Academic literature on the topic 'Eastern Classification'

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Journal articles on the topic "Eastern Classification"

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Tomaselli, Valeria, Giuseppe Veronico, Saverio Sciandrello, and Luigi Forte. "Therophytic halophilous vegetation classification in South-Eastern Italy." Phytocoenologia 50, no. 2 (July 10, 2020): 187–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/phyto/2020/0364.

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Fjeldså, Jon. "Classification of Waterbird Communities in South-Eastern Australia." Emu - Austral Ornithology 85, no. 3 (September 1985): 141–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/mu9850141.

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Morris, C. D., N. M. Taintoi, and S. Boleme. "Classification of the eastern alpine vegetation of Lesotho." African Journal of Range & Forage Science 10, no. 1 (April 1993): 47–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10220119.1993.9638321.

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Manakov, A. G., I. A. Ivanov, and O. A. Chuchenkova. "Classification of South-Eastern Baltics cross-border recreational mesoregions." Regional nye issledovaniya 71, no. 1 (2021): 118–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.5922/1994-5280-2021-1-10.

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Experience in assessing the COVID-19 pandemic impact on international tourism indicates insufficient attention to changes in geography and volume of international tourist flows. In particular, studies aimed at assessing the value of tourist exchange in cross-border tourist and recreational regions are becoming relevant. The purpose of the article is to classify cross-border tourist and recreational mesoregions in the south-eastern part of the Baltic region by the size of cross-border tourist exchange. As a result of the study, six cross-border tourist and recreational mesoregions were identified with the participation of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. The boundaries of these mesoregions were determined and the value of cross-border tourist exchange within them was estimated. According to the latter indicator, it is proposed to divide mesoregions into three categories: 1) with a high level of formation (tourist exchange of more than 500 thousand people per year); 2) with a level of formation «above average» (from 100 to 500 thousand people per year); 3) with an average level of formation (from 50 to 100 thousand people per year). Cross-border tourist and recreational regions with a low level of formation (with a tourist exchange of fewer than 50 thousand people per year) are classified as microregions. The first category included the Estonian-Finnish mesoregion, the second – three mesoregions (Russian- Estonian, Russian-Polish-Lithuanian, and Polish-Lithuanian-Belarusian), the third – Russian-Estonian- Latvian and Estonian-Latvian.
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Sasmal, S. K. "Optical classification of waters in the eastern arabian sea." Journal of the Indian Society of Remote Sensing 25, no. 2 (June 1997): 73–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf03025905.

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Batty, Erin L., Gareth D. Holmes, Daniel J. Murphy, Paul I. Forster, Will C. Neal, and Michael J. Bayly. "Phylogeny, classification and biogeography of." Australian Systematic Botany 35, no. 4 (September 16, 2022): 326–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sb22003.

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Philotheca sect. Erionema includes 14 species from eastern Australia and one from south-western Australia. We conducted a phylogenetic analysis of the section, including samples of all species, using sequences of the ITS and ETS regions of nuclear ribosomal DNA. Results were broadly congruent with a previous analysis based on morphological and flavonoid data. The analysis is consistent with the monophyly of the section and supports the monophyly of six species represented by multiple samples. Philotheca verrucosa (A. Rich.) Paul G. Wilson was resolved as paraphyletic with respect to P. freyciana Rozefelds but with poor support. Philotheca glasshousiensis, P. myoporoides and P. myoporoides subsp. myoporoides were clearly polyphyletic, including separate geographic clades and the classification of each of these taxa requires revision. In particular, disjunct northern populations of P. glasshousiensis probably represent a distinct species, the five subspecies of P. myoporoides could be treated as separate species and at least two other distinct groups that are currently included under the circumscription of subsp. myoporoides could be treated as species. The phylogeny revealed deeply divergent, geographically overlapping clades in eastern Australia and substantial distances (up to 900 km) between sister taxa. We infer that biogeography of the group has been shaped largely by vicariant differentiation of taxa.
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Zinchuk, Mykola, Mykhailo Shevchuk, and Petro Zin’chuk. "Modern classifications of soils and problem of their regional harmonization in Ukraine." Visnyk of the Lviv University. Series Geography, no. 47 (November 27, 2014): 124–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vgg.2014.47.877.

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Question of local inconsistencies of real soil cover versus theoretical data was raised in article. One of the reasons of inconsistencies is ignoring the problem of regional peculiarities of soil differences. The situation regarding the approaches to modern classification of soils in Ukraine, near abroad, as well as at the international level was analyzed. The active development of the classification of the models in the Eastern European countries was identified. The attention is focused on the future development of parametric approaches to classification of soils of Ukraine. Methodology of regional harmonization of soil cover of the Volhyn region by authentication of predominant soil types in the modern classification and International reference base for soil resources was proposed. Periodic monitoring of state of classification areas of soils for regional harmonization of criteria for the diagnosis of soil differences, the activation of the local soil science cells for assessment of the compliance levels of scientific developments in the classification and improvement of the normative base for soil resources of Ukraine was recommended to carry out. Key words: soils, genetic classifications, parametric classifications, taxons, soil forming processes, KRAH, KPAH.
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de Lange, P. J., R. D. Smissen, S. J. Wagstaff, D. J. Keeling, B. G. Murray, and H. R. Toelken. "A molecular phylogeny and infrageneric classification for Kunzea (Myrtaceae) inferred from rDNA ITS and ETS sequences." Australian Systematic Botany 23, no. 5 (2010): 309. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sb10019.

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Circumscription and infrageneric classification of Kunzea is evaluated after phylogenetic analyses of nrDNA ITS and ETS sequences. Kunzea is monophyletic if the K. ericoides complex and the monotypic Angasomyrtus are included. The genus can be divided into western Australian, eastern Australian, and eastern Australian plus New Zealand clades. Angasomyrtus has greater affinity with the eastern Kunzea species, despite its western Australian endemic status. A new infrageneric classification is proposed, recognising four subgenera, with a further division into sections within two of these. A new combination in Kunzea is made for Angasomyrtus.
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Kunjachen Maducolil, Mariam, Hafsa Abid, Rachael Marian Lobo, Ambreen Qayyum Chughtai, Arjumand Muhammad Afzal, Huda Abdullah Hussain Saleh, and Stephen W. Lindow. "Risk factors and classification of stillbirth in a Middle Eastern population: a retrospective study." Journal of Perinatal Medicine 46, no. 9 (November 27, 2018): 1022–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/jpm-2017-0274.

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AbstractObjective:To estimate the incidence of stillbirth, explore the associated maternal and fetal factors and to evaluate the most appropriate classification of stillbirth for a multiethnic population.Methods:This is a retrospective population-based study of stillbirth in a large tertiary unit. Data of each stillbirth with a gestational age >/=24 weeks in the year 2015 were collected from electronic medical records and analyzed.Results:The stillbirth rate for our multiethnic population is 7.81 per 1000 births. Maternal medical factors comprised 52.4% in which the rates of hypertensive disorders, diabetes and other medical disorders were 22.5%, 20.8% and 8.3%, respectively. The most common fetal factor was intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) (22.5%) followed by congenital anomalies (21.6%). All cases were categorized using the Wigglesworth, Aberdeen, Tulip, ReCoDe and International Classification of Diseases-perinatal mortality (ICD-PM) classifications and the rates of unclassified stillbirths were 59.2%, 46.6%, 16.6%, 11.6% and 7.5%, respectively. An autopsy was performed in 9.1% of cases reflecting local religious and cultural sensitivities.Conclusion:This study highlighted the modifiable risk factors among the Middle Eastern population. The most appropriate classification was the ICD-PM. The low rates of autopsy prevented a detailed evaluation of stillbirths, therefore it is suggested that a minimally invasive autopsy [postmortem magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)] may improve the quality of care.
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Maisuradze, Lamara, Kakhaber Koiava, and Silvia Spezzaferri. "Taxonomic revision and new species/subspecies of Middle-Late Miocene (Bessarabian) miliolids of the Family Hauerinidae Schwager from Georgia — Eastern Paratethys." Geologica Carpathica 60, no. 5 (October 1, 2009): 419–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10096-009-0030-3.

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Taxonomic revision and new species/subspecies of Middle-Late Miocene (Bessarabian) miliolids of the Family Hauerinidae Schwager from Georgia — Eastern ParatethysThree new miliolid taxa from Bessarabian sediments from Georgia (Eastern Paratethys) are described following the classification of Łuczkowska (1972), which has never been used before by ex-Soviet micropaleontologists. They are:Varidentella luczkowskae; Varidentella reussi(Bogdanowicz) subsp.costulata; andAffinetrina voloshinovae(Bogdanowicz) subsp.eldarica.This classification takes into account the morphology of the aperture and the shape and size of teeth as criteria to distinguish the species. This study contributes important criteria which will help to unify the taxonomical inconsistencies between the Eastern, Central and Western Paratethyan miliolids.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Eastern Classification"

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MALUF, LINDA YVONNE. "CLASSIFICATION AND DISTRIBUTION OF THE CENTRAL EASTERN PACIFIC ECHINODERMS." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1987. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/184082.

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A total of 627 echinoderm species (12 crinoids, 185 asteroids, 185 ophiuroids, 95 echinoids and 150 holothuroids) are known from the shallow and deep waters between southern California and southern Peru, and an up-to-date classification scheme is given for them. Distribution tables provide detailed presence-absence data for latitudinal increments, geographic range endpoints, depth ranges, and substrate associations of each species. Annotated lists of all species include relevant synonyms and mistaken records as well as literature citations used for both lists and distribution tables. A species-level biogeographic analysis shows that echinoderm provinces conform to those generally observed for other marine taxa, including mollusks, crustaceans and fishes. Based on cluster analysis and more traditional approaches (using species richness, faunal turnover and faunal composition), overall faunal similarity of the shelf echinoderms is very high between 23°N and 4°S, in the tropical Panamic province. There is a northern warm-temperate fauna (California province) between Pt. Conception, California and Pt. Eugenio, Baja California that also extends into lower Baja and the Gulf of California. Warm-temperate elements in the subtropical Gulf of California distinguish it from the tropics, and it is recognized as a faunal province in spite of its low endemism. Echinoderm endemism is unusually high in the Galapagos province and is attributed to the wide habitat diversity and isolation of the archipelago. There is no evidence for a Mexican province, but there is evidence for a distinction between the tropics to the north and south of Costa Rica/Panama. Transition zones (especially in Panama and southern California) often have high species richness, increased habitat diversity, and a number of endemic species. The warm-water eastern Pacific genera are most closely related to those of the west Atlantic tropics, but very few species are shared between the regions. Trans-Pacific species in the CEP are widespread throughout the region. A confinement of Indo-Pacific species to offshore CEP islands is only seen at Clipperton Island, the lone coral atoll of the eastern Pacific.
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Garner, Cornelia Johanna. "Characterisation and biotic classification of Eastern Cape mixed substrate shores." Thesis, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1020825.

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A significant proportion of the South African coastline is composed of both soft (mostly sand) and hard (mostly bedrock) substrata, i.e. “mixed”. This study described and classified macrobenthic assemblages of 20 Eastern Cape mixed substrate shores that differed in shore topography and the extent and position of intertidal rock and sand. A stratified random approach was used. Species richness, composition, abundance and environmental variables were determined. Commonly used beach indices were calculated. A total of 78 macrofaunal and 172 macroalgal species from rock substrate assemblages and 205 macrofauna species from sediment were recorded. Total species richness and richness per substratum exceeded that of sandy beaches devoid of rock and rocky shores with no sand. Rhodophyta were the most diverse and abundant algae, dominating all low-elevation rock surfaces as midlittoral and infralittoral turfs. Chlorophyta diversity was higher than at rocky shores, contributing more to cover-abundance at study sites and in microhabitats with an increased sand load. Sessile macrofauna species richness and abundance was lower than that of rocky shores. Polychaetes and crustaceans were the most diverse and abundant beach infauna. Species richness of both substrates declined from the low shore towards the high shore, but abundance trends varied substantially. The presence and extent of an intertidal biotope/subzone at either substrate depended on substrate availability.The supralittoral fringe in both substrate types was most often affected. Zonal overlap was evident on rock substrate: assemblages of raised midlittoral rock surfaces were enriched by species from lower surfaces sometimes leading to elimination of character taxa. Classification and ordination identified three potential mixed substrate shore biotic types: Biotic type A (Jania-Corallina- Polysiphonia turf) was characterised by robustly-textured algal turfs, a lowered predominance and diversity of polychaetes and an increase in crustacean abundance and diversity in sediment. Biotic type B (Polysiphonia-Tayloriella-Caulacanthus turf) had intermediately and biotic type C (Arthrocardia-Laurencia turf) the most sheltered eulittoral zones and beaches. DCCA identified the major environmental parameters affecting the macrobiota as: the level of wave energy, geological control of waves by hard substrate, sediment grain size and sediment inundation. A strong cross-shore wave attenuation results in sheltered sediments and midshore rock surfaces. Beach macrofauna were highly variable and diverse, which directly opposes previous perceptions about the sediment-bound biota of mixed substrate shores. The hierarchical cluster analysis produced a biotic classification of mixed substrate shores that was indicative of a biotic response to the total effects of leading environmental parameters. Macrobenthos of rock surfaces and sediment therefore showed potential to be used as an alternative or complementary to physical characteristics in classifying mixed substrate shores.
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Lovett, Jonathan C. "Classification and affinities of the Eastern Arc moist forests of Tanzania." Thesis, Bangor University, 1992. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.333691.

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Kaiser, Hinrich. "Systematics and biogeography of eastern Caribbean frogs." Thesis, McGill University, 1993. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=41632.

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This study examines the systematics and biogeography of frogs in the Eastern Caribbean, a biogeographical province consisting of the Lesser Antilles, Trinidad, and Tobago. A comprehensive collection of specimens was subjected to an analysis incorporating morphometric, osteological, and biochemical approaches. An investigation of $ alpha$-level taxonomy revealed the presence of four additional taxa: Colostethus chalcopis sp. nov. on Martinique, Eleutherodactylus amplinympha sp. nov. on Dominica, E. euphronides comb. nov. on Grenada, and E. shrevei comb. nov. on St. Vincent. Based on species distributions and detailed analyses of the largely congruent data sets, Eastern Caribbean frogs can be grouped into two major categories, those originating with South American stock and those of Greater Antillean ancestry. A South American origin is obvious for species which have no congeneric relatives in the Greater Antilles, e.g. C. chalcopis, Leptodactylus fallax, L. wagneri. Among the Eleutherodactylus species, northern Eastern Caribbean taxa form a monophyletic group within the E. auriculatus species group; the topology of relationships is ((E. barlagnei, E. pinchoni) ((E. amplinympha, E. martinicensis) E. johnstonei)). The southern Eastern Caribbean species may or may not form a monophyletic group, but E. euphronides and E. shrevei are sister taxa. The topology for these species is (E. urichi (E. terraebolivaris (E. euphronides, E. shrevei))). Thus, the Eastern Caribbean forms a biogeographic link between the large South American and Greater Antillean radiations of Eleutherodactylus; Eleutherodactylus is the only truly circum-Caribbean frog genus. Furthermore, historical evidence shows that the patchy, Caribbean-wide distribution of E. johnstonei is the direct result of accidental introduction mitigated by humans during the past three centuries.
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Naidoo, Lyndle Sherae. "Identification and classification of micro-estuaries using selected abiotic and biotic characteristics along the Eastern Cape coast, South Africa." Thesis, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10948/11920.

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Many of the larger estuaries along the South African coastline are highly degraded due to human impacts, highlighting the need to conserve pristine systems. There are approximately 100 micro-estuaries along our coastline which have not yet been identified or classified and hence their ecological functioning is unknown. The aim of this study was to identify and classify micro-estuaries along the Eastern Cape coast. Specific objectives of the study were to: 1) map the distribution of estuarine habitats in a selection of micro-estuaries and assess changes over time; 2) measure the physico-chemical characteristics of the micro-estuaries in the field; 3) investigate the distribution of vegetation, identify macrophyte species and habitat integrity and classify the micro-estuaries sampled using abiotic and botanical characteristics. A total of 30 systems were identified of which 10 were selected for sampling which took place seasonally (2015-2016). A relationship between open water surface area and short term rainfall was only evident in Cunge, Sandy Bottom and Ichabana. In the field it was observed that after heavy rainfall, open water surface area increased and mouth breaching occurred. Salinity was the only water column characteristic that showed differences; salinity increased in response to over wash events. Sand was dominant in all systems and there were no differences in sediment characteristics. A total of 8 macroalgal species, 16 estuarine macrophyte species, six freshwater species and 72 riparian plant species were found. Seed bank reserves were low in all systems despite them being vegetated. Only abiotic characteristics were used for classification using Principle Components Analysis since there were no botanical differences between systems. Micro-estuaries were larger (> 0.03 ha), had a higher salinity (oligohaline, mesohaline and polyhaline conditions) and a constant water body. Micro-outlets were smaller (< 0.03 ha), had a lower salinity (oligohaline conditions were most common) and showed periods of drying. Five micro-estuaries (Shelbertsstroom, Kwesani, Cunge, Mtwendwe and Mtendwe) and five micro-outlets (Stromatolite, Sandy Bottom, Ichabana, Palm Tree and Black Rock) were classified. This study has shown that the micro-estuaries along the Eastern Cape coast are pristine (i.e. intact riparian zone and catchment), untouched and highly dynamic systems (i.e. great variation in water surface area and mouth condition) highlighting their need for protection.
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Lucas, Gavin Murray. "Genealogies : classification, narrative and time : an archaeological study of Eastern Yorkshire, 3700-1300 BC." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1994. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/273005.

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Tafreshi, Shabnam. "Cross-Genre, Cross-Lingual, and Low-Resource Emotion Classification." Thesis, The George Washington University, 2021. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=28088437.

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Emotions can be defined as a natural, instinctive state of mind arising from one’s circumstances, mood, and relationships with others. It has long been a question to be answered by psychology that how and what is it that humans feel. Enabling computers to recognize human emotions has been an of interest to researchers since 1990s (Picard et al., 1995). Ever since, this area of research has grown significantly and emotion detection is becoming an important component in many natural language processing tasks. Several theories exist for defining emotions and are chosen by researchers according to their needs. For instance, according to appraisal theory, a psychology theory, emotions are produced by our evaluations (appraisals or estimates) of events that cause a specific reaction in different people. Some emotions are easy and universal, while others are complex and nuanced. Emotion classification is generally the process of labeling a piece of text with one or more corresponding emotion labels. Psychologists have developed numerous models and taxonomies of emotions. The model or taxonomy depends on the problem, and thorough study is often required to select the best model. Early studies of emotion classification focused on building computational models to classify basic emotion categories. In recent years, increasing volumes of social media and the digitization of data have opened a new horizon in this area of study, where emotion classification is a key component of applications, including mood and behavioral studies, as well as disaster relief, amongst many other applications. Sophisticated models have been built to detect and classify emotion in text, but few analyze how well a model is able to learn emotion cues. The ability to learn emotion cues properly and be able to generalize this learning is very important. This work investigates the robustness of emotion classification approaches across genres and languages, with a focus on quantifying how well state-of-the-art models are able to learn emotion cues. First, we use multi-task learning and hierarchical models to build emotion models that were trained on data combined from multiple genres. Our hypothesis is that a multi-genre, noisy training environment will help the classifier learn emotion cues that are prevalent across genres. Second, we explore splitting text (i.e. sentence) into its clauses and testing whether the model’s performance improves. Emotion analysis needs fine-grained annotation and clause-level annotation can be beneficial to design features to improve emotion detection performance. Intuitively, clause-level annotations may help the model focus on emotion cues, while ignoring irrelevant portions of the text. Third, we adopted a transfer learning approach for cross-lingual/genre emotion classification to focus the classifier’s attention on emotion cues which are consistent across languages. Fourth, we empirically show how to combine different genres to be able to build robust models that can be used as source models for emotion transfer to low-resource target languages. Finally, this study involved curating and re-annotating popular emotional data sets in different genres, and annotating a multi-genre corpus of Persian tweets and news, and generating a collection of emotional sentences for a low-resource language, Azerbaijani, a language spoken in the north west of Iran.
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Keizer, Jan Jacob. "Vascular plant family composition of the Eastern Cordillera of Colombia diversity patterns, classification, and ordination /." [S.l. : Amsterdam : s.n.] ; Universiteit van Amsterdam [Host], 2000. http://dare.uva.nl/document/84370.

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Cooley, Brian. "Characterization and classification of clayey soils forming on limestone in the Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia." Morgantown, W. Va. : [West Virginia University Libraries], 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10450/10291.

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Thesis (M.S.)--West Virginia University, 2009.
Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains viii, 114 p. : ill. (some col.), col. map. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 55-61).
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von, der Krone Kerstin. "Mordechai Zalkin: Modernizing Jewish education in nineteenth century Eastern Europe." HATiKVA e.V. – Die Hoffnung Bildungs- und Begegnungsstätte für Jüdische Geschichte und Kultur Sachsen, 2018. https://slub.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A34638.

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Books on the topic "Eastern Classification"

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Dey, Monalisa. Epiphyllous liverworts of Eastern Himalaya. Kolkata: Botanical Survey of India, Ministry of Environment and Forests, 2012.

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Das, Sudipta Kumar. Freshwater algae of eastern India. New Delhi: Daya Publishing House, 2014.

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B, Chaudhuri A. Forest plants of eastern India. New Delhi: Ashish Pub. House, 1993.

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Bayram, Öztürk, and Başusta Nuri, eds. Fishes of the eastern Mediterranean. Beykoz, Istanbul: Turkish Marine Research Foundation, 2006.

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Singh, Ajai Kumar. Sedges & grasses of eastern Uttar Pradesh. Delhi: Daya Pub. House, 2007.

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Siwakoti, M. Plant diversity of Eastern Nepal: Flora of plains of Eastern Nepal. Dehra Dun, India: Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh, 1999.

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Forth, Gregory L. Nage birds: Classification and symbolism among an Eastern Indonesian people. London: Routledge, 2004.

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Nage birds: Classification and symbolism among an Eastern Indonesian people. New York: Routledge, 2003.

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Youngblood, Andrew P. Riparian community type classification of eastern Idaho - western Wyoming. [Ogden, Utah?]: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Intermountain Region, 1985.

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Dudley, Patricia L. Marine flora and fauna of the eastern United States. Seattle, WA: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service, 1991.

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Book chapters on the topic "Eastern Classification"

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Pappalardo, Eleonora. "Connoisseurship and Classification." In A Companion to Ancient Near Eastern Art, 103–27. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118336779.ch5.

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Mucina, Ladislav, Mervyn C. Lötter, Lubomír Tichý, Stefan J. Siebert, and C. Robert Scott-Shaw. "Classification of the Eastern Scarp Forests." In Geobotany Studies, 125–226. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-67831-3_6.

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Onoyama, Keiichi, Noboru Ohsumi, Naoko Mitsumochi, and Tsuyoshi Kishihara. "Data Analysis of Deer-Train Collisions in Eastern Hokkaido, Japan." In Studies in Classification, Data Analysis, and Knowledge Organization, 746–51. Tokyo: Springer Japan, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-65950-1_81.

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McClelland, J. E., C. A. Mogen, W. M. Johnson, F. W. Schroer, and J. S. Allen. "Chernozems and Associated Soils of Eastern North Dakota: Some Properties and Topographic Relationships." In Selected Papers in Soil Formation and Classification, 83–94. Madison, Wisconsin, USA: Soil Science Society of America, Inc., 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2136/sssaspecpub1.c8.

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Mulyani, Anny, Adi Priyono, and Fahmuddin Agus. "Semiarid Soils of Eastern Indonesia: Soil Classification and Land Uses." In Developments in Soil Classification, Land Use Planning and Policy Implications, 449–66. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-5332-7_24.

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Castellano, Rosalia, Gennaro Punzo, and Antonella Rocca. "Female Labour Force Participation and Selection Effect: Southern vs Eastern European Countries." In Studies in Classification, Data Analysis, and Knowledge Organization, 35–43. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-17377-1_5.

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Kovacs, Janos Matyas. "Various Varieties. On the Classification of New Capitalisms in Eastern Europe." In Unsichere Zeiten, 287–300. Wiesbaden: VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-531-92035-1_29.

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Lindenmayer, D. B., and R. B. Cunningham. "A Habitat-Based Microscale Forest Classification System for Zoning Wood Production Areas to Conserve a Rare Species Threatened by Logging Operations in South-Eastern Australia." In Global to Local: Ecological Land Classification, 543–57. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-1653-1_38.

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Mavrakis, A. "Climatic Classification of an Industrial Area of Eastern Mediterranean (Thriassio Plain: Greece)." In Advances in Meteorology, Climatology and Atmospheric Physics, 599–604. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-29172-2_85.

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Baldia, Christel M., and Kathryn A. Jakes. "Toward the Classification of Colorants in Archaeological Textiles of Eastern North America." In ACS Symposium Series, 15–43. Washington, DC: American Chemical Society, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bk-2007-0968.ch002.

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Conference papers on the topic "Eastern Classification"

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Hegde, Chiranth, Scott Wallace, and Ken Gray. "Real Time Prediction and Classification of Torque and Drag During Drilling Using Statistical Learning Methods." In SPE Eastern Regional Meeting. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/177313-ms.

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Shiner, P. R., C. Ricci, and G. Rusciadelli. "Carbonate Reservoirs of the Mediterranean: a Review and Classification for producing assets to frontier exploration." In Third EAGE Eastern Mediterranean Workshop. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.202137021.

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Zhou, Yuhai, Zoya Heidari, Ding Zhu, and A. D. Hill. "Petrophysical Rock Classification, Permeability Estimation, and Elastic Moduli Assessment in Tight Carbonate Reservoirs: A Case Study in Tarim Field, China." In SPE Eastern Regional Meeting. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/187516-ms.

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Hedzyk, Nazarii, Roman Malyk, Serhii Tyvonchuk, Volodymyr Vaskiv, Oksana Vanchak, and Viktoriia Mykytiuk. "Investment Planning in Oil Production Enhancement Projects in Ukraine Based on Joint Usage of 3D Modelling and SPE-PRMS Reserves Classification." In SPE Eastern Europe Subsurface Conference. SPE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/208503-ms.

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Abstract Most of the discovered oil fields in Ukraine entering a declining production stage. Many of these assets have good potential for production increasing and require investments. The risks of such investments are related to the uncertainty of geological information, production data, and the total amount of reserves and resources. This paper describes the study of the joint use of 3D hydrodynamic modeling and reserves estimation according to the SPE-PRMS classification, which together allowed to assess and significantly reduce investment risks for oil production enhancement projects. The use of 3D modeling is one of the key elements during field exploration and production, because of coordination of all available geological and field data it is often possible to discover new, previously unknown features of the geological structure and identify high potential areas to increase production. In this paper petrophysical, geological and hydrodynamic modeling tools and material balance method have been used to consolidate existing geological and field data and create 3D model of the field in Western oil and gas bearing region of Ukraine. Also, for uncertainty analysis of the initial hydrocarbons in-place and IOR project investment presentation the SPE-PRMS classification was used. Comprehensive usage of material balance tools, field development history analysis, well performance changes, and fluid properties behavior revealed inconsistencies in the geological data and hypothesized the existence of a gas cap in the oil deposit and identify a faults system through the reservoir. After well logging these hypotheses has been confirmed, which allowed achieving a good history match of the model for the entire field and each well. Based on the matched model, a comprehensive field development strategy was proposed, which also considered all existing limitations related to production and infrastructure issues. The best scenario of field development was selected, according to the results of the economic assessment in terms of investment attractiveness. Based on the created 3D geological model, hydrocarbons reserves and resources were estimated using deterministic and stochastic methods and have been classified according to the SPE-PRMS. Reserves categories were assessed by the degree of commercial maturity of the project based on ten possible field development scenarios and high potential zones for infill drilling, plays exploration, and IOR project implementation was selected. The integrated approach to the field development strategy assessment and the input data uncertainties allowed to consider all available geological information and field data to create a comprehensive pilot investment IOR project. The proposed approach allows to solve complex problems of potential investments risks assessment and reduction in IOR projects and discover new assets' potential on the example of a complex field in the inner zone of the Pre-Carpathian Depression.
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Yarochenko, Yanina. "PHILOSOPHICAL APPROACH TO THE CLASSIFICATION OF NEEDS OF A HUMAN BEING IN 21ST CENTURY." In Scientific Development of New Eastern Europe. Publishing House “Baltija Publishing”, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.30525/978-9934-571-89-3_50.

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Han, Guifeng, and Jianhua Xu. "Vegetation classification in eastern China using time series NDVI images." In International Symposium on Multispectral Image Processing and Pattern Recognition, edited by Yongji Wang, Jun Li, Bangjun Lei, and Jingyu Yang. SPIE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.749124.

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Leonova, Katerina, and Andriy Morgun. "CLASSIFICATION OF THE SOURCE MATERIAL OF TOBACCO VARIETIES CULTIVATED IN THE CENTRAL PART OF THE FOREST-STEPPE OF UKRAINE BY THE MULTIVARIATE STATISTICS METHOD." In Scientific Development of New Eastern Europe. Publishing House “Baltija Publishing”, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.30525/978-9934-571-89-3_99.

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Zheng, Danzhu, Evren M. Ozbayoglu, Stefan Z. Miska, and Yaxin Liu. "Cement Sheath Fatigue Failure Prediction by Support Vector Machine Based Model." In SPE Eastern Regional Meeting. SPE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/211880-ms.

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Abstract Zonal isolation is significant for safety operation of the well. Failure to keep wellbore integrity can lead to sustained annulus pressure (SAP), and gas migration (GM), which may cause long non-productive time. Losing zonal isolation can cause severe environmental issue, which is irreversible and detrimental. However, cement sheath is exposed to temperature and pressure changes from the beginning of the drilling process to the whole life of the well. These cyclic changes can lead to fatigue failure of the cement. The objective of this study is to investigate the fatigue failure that caused by cyclic changing of temperature and pressure during life of the well. The scope of the study is based on the laboratory fatigue failure cases in previous literatures. Instead of using mechanical failure models, support vector machine (SVM) model is used to predict the fatigue failure of the cement sheath. The data is gathered from six papers of One-Petro, which includes 325 laboratory cement fatigue failure cases. The model has fourteen inputs. Seven cement related factors were selected, which include cement type, additive material, Uniaxial Confining Strength (UCS), curing temperature, curing pressure, curing age, and Young's modulus. Seven experimental related factors, which include highest inner pressure, loading increment rate, frequency of loading, experimental temperature, confining pressure, existence of outer confining part, and cycles to reach failure. The SVM model is implemented by Python. We investigated 240 combinations of input groups and selected the best performance SVM model. The classification result is zero for no fatigue failure, and one for failure. The accuracy for the SVM model is 72.7%, which shows that SVM can be an acceptable model for cement fatigue prediction. The SVM model we proposed is more applicable for real implementation. Because we used real wellbore geometry data (thick wall geometry). Although the data were based on laboratory result, the SVM model provides a helpful method in predicting cement-sheath-failure. This study provides a data based method to predict cement fatigue failure under cyclic changing pressure and temperature. The result will be instructive for the cement design and wellbore operation optimization.
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Krasnov, Fedor. "Topic Classification Through Topic Modeling with Additive Regularization for Collection of Scientific Papers." In the 14th Central and Eastern European Software Engineering Conference Russia. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3290621.3290629.

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Trofimova, L. S., and I. A. Trofimov. "Agro-landscape and ecological zoning for crop and meadow production in Eastern Siberia." In Растениеводство и луговодство. Тимирязевская сельскохозяйственная академия, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.26897/978-5-9675-1762-4-2020-118.

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The agro-landscape and ecological zoning of the East Siberian natural and economic region has been developed. A map, legend to the map, classification of natural forage lands and classification of deer pastures have been compiled. A detailed description of all 136 designated zoning units (zones, mountain territories, provinces, districts) is given.
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Reports on the topic "Eastern Classification"

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Kovalchik, Bernard L., and Rodrick R. Clausnitzer. Classification and management of aquatic, riparian, and wetland sites on the national forests of eastern Washington: series description. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.2737/pnw-gtr-593.

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Levi, Brittany E. Choledochal Cysts: In Brief with Dr. Alexander Bondoc. Stay Current, May 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.47465/sc1.

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Choledochal cysts are a core pathology in pediatric surgery, affecting 1/100,000 live births in the western world, and 1/13,000 in eastern asia. These cysts are classified by the Todani classification, types I-V, in respect to their location and underlying pathophysiology. Infants and children presenting with stigmata of biliary disease should undergo evaluation for choledocal cyst. Workup includes axial imaging, ultrasonography, and laboratory investigation. A liver biopsy is necessary in neonates and newborns to rule out cystic biliary atresia, which would require further evaluation and management. Large choledochal cysts may be visualized on prenatal ultrasound, and warrant referral to a fetal care center for postnatal work up and monitoring. Management of choledochal cysts is dependent on the anatomic variant and spans from ERCP with sphincterotomy, to cyst excision with ductal and alimentary tract reconstruction. Type V choledochal cysts may require liver transplantation. Long term follow up is required due to an enhanced risk of future malignancy, even after resection.
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Levi, Brittany E., Rodrigo G. Gerardo, Alexander J. Bondoc, Rachel E. Hanke, Chandler Gibson, Ellen M. Encisco, and Todd A. Ponsky. Choledochal Cysts: In Brief with Dr. Alexander Bondoc. Stay Current, May 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.47465/sc00001.

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Choledochal cysts are a core pathology in pediatric surgery, affecting 1/100,000 live births in the western world, and 1/13,000 in eastern asia. These cysts are classified by the Todani classification, types I-V, in respect to their location and underlying pathophysiology. Infants and children presenting with stigmata of biliary disease should undergo evaluation for choledocal cyst. Workup includes axial imaging, ultrasonography, and laboratory investigation. A liver biopsy is necessary in neonates and newborns to rule out cystic biliary atresia, which would require further evaluation and management. Large choledochal cysts may be visualized on prenatal ultrasound, and warrant referral to a fetal care center for postnatal work up and monitoring. Management of choledochal cysts is dependent on the anatomic variant and spans from ERCP with sphincterotomy, to cyst excision with ductal and alimentary tract reconstruction. Type V choledochal cysts may require liver transplantation. Long term follow up is required due to an enhanced risk of future malignancy, even after resection.
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Evaluation of coal-mining impacts using numerical classification of benthic invertebrate data from streams draining a heavily mined basin in eastern Tennessee. US Geological Survey, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.3133/wri854289.

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