of different neutralizations used by adult convicts who have committed different crimes; 3) to test the effect of criminal experience, as well as of interaction of criminal experience and the type of crime on neutralization. The social information processing model (Crick and Dodge, 1994) complemented with the neutralization process (Sykes and Matza, 1957) was chosen as a theoretical background of the study. We state that neutralizations are the interpretation process in the second step of the social information processing model. Neutralization of adult men who had committed property (theft), violence (murder, aasault), mixed (robbery) and illegal disposal (drugs, alcohol) crimes was investigated. Participants of the research were divided into two groups by the amount of previous convictions. A supra-secondary analysis of data collected during the program “One to one” (Priestley, 2008) was performed. Two investigators coded different types of neutralizations in semi-structured interview protocols about crimes committed by participants (n = 67). Coded information about the frequency of different types of neutralization as well as scores of the violence neutralization scale (Agnew, 1994) (n = 161) were processed in the further statistical analysis.The results of the research showed that the types of neutralization were significantly related to the type of crime committed by adult convicts (p < 0.001). The prevalence of neutralizations varied in groups of men who had committed different crimes. Men who had committed crimes with elements of violence (violent crimes and robberies) mostly used denial of responsibility and denial of victim (above 80% of group participants). Men who had committed crimes without elements of violence (property and illegal disposal crimes) mostly used denial of harm (about 85% of group participants). Groups of convicts who had committed different crimes significantly differed in the rates of two neutralizations: denial of harm (p < 0.01) and denial of victim (p < 0.01). Men who had convicted property crimes used denial of harm and men who had convicted of violent crimes used denial of victim more often than convicts in other groups. Results of this investigation show that convicts can use several different neutralizations at a time. There was an insignificant main effect of the amount of criminal experience on the frequency of neutralization (p > 0.05). Neither there was a significant interaction between the criminal experience and the type of crime on the frequency of neutralization (p > 0.05).Keywords: neutralization, criminal behavior, criminal experience.
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Wenning, M. J., T. Piotrowski, J. Janzen, B. Nießing, and R. H. Schmitt. "Towards monitoring of a cricket production using instance segmentation." Journal of Insects as Food and Feed, January 31, 2022, 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.3920/jiff2021.0165.

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A growing world population requires sufficient food to sustain itself. Therefore, increasingly more resources are required to produce the food. Insects are a viable food and feed alternative since their production requires only a fraction of the resources that conventional livestock needs. For the efficient production of insects, automation technology is needed. An automatic monitoring of the insects’ growth ensures stable production processes and a high product quality. The use of a camera with image processing using neural networks makes it possible to detect insects, measure their features such as shape and colour and enables to derive their age, size, and health. In this paper, instance segmentation using mask scoring regional convolutional neural network (Mask Scoring R-CNN) shows good results in detecting house crickets (Acheta domesticus). A dataset is created consisting of six images, showing 1,022 insect instances, of a real-world cricket production facility to train and test the algorithm. Furthermore, image augmentation by cropping, flipping and rotating is applied to the set to solve the problem of limited data. By combining the augmentations, 288 different trainings are compared to find the best augmentation strategy. The evaluation of the algorithm uses two variations of the F1-score: one variation to estimate the capabilities of producing qualitative segmentation masks and another to estimate the detection capabilities. For the estimation of the detection capabilities, a rule termed ‘centre over ground truth’ is developed. The results show that the presented method is suitable for monitoring a cricket production facility with a recall of 76.6% and a precision of 96.2%.
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"Generating Highlights of Cricket Video using Commentators and Spectators Voice." International Journal of Recent Technology and Engineering 8, no. 4 (November 30, 2019): 10134–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.35940/ijrte.d4261.118419.

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Videos are one of the important and richest sources of data on internet. In this growing world of digital technology video summarization will be handy in analysing the video data. Recently Natural Language Processing has attracted more researchers to work to meet the current emerging challenges. Among the various issues, video summarization got more focus and in this regard, many applications and works have been evolved. Video Summarization is the process of creating a small video describing the actual video within short duration(s). The paper focuses on generating highlights of a cricket video by analysing the voice of commentator and spectators. The experimental results have shown good performance when compared with human generated summary.
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Meiser, Linda C., Bichlien H. Nguyen, Yuan-Jyue Chen, Jeff Nivala, Karin Strauss, Luis Ceze, and Robert N. Grass. "Synthetic DNA applications in information technology." Nature Communications 13, no. 1 (January 17, 2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-27846-9.

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AbstractSynthetic DNA is a growing alternative to electronic-based technologies in fields such as data storage, product tagging, or signal processing. Its value lies in its characteristic attributes, namely Watson-Crick base pairing, array synthesis, sequencing, toehold displacement and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) capabilities. In this review, we provide an overview of the most prevalent applications of synthetic DNA that could shape the future of information technology. We emphasize the reasons why the biomolecule can be a valuable alternative for conventional electronic-based media, and give insights on where the DNA-analog technology stands with respect to its electronic counterparts.
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23

Wallace, Derek. "'Self' and the Problem of Consciousness." M/C Journal 5, no. 5 (October 1, 2002). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.1989.

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Whichever way you look at it, self is bound up with consciousness, so it seems useful to review some of the more significant existing conceptions of this relationship. A claim by Mikhail Bakhtin can serve as an anchoring point for this discussion. He firmly predicates the formation of self not just on the existence of an individual consciousness, but on what might be called a double or social (or dialogic) consciousness. Summarising his argument, Pam Morris writes: 'A single consciousness could not generate a sense of its self; only the awareness of another consciousness outside the self can produce that image.' She goes on to say that, 'Behind this notion is Bakhtin's very strong sense of the physical and spatial materiality of bodily being,' and quotes directly from Bakhtin's essay as follows: This other human being whom I am contemplating, I shall always see and know something that he, from his place outside and over against me, cannot see himself: parts of his body that are inaccessible to his own gaze (his head, his face and its expression), the world behind his back . . . are accessible to me but not to him. As we gaze at each other, two different worlds are reflected in the pupils of our eyes . . . to annihilate this difference completely, it would be necessary to merge into one, to become one and the same person. This ever--present excess of my seeing, knowing and possessing in relation to any other human being, is founded in the uniqueness and irreplaceability of my place in the world. (Bakhtin in Morris 6 Recent investigations in neuroscience and the philosophy of mind lay down a challenge to this social conception of the self. Notably, it is a challenge that does not involve the restoration of any variant of Cartesian rationalism; indeed, it arguably over--privileges rationalism's subjective or phenomenological opposite. 'Self' in this emerging view is a biologically generated but illusory construction, an effect of the operation of what are called 'neural correlates of consciousness' (NCC). Very briefly, an NCC refers to the distinct pattern of neurochemical activity, a 'neural representational system' -- to some extent observable by modern brain--imaging equipment – that corresponds to a particular configuration of sense--phenomena, or 'content of consciousness' (a visual image, a feeling, or indeed a sense of self). Because this science is still largely hypothetical, with many alternative terms and descriptions, it would be better in this limited space to focus on one particular account – one that is particularly well developed in the area of selfhood and one that resonates with other conceptions included in this discussion. Thomas Metzinger begins by postulating the existence within each person (or 'system' in his terms) of a 'self--model', a representation produced by neural activity -- what he calls a 'neural correlate of self--consciousness' -- that the individual takes to be the actual self, or what Metzinger calls the 'phenomenal self'. 'A self--model is important,' Metzinger says, 'in enabling a system to represent itself to itself as an agent' (293). The individual is able to maintain this illusion because 'the self--model is the only representational structure that is anchored in the brain by a continuous source of internally generated input' (297). In a manner partly reminiscent of Bakhtin, he continues: 'The body is always there, and although its relational properties in space and in movement constantly change, the body is the only coherent perceptual object that constantly generates input.' The reason why the individual is able to jump from the self--model to the phenomenal self in the first place is because: We are systems that are not able to recognise their subsymbolic self--model as a model. For this reason, we are permanently operating under the conditions of a 'naïve--realistic self--misunderstanding': We experience ourselves as being in direct and immediate epistemic contact with ourselves. What we have in the past simply called a 'self' is not a non--physical individual, but only the content of an ongoing dynamical process – the process of transparent self—modeling. (Metzinger 299) The question that nonetheless arises is why it should be concluded that this self--model emerges from subjective neural activity and not, say, from socialisation. Why should a self--model be needed in the first place? Metzinger's response is to say that there is good evidence 'for some kind of innate 'body prototype'' (298), and he refers to research that shows that even children born without limbs develop self--models which sometimes include limbs, or report phantom sensations in limbs that have never existed. To me, this still leaves open the possibility that such children are modelling their body image on strong identification with human others. But be that as it may, one of the things that remains unclear after this relatively rich account of contemporary or scientific phenomenology is the extent to which 'neural consciousness' is or can be supplemented by other kinds of consciousness, or indeed whether neural consciousness can be overridden by the 'self' acting on the basis of these other kinds of consciousness. The key stake in Metzinger's account is 'subjectivity'. The reason why the neural correlate of self--consciousness is so important to him is: 'Only if we find the neural and functional correlates of the phenomenal self will we be able to discover a more general theoretical framework into which all data can fit. Only then will we have a chance to understand what we are actually talking about when we say that phenomenal experience is a subjective phenomenon' (301). What other kinds of consciousness might there be? It is significant that, not only do NCC exponents have little to say about the interaction with other people, they rarely mention language, and they are unanimously and emphatically of the opinion that the thinking or processing that takes place in consciousness is not dependent on language, or indeed any signifying system that we know of (though conceivably, it occurs to me, the neural correlates may signify to, or 'call up', each other). And they show little 'consciousness' that a still influential body of opinion (informed latterly by post--structuralist thinking) has argued for the consciousness shaping effects of 'discourse' -- i.e. for socially and culturally generated patterns of language or other signification to order the processing of reality. We could usefully coin the term 'verbal correlates of consciousness' (VCC) to refer to these patterns of signification (words, proverbs, narratives, discourses). Again, however, the same sorts of questions apply, since few discourse theorists mention anything like neuroscience: To what extent is verbal consciousness supplemented by other forms of consciousness, including neural consciousness? These questions may never be fully answerable. However, it is interesting to work through the idea that NCC and VCC both exist and can be in some kind of relation even if the precise relationship is not measurable. This indeed is close to the case that Charles Shepherdson makes for psychoanalysis in attempting to retrieve it from the misunderstanding under which it suffers today: We are now familiar with debates between those who seek to demonstrate the biological foundations of consciousness and sexuality, and those who argue for the cultural construction of subjectivity, insisting that human life has no automatically natural form, but is always decisively shaped by contingent historical conditions. No theoretical alternative is more widely publicised than this, or more heavily invested today. And yet, this very debate, in which 'nature' and 'culture' are opposed to one another, amounts to a distortion of psychoanalysis, an interpretive framework that not only obscures its basic concepts, but erodes the very field of psychoanalysis as a theoretically distinct formation (2--3). There is not room here for an adequate account of Shepherdson's recuperation of psychoanalytic categories. A glimpse of the stakes involved is provided by Shepherdson's account, following Eugenie Lemoine--Luccione, of anorexia, which neither biomedical knowledge nor social constructionism can adequately explain. The further fact that anorexia is more common among women of the same family than in the general population, and among women rather than men, but in neither case exclusively so, thereby tending to rule out a genetic factor, allows Shepherdson to argue: [A]norexia can be understood in terms of the mother--daughter relation: it is thus a symbolic inheritance, a particular relation to the 'symbolic order', that is transmitted from one generation to another . . . we may add that this relation to the 'symbolic order' [which in psychoanalytic theory is not coextensive with language] is bound up with the symbolisation of sexual difference. One begins to see from this that the term 'sexual difference' is not used biologically, but also that it does not refer to general social representations of 'gender,' since it concerns a more particular formation of the 'subject' (12). An intriguing, and related, possibility, suggested by Foucault, is that NCC and VCC (or in Foucault's terms the 'visible' and the 'articulable'), operate independently of each other – that there is a 'disjunction' (Deleuze 64) or 'dislocation' (Shepherdson 166) between them that prevents any dialectical relation. Clearly, for Foucault, the lack of dialectical relation between the two modes does not mean that both are not at all times equally functional. But one can certainly speculate that, increasingly under postmodernity and media saturation, the verbal (i.e. the domain of signification in general) is influential. And if linguistic formations -- discourses, narratives, etc. -- can proliferate and feed on each other unconstrained by other aspects of reality, we get the sense of language 'running away with itself' and, at least for a time, becoming divorced from a more complete sense of reality. (This of course is basically the argument of Baudrillard.) The reverse may also be possible, in certain periods, although the idea that language could have no mediating effect at all on the production of reality (just inconsequential fluff on the surface of things) seems far--fetched in the wake of so much postmodern and media theory. However, the notion is consistent with the theories of hard--line materialists and genetic determinists. But we should at least consider the possibility that some sort of shaping interaction between NCC and VCC, without implicating the full conceptual apparatus of psychoanalysis, is continuously occurring. This possibility is, for me, best realised by Jacques Derrida when he writes of an irreducible interweaving of consciousness and language (the latter for Derrida being a cover term for any system of signification). This interweaving is such that the significatory superstructure 'reacts upon' the 'substratum of non--expressive acts and contents', and the name for this interweaving is 'text' (Mowitt 98). A further possibility is that provided by Pierre Bourdieu's notion of habitus -- the socially inherited schemes of perception and selection, imparted by language and example, which operate for the most part below the level of consciousness but are available to conscious reflection by any individual lucky enough to learn how to recognise that possibility. If the subjective representations of NCC exist, this habitus can be at best only partial; something denied by Bourdieu whose theory of individual agency is founded in what he has referred to as 'the relation between two states of the social' – i.e. 'between history objectified in things, in the form of institutions, and history incarnate in the body, in the form of that system of durable dispositions I call habitus' (190). At the same time, much of Bourdieu's thinking about the habitus seems as though it could be consistent with the kind of predictable representations that might be produced by NCC. For example, there are the simple oppositions that structure much perception in Bourdieu's account. These range from the obvious phenomenological ones (dark/light; bright/dull; male/female; hard/soft, etc.) through to the more abstract, often analogical or metaphorical ones, such as those produced by teachers when assessing their students (bright/dull again; elegant/clumsy, etc.). It seems possible that NCC could provide the mechanism or realisation for the representation, storage, and reactivation of impressions constituting a social model--self. However, an entirely different possibility remains to be considered – which perhaps Bourdieu is also getting at – involving a radical rejection of both NCC and VCC. Any correlational or representational theory of the relationship between a self and his/her environment -- which, according to Charles Altieri, includes the anti--logocentrism of Derrida -- assumes that the primary focus for any consciousness is the mapping and remapping of this relationship rather than the actions and purposes of the agent in question. Referring to the later philosophy of Wittgenstein, Altieri argues: 'Conciousness is essentially not a way of relating to objects but of relating to actions we learn to perform . . . We do not usually think about objects, but about the specific form of activity which involves us with these objects at this time' (233). Clearly, there is not yet any certainty in the arguments provided by neuroscience that neural activity performs a representational role. Is it not, then, possible that this activity, rather than being a 'correlate' of entities, is an accompaniment to, a registration of, action that the rest of the body is performing? In this view, self is an enactment, an expression (including but not restricted to language), and what self--consciousness is conscious of is this activity of the self, not the self as entity. In a way that again returns us towards Bakhtin, Altieri writes: '>From an analytical perspective, it seems likely that our normal ways of acting in the world provide all the criteria we need for a sense of identity. As Sidney Shoemaker has shown, the most important source of the sense of our identity is the way we use the spatio--temporal location of our body to make physical distinctions between here and there, in front and behind, and so on' (234). Reasonably consistent with the Wittgensteinian view -- in its focus on self--activity -- is that contemporary theorisation of the self that compares in influence with that posed by neuroscience. This is the self avowedly constructed by networked computer technology, as described by Mark Poster: [W]hat has occurred in the advanced industrial societies with increasing rapidity . . . is the dissemination of technologies of symbolisation, or language machines, a process that may be described as the electronic textualisation of daily life, and the concomitant transformations of agency, transformations of the constitution of individuals as fixed identities (autonomous, self--regulating, independent) into subjects that are multiple, diffuse, fragmentary. The old (modern) agent worked with machines on natural materials to form commodities, lived near other workers and kin in urban communities, walked to work or traveled by public transport, and read newspapers but engaged as a communicator mostly in face--to--face relations. The new (postmodern) agent works mostly on symbols using computers, lives in isolation from other workers and kin, travels to work by car, and receives news and entertainment from television. . . . Individuals who have this experience do not stand outside the world of objects, observing, exercising rational faculties and maintaining a stable character. The individuals constituted by the new modes of information are immersed and dispersed in textualised practices where grounds are less important than moves. (44--45) Interestingly, Metzinger's theorisation of the model--self lends itself to the self--mutability -- though not the diffusion -- favoured by postmodernists like Poster. [I]t is . . . well conceivable that a system generates a number of different self--models which are functionally incompatible, and therefore modularised. They nevertheless could be internally coherent, each endowed with its own characteristic phenomenal content and behavioral profile. . . this does not have to be a pathological situation. Operating under different self--models in different situational contexts may be biologically as well as socially adaptive. Don't we all to some extent use multiple personalities to cope efficiently with different parts of our lives? (295--6) Poster's proposition is consistent with that of many in the humanities and social sciences today, influenced variously by postmodernism and social constructionism. What I believe remains at issue about his account is that it exchanges one form of externally constituted self ('fixed identity') for another (that produced by the 'modes of information'), and therefore remains locked in a logic of deterministic constitution. (There is a parallel here with Altieri's point about Derrida's inability to escape representation.) Furthermore, theorists like Poster may be too quickly generalising from the experience of adults in 'textualised environments'. Until such time as human beings are born directly into virtual reality environments, each will, for a formative period of time, experience the world in the way described by Bakhtin – through 'a unified perception of bodily and personal being . . . characterised . . . as a loving gift mutually exchanged between self and other across the borderzone of their two consciousnesses' (cited in Morris 6). I suggest it is very unlikely that this emergent sense of being can ever be completely erased even when people subsequently encounter each other in electronic networked environments. It is clearly not the role of a brief survey like this to attempt any resolution of these matters. Indeed, my review has made all the more apparent how far from being settled the question of consciousness, and by extension the question of selfhood, remains. Even the classical notion of the homunculus (the 'little inner man' or the 'ghost in the machine') has been put back into play with Francis Crick and Christof Koch's (2000) neurobiological conception of the 'unconscious homunculus'. The balance of contemporary evidence and argument suggests that the best thing to do right now is to keep the questions open against any form of reductionism – whether social or biological. One way to do this is to explore the notions of self and consciousness as implicated in ongoing processes of complex co--adaptation between biology and culture -- or their individual level equivalents, brain and mind (Taylor Ch. 7). References Altieri, C. "Wittgenstein on Consciousness and Language: a Challenge to Derridean Literary Theory." Wittgenstein, Theory and the Arts. Ed. Richard Allen and Malcolm Turvey. New York: Routledge, 2001. Bourdieu, P. In Other Words: Essays Towards a Reflexive Sociology. Trans. Matthew Adamson. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1990. Crick, F. and Koch, C. "The Unconscious Homunculus." Neural Correlates of Consciousness: Empirical and Conceptual Questions. Ed. Thomas Metzinger. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2000. Deleuze, G. Foucault. Trans. Sean Hand. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1988. Metzinger, T. "The Subjectivity of Subjective Experience: A Representationalist Analysis of the First-Person Perspective." Neural Correlates of Consciousness: Empirical and Conceptual Questions. Ed. Thomas Metzinger. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2000. Morris, P. (ed.). The Bakhtin Reader: Selected Writings of Bakhtin, Medvedev, Voloshinov. London: Edward Arnold, 1994. Mowitt, J. Text: The Genealogy of an Interdisciplinary Object. Durham: Duke University Press, 1992. Poster, M. Cultural History and Modernity: Disciplinary Readings and Challenges. New York: Columbia University Press, 1997. Shepherdson, C. Vital Signs: Nature, Culture, Psychoanalysis. New York: Routledge, 2000. Taylor, M. C. The Moment of Complexity: Emerging Network Culture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001. Citation reference for this article Substitute your date of access for Dn Month Year etc... MLA Style Wallace, Derek. "'Self' and the Problem of Consciousness" M/C: A Journal of Media and Culture 5.5 (2002). [your date of access] < http://www.media-culture.org.au/mc/0210/Wallace.html &gt. Chicago Style Wallace, Derek, "'Self' and the Problem of Consciousness" M/C: A Journal of Media and Culture 5, no. 5 (2002), < http://www.media-culture.org.au/mc/0210/Wallace.html &gt ([your date of access]). APA Style Wallace, Derek. (2002) 'Self' and the Problem of Consciousness. M/C: A Journal of Media and Culture 5(5). < http://www.media-culture.org.au/mc/0210/Wallace.html &gt ([your date of access]).
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