Books on the topic 'Estimation de la direction du regard'

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1

1976-, Gokeda Gopal, and Yu Yiqiang, eds. Introduction to direction-of-arrival estimation. Boston: Artech House, 2010.

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2

1962-, Chandran Sathish, ed. Advances in direction-of-arrival estimation. Boston: Artech House, 2005.

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3

Benjamin, Friedlander, Knovel (Firm), and ScienceDirect (Online service), eds. Classical and modern direction-of-arrival estimation. Amsterdam: Academic Press/Elsevier, 2009.

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4

Foutz, Jeffrey, Andreas Spanias, and Mahesh K. Banavar. Narrowband Direction of Arrival Estimation for Antenna Arrays. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-01537-3.

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5

Dey, Nilanjan, and Amira S. Ashour. Direction of Arrival Estimation and Localization of Multi-Speech Sources. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-73059-2.

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6

Bolt, Daniel. Estimation of item dimensional measurement direction using conditional covariance patterns. Newtown, PA: Law School Admission Council, 2002.

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7

National Research Council (U.S.). Committee for Determination of the State of the Practice in Metropolitan Area Travel Forecasting., ed. Metropolitan travel forecasting: Current practice and future direction. Washington, D.C: Transportation Research Board, 2007.

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8

Fund, International Monetary, ed. Improving the estimation methodology of monthly data in direction of trade statistics. Washington, D.C: International Monetary Fund, 1994.

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9

Lau, Chun Kit Edwin. Minimum norm mutual coupling compensation with applications in matrix pencil direction of arrival estimation. Ottawa: National Library of Canada, 2003.

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10

Un regard qui te fracasse: Propos sur le théâtre et la mise en scène. Montréal, Quebec: Boréal, 2014.

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11

Didier, Mouchel, Maison des arts de la ville d'Evreux., and Musée d'Evreux, eds. Portraits d'arbres: Henri Gadeau de Kerville au regard de la photographie contemporaine / sous la direction de Didier Mouchel. [Cherbourg]: Point du jour, 2004.

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12

Hop!: Un regard pragmatique sur la direction que prend la vie : 365 exemples prouvant que c'est maintenant que nous vivons le mieux. Varennes, Québec: Éditions AdA, 2012.

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13

Burke, Andrew E. The demand for vinylite record albums: Time series estimation of a product group in the presence of product differentiation innovation. Dublin: University College Dublin, Department of Economics, 1992.

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14

1944-, Hébert Raymond, Théberge Raymond, Beaudoin Gérald A. 1929-, Collège universitaire de Saint-Boniface, Société franco-manitobaine, and Chambre de commerce francophone de Saint-Boniface., eds. Canada--horizons 2000 : un pays à la recherche de soi : regard prospectif sur le Canada du 21e siècle : actes du colloque tenu au Collège universitaire de Saint-Boniface les 7, 8 et 9 novembre 1996 =: Canada--horizons 2000 : re(defining) Canada : a prospective look at our country in the 21st century : proceedings of the Symposium held at the Collège universitaire de Saint-Boniface, November 7, 8 and 9, 1996 / sous la direction de = edited by Raymond-M. Hébert, Raymond Théberge ; [auteurs = authors, Gérald A. Beaudoin ... et al.]. Winnipeg, Man: Presses universitaires de Saint-Boniface, 1997.

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15

Advances in direction-of-arrival estimation. Boston, MA: Artech House, 2006.

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16

Classical and Modern Direction-of-Arrival Estimation. Elsevier, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/c2009-0-19135-3.

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17

Foutz, Jeffrey, Andreas Spanias, and Mahesh Banavar. Narrowband Direction of Arrival Estimation for Antenna Arrays. Morgan & Claypool Publishers, 2008.

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18

Foutz, Jeffrey, Andreas Spanias, and Mahesh Banavar. Narrowband Direction of Arrival Estimation for Antenna Arrays. Morgan & Claypool Publishers, 2008.

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19

Foutz, Jeffrey, Andreas Spanias, and Mahesh Banavar. Narrowband Direction of Arrival Estimation for Antenna Arrays. Springer International Publishing AG, 2008.

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20

Dey, Nilanjan, and Amira S. Ashour. Direction of Arrival Estimation and Localization of Multi-Speech Sources. Springer, 2017.

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21

Zou, Yongwei. Direction finding and carrier frequently estimation using the moving window operator. 1988.

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22

The Analysis of Sophisticated Direction of Arrival Estimation Methods in Passive Coherent Locators. Storming Media, 2002.

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23

Hazel, Joe Thomas 1924. Effect of Direction, Magnitude, and Duration of Body Tilt on Size Estimation with Varied Surround Conditions. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2021.

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24

Digital Techniques for Wideband Receivers. 2nd ed. SciTech Publishing, 2004.

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25

Digital Techniques for Wideband Receivers. Institution of Engineering & Technology, 2016.

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26

Gilad-Gutnick, Sharon, Rohan Varma, and Pawan Sinha. The Bogart Effect. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199794607.003.0089.

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While a geometry-based eye-gaze estimation strategy has been the basis of many theories regarding the direction of one’s gaze, such a strategy relies on relatively detailed curvature information and therefore functions suboptimally under low-resolution viewing conditions. Partly in response to this concern, the past decade has seen the rise of luminance-based theories of eye-gaze estimation. The idea of luminance-based estimation of gaze direction arose from the observation that contrast negation affects eye-gaze perception, and an early demonstration and possible explanation for this phenomenon was offered by Sinha and named the “Bogart effect.” The Bogart Effect is an illusion of perceived gaze reversal in contrast negated images. It provides clues regarding the heuristics the visual system uses to robustly estimate gaze in real-world settings. This chapter discusses this illusion and related concepts.
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27

Kende, Mathias. Conclusions. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198817611.003.0003.

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The Conclusion to this book confirms that the TPRM has functioned relatively well but that its performance could and should be improved in order for it to remain politically relevant. In this regard, this chapter provides some recommendations with regard to the objectives, the structure, and the respective participants of the TPRM. Each of these recommendations are tested against the background of the last (sixth) appraisal of the system (2016) whose results precede the upcoming Eleventh WTO Ministerial Conference in Buenos Aires (December 2017). The book concludes that some of the results of the last appraisal are a step into the good direction but that the WTO Membership will need to be more ambitious in order to keep the system relevant.
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28

Luccio, Riccardo. The Illusions of Numerosity. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199794607.003.0101.

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The illusions of numerosity can be broadly divided into two main categories (a) illusions of numerosity that can be observed in many classical illusions of linear or area extent just replacing the uninterrupted lines by rows of dots, or putting the elements to judge in the area, and (b) illusions in which the participants are clearly aware that the numbers of the elements to estimate are equal in two patterns, but despite this fact they judge that the elements in one pattern are “more” than in the other. Using a constant stimuli method both length/area and numerosity illusions move in the same direction, whereas using a magnitude estimation method the illusions disappear or move in opposite direction. All of this suggests the existence of at least two different cognitive mechanisms at the basis of this phenomenon.
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29

Rahat, Gideon, and Ofer Kenig. Party Change and Political Personalization. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198808008.003.0010.

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Scholars tend to see the relationship between parties and personalization as a zero-sum game: when one declines, the other is expected to rise. Yet, while scholars of political personalization regard party decline as the starting point of their story, for scholars of party change personalization is only one of the possible outcomes of party decline. These two perspectives are critically examined here. Then the chapter surveys Wattenberg’s works, the only scholar who accorded the two phenomena equal weight. Next the challenges encountered by this common representation of the relationship between party change and political personalization as a zero-sum game are examined. The chapter ends by reviewing the issue of the causal direction of this relationship.
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30

Bowles, Adam. Law during Emergencies. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198702603.003.0020.

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This chapter traces concepts underpinning āpaddharma (“law during emergencies”) from their earliest articulations in the Dharmaśāstras. It argues that “law during emergencies” first appears as a way to ameliorate problems arising when circumstances render normative occupations unviable. Therefore, the core principle of āpaddharma permits a conditional occupational mobility, typically in a socially downward direction. Later texts—particularly the Mānavadharmaśāstra and the Mahābhārata, in which the compound āpaddharma is first coined—develop and extend this concept into other areas, especially with regard to leviratic union and political violence. It is argued that the concept of āpaddharma serves to protect an individual from the social and transcendent consequences of being unable to follow normative standards of behavior.
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31

Dryzek, John S. 9. Changing People: Green Consciousness. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hepl/9780199696000.003.0009.

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This chapter examines a category of green radicalism that focuses on green consciousness. The stress on green consciousness means that the way people experience and regard the world in which they live, and each other, is the key to green change. Once consciousness has changed in an appropriate direction, then policies, social structures, institutions, and economic systems are expected to fall into place. This prioritization of consciousness is widespread in the green movement, among deep ecologists, bioregionalists, ecofeminists, ecotheologists, and lifestyle greens, among others. The chapter begins with a discussion of deep ecology, ecofeminism, bioregionalism, ecological citizenship, lifestyle greens, and ecotheology. It then considers romanticism, the discourse analysis of green consciousness, and the impact of green consciousness change. Finally, it highlights the challenges confronting green consciousness.
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32

Sreenivasan, Gopal. Acts, Agents, and the Definition of Virtue. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198808930.003.0013.

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This chapter discusses the direction of epistemological priority between traits and actions in the definition of virtue. Do we first identify a character trait as kind, say, and only then identify its characteristic expressions as kind acts? Or do we identify various acts as kind acts first, and only then identify the agents who perform them as kind agents? This chapter defends a modest agent-centered view: some kind acts can be identified as kind without reference to any kind agent, while other kind acts cannot be identified as kind except by identifying them as the characteristic expressions of a certain trait (kindness). Many proponents of virtue ethics are committed to a privileged role for agents in the definition of virtue; and they regard this commitment as making their enterprise distinctive. In preserving an indispensable role for virtuous agents in the identification of virtuous actions, the present argument vindicates their aspiration.
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33

Wen, Yun. The Huawei Model. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043437.001.0001.

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With the rise of China’s information and communications technology (ICT) sector, a number of Chinese high-tech firms are approaching transnational stages and shifting the center of gravity in global ICT markets. In the meantime, China’s digital economy has raised the debate with regard to the nature and direction of its developmental model. This book investigates Huawei Technologies—China’s most competitive high-tech company—as a microcosm of the rise of China’s corporate power and its evolving digital economy. Yun Wen first traces Huawei’s history against the backdrop of China’s ICT development and its outward expansion in global markets. Focusing on Huawei’s research and development strategies, she then delineates Huawei’s path to its cutting-edge technology and innovation leadership. Huawei’s distinct experience in the design of its ownership structure and labor practices is also examined in the book. By examining how Huawei’s growth intertwined with the trajectory of China’s ICT development and how it responded to various forces of corporate China’s globalization, this book sheds light on distinguishing features of the “Huawei model” and the geopolitical economic implications of China’s corporate globalization. It argues that the core of China’s pathbreaking model lies in local alternatives and indigenous agencies that have the ability to insist on a self-reliant, open-minded, and innovation-oriented developmental strategy.
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34

Mardis, Marcia A. The Collection’s at the Core. ABC-CLIO, LLC, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798400628382.

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Common Core standards, OER, STEM, and collection development―where to begin? This book investigates these critical topics together to give you the power to transform your collection and practice and put your school library at the center of STEM. Curricula that focus on Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) areas of study aren't just important for furthering competency and careers in these fields; STEM helps ensure that future generations include inventive and critical thinkers. Digital resources offer a current, exciting direction to involve school librarians with their STEM teachers. With its specific focus on open digital multimedia learning resources, this book will enable school librarians to take advantage of this opportunity and evaluate, build, and maintain their STEM collections. The book comprises three sections: an overview of policy initiatives; a thorough exploration of STEM education policy, digital materials, and collection considerations; and detailed explanations of strategies for collection development and promotion. You'll learn how to perform a collection analysis to determine the age and extent of your STEM collections and make priorities for enriching them with appropriate digital multimedia resources as well as how to classify resources using Dewey and Sears and with regard to the Common Core State Standards and the Next Generation Science Standards.
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35

Solomon, William. Theoretical Interlude. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252040245.003.0007.

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Lookout honey, ’cause I’m using technology Ain’t got no time to make no apology—The Stooges, “Search and Destroy”Walter Benjamin’s Depression-era reflections on the collective functions of modernist poetry and slapstick film, on the ways they both struggled to negotiate the psychosomatic impact of capitalist modernity, provide a strong model for grasping the utopian impulses structuring the phenomenon I have termed “slapstick modernism.” The strain of his thought that is most valuable in this regard is the one tending in the direction of an anthropological materialism. Particularly promising is the constellation of concepts that he was still in the process of elaborating at the end of his life: innervation, (corporeal) mimesis, second technology, and play. Holding these concepts together is the idea that affectively charged cultural practices may play a crucial role in fashioning an antifascist social body, one capable of adjusting to its technologically mediated environment. For Benjamin, literary modernism and silent comedy participated in the same general project: the historical mission or task they assigned themselves was to contribute to the construction of a collective agent that would be capable of determining its own future. If, as Miriam Hansen argues, Benjamin’s investment in film was not the result of a “futurist or constructivist enthusiasm for the machine-age,” but arose from his hope that the medium “might yet counter the devastating effects of humanity’s ‘bungled reception of technology,’ which had come to a head with World War I” (...
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