Academic literature on the topic 'Maps'

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Journal articles on the topic "Maps"

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Brugg, B., and A. Matus. "PC12 cells express juvenile microtubule-associated proteins during nerve growth factor-induced neurite outgrowth." Journal of Cell Biology 107, no. 2 (August 1, 1988): 643–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.107.2.643.

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Microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) are believed to play an important role in regulating the growth of neuronal processes. The nerve growth factor-induced differentiation of PC12 pheochromocytoma cells is a widely used tissue culture model for studying this mechanism. We have found that contrary to previous suggestions, the major MAPs of adult brain, MAP1 and MAP2, are minor components of PC12 cells. Instead two novel MAPs characteristic of developing brain, MAP3 and MAP5, are present and increase more than 10-fold after nerve growth factor treatment; the timing of these increases coinciding with the bundling of microtubules and neurite outgrowth. Immunocytochemical staining showed that MAP3 and MAP5 are initially distributed throughout the cytoplasm. Subsequently MAP5 becomes associated with microtubules in both neurites and growth cones but MAP3 distribution remained diffuse. Thus MAP3 and MAP5, which are characteristic of developing neurons in the juvenile brain, are also induced in PC12 cells during neurite outgrowth in culture. In contrast MAP1, which is characteristic of mature neurons, does not increase during PC12 cell differentiation. These results provide evidence that one set of MAPs is expressed during neurite outgrowth and a different set during the maintenance of neuronal form. It also appears that the PC12 system is an appropriate model for studying the active neurite growth phase of neuronal differentiation but not for neuronal maturation.
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O’Shea, Donald C. "Of Macs and Maps." Optical Engineering 48, no. 5 (May 1, 2009): 050101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/1.3127130.

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Febriyantiningrum, Kuntum, Sriwulan Sriwulan, and Nia Nurfitria. "Karakterisasi Bakteri Rhizosfer Putri Malu (Mimosa pudica) yang Berpotensi sebagai Dekomposer dalam Pembuatan Biourin." Bioscientist : Jurnal Ilmiah Biologi 11, no. 2 (December 30, 2023): 1239. http://dx.doi.org/10.33394/bioscientist.v11i2.8986.

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This research aims to determine the characterization of the rhizosphere bacteria of the roots of Mimosa pudica in its contribution as a decomposer agent that will be used in making of biourine. The research held in June-August 2023, was carried out in several stages, like the preparation stage, the bacterial isolation stage, and observing the macroscopic and microscopic characteristics of the bacteria. The results of the macroscopic and microscopic characteristics obtained during the observations showed that the isolates in the MOL of the roots of Mimosa pudica resembled the characteristics of bacteria from the genera Bacillus (MAP6), Rhizobium (MAP4), Pseudomonas (MAP1, MAP2, MAP3, MAP5, and MAP8), and Klebsiella (MAP7). These four genera are types of soil bacteria that are capable of producing plant hormones that can speed up the process of nutrients absorption and breakdown of organic material in the soil optimally.
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Brandt, D. Scott. "Of Road Maps, Treasure Maps, Weather Maps, and Exploration." Academic and Library Computing 8, no. 9 (April 1991): 5–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/eb027460.

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Fernandes, Wellington De Oliveira, Felipe Garcia Passos, Jéssica Cerqueira dos Santos, and Marcelo Nunes Pacheco. "Quebrada maps, mobilizando mapas críticos e participativos." Giramundo: Revista de Geografia do Colégio Pedro II 4, no. 8 (June 5, 2020): 65. http://dx.doi.org/10.33025/grgcp2.v4i8.2561.

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Urakawa, Hajime. "Harmonic Maps and Biharmonic Maps." Symmetry 7, no. 2 (May 12, 2015): 651–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/sym7020651.

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Bjørn, Axelsen, and Jones Michael. "Are all maps mental maps?" GeoJournal 14, no. 4 (June 1987): 447–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf02602720.

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Chapin, S. J., and J. C. Bulinski. "Non-neuronal 210 × 10(3) Mr microtubule-associated protein (MAP4) contains a domain homologous to the microtubule-binding domains of neuronal MAP2 and tau." Journal of Cell Science 98, no. 1 (January 1, 1991): 27–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jcs.98.1.27.

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A polyclonal antiserum raised against a HeLa cell microtubule-associated protein of Mr 210,000 (210 kD MAP or MAP4), an abundant non-neuronal MAP, was used to isolate cDNA clones encoding MAP4 from a human fetal brain lambda gt11 cDNA expression library. The largest of these clones, pMAP4.245, contains an insert of 4.1 kb and encodes a 245 kD beta-galactosidase fusion protein. Evidence that pMAP4.245 encodes MAP4 sequences includes immunoabsorption of MAP4 antibodies with the pMAP4.245 fusion protein, as well as identity of protein sequences obtained from HeLa 210 kD MAP4 with amino acid sequences encoded by pMAP4.245. The MAP4.245 cDNA hybridizes to several large (approximately 6–9 kb) transcripts on Northern blots of HeLa cell RNA. DNA sequencing of overlapping MAP4 cDNA clones revealed a long open reading frame containing a C-terminal region with three imperfect 18-amino acid repeats; this region is homologous to a motif present in the microtubule (MT)-binding domain of two prominent neuronal MAPs, MAP2 and tau. The pMAP4.245 sequence also encoded a series of unrelated repeats, located in the MAP's projection domain, N-terminal to the MT-binding domain. MAP4.245 fusion proteins bound to MTs in vitro, while fusion proteins that contained only the projection domain repeats failed to bind specifically to MTs. Thus, the major human non-neuronal MAP resembles two neuronal MAPs in its MT-binding domain, while most of the molecule has sequences, and presumably functions, distinct from those of the neuronal MAPs.
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Aciole, Douglas de Souza Braga, Anne Albuquerque Filgueira, Thiago Jesus da Silva Xavier, Guilherme Marques Da Cunha, Maria Tereza Mendes Vieira, Ruann Ramires Nunes Paiva, Roberto Lima Santos, and Elineí Araújo-de-Almeida. "Enfoques aos mapas conceituais e ao esqueleto de mapa na aprendizagem sobre biodiversidade / Approaches to concept maps and skeleton concept maps in biodiversity learning." Brazilian Journal of Development 7, no. 12 (December 29, 2021): 116880–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.34117/bjdv7n12-443.

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Barua, Rajeev, Walter Lee, Saman Amarasinghe, and Anant Agarwal. "Maps." ACM SIGARCH Computer Architecture News 27, no. 2 (May 1999): 4–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/307338.300980.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Maps"

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Angelsberg, Gilles. "Biharmonic maps /." Zürich : ETH, 2007. http://e-collection.ethbib.ethz.ch/show?type=diss&nr=17187.

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Lamm, Tobias. "Biharmonic maps." [S.l. : s.n.], 2005. http://deposit.ddb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?idn=974969281.

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Manhart, Samuel H. "OLD MAPS." Fogler Library, University of Maine, 2002. http://www.library.umaine.edu/theses/pdf/ManhartSH2002.pdf.

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Carlson, Erik. "Audio Maps." Thesis, Linköpings universitet, Institutionen för teknik och naturvetenskap, 2007. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-96206.

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In most modern computer games, ambient soundtracks are used to enhance the immersive quality of the game. These ambient tracks are often simply stereo samples playing on repeat for as long as the player's avatar is within a simply specified – for example, within a given distance – area in the game world. This kind of ambient sound provides only the crudest form of navigational information – whether the player avatar is inside or outside the ambient source's area of effect. This thesis discusses the idea and implementation of a system that allows for arbitrarily shaped areas of effect by using painted maps. The source fields are generated from the maps in order to emulate directionality and distribution of the ambient sound. In addition, the implementation should also take the height map of the game terrain into account, and change the behaviour of the source fields accordingly. The implementation uses the OpenAL interface to position point audio sources, according to the calculations based on the input maps, for the audio output. Two different approaches to point source positioning were examined; the grid layout, where the point sources were positioned uniformly around the avatar, and the dynamic sector approach, in which the positioning depends on how big a circle sector the source field describes as seen from the avatar position. The terrain interaction uses a ray-tracing algorithm that “crawls” over the landscape to find the shortest possible straight path from avatar to source over the terrain. In the current version of the implementation, a simple intensity modification accounts for the terrain impact on sound propagation.
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Anand, Christopher Kumar. "Harmonic maps." Thesis, McGill University, 1990. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=59558.

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After a brief introduction, we consider three main results in the existence theory of harmonic maps between manifolds. The first is the heat-equation proof of Eells and Sampson, which says that minimal harmonic maps of compact manifolds into compact manifolds with nonpositive curvature always exist. The next two results show they exist among maps of compact Riemann surfaces into compact manifolds, N, with $ pi sb2$(N) = 0. One proof uses the induced $ pi sb1$-action of Schoen and Yau; the other a perturbation of the action due to Sacks and Uhlenbeck. As required, we also develop some of the regularity theory, especially that for surfaces.
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Falcão, Renato Pinto de Queiroz. "Reasoning Maps." Florianópolis, SC, 2003. http://repositorio.ufsc.br/xmlui/handle/123456789/84814.

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Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro Tecnológico. Programa de Pós-Graduação em Engenharia de Produção.
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Esta dissertação apresenta uma ferramenta de apoio à decisão, baseada na Metodologia Multicritérios de Apoio à Decisão - MCDA, através do desenvolvimento de um software denominado Reasoning Maps. O software permite, de maneira integrada, a construção de mapas cognitivos, suas diversas análises topológicas e o cadastramento e análise de alternativas. Aborda um estudo de caso procurando demonstrar os recursos utilizados na criação, inicialmente, de um mapa cognitivo conciso, os diversos tipos de análises topológicas - caminhos, clusters e análise concisa, que corresponde à análise das causalidades entre conceitos do mapa. Evidencia a transformação do mapa conciso em um mapa difuso através da modelização dos graus de influência percebida pelo tomador de decisão. Procede com a entrada de medidores de performance (descritores), utilizados como parâmetro de avaliação de alternativas. Elabora o cadastro e a análise das alternativas utilizando os operadores fuzzy: Máximo, Média Ponderada, Mediana e Agregação Linear como suporte para efetivação dos cálculos. Gera relatórios das análises em tela e impressos. Permite ao decisor conhecer melhor o ambiente decisório e melhorar o nível de avaliação das alternativas. Formula conclusões e faz sugestões visando o aperfeiçoamento do estudo, no encerramento do texto. Um estudo de caso foi empregado para teste do software em uma situação real de apoio à decisão e é também descrito ao longo da dissertação.
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Vassoler, Geraldo Angelo. "MERGE MAPS : um mecanismo computacional para mesclagem de mapas conceituais." reponame:Repositório Institucional da UFES, 2014. http://repositorio.ufes.br/handle/10/2000.

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Mapas Conceituais são representações gráficas do conhecimento acerca de um dado domínio frequentemente utilizadas em abordagens pedagógicas com finalidade de promover aprendizagens significativas e de representar e organizar um conjunto de significados em uma estrutura proposicional. Nesse processo de aprendizagem, os mapas conceituais podem ser considerados como meios para identificar conceitos e seus significados, dando origem ao conhecimento de forma explícita. Porém, o acompanhamento desse aprendizado é realizado de forma lenta e individual, no qual num contexto coletivo, não se pode mensurar o conhecimento de uma turma em um dado conhecimento. Esta dissertação propõe uma abordagem focada na importância da mesclagem de mapas conceituais e suas implicações no acompanhamento e na avaliação de desempenho de turmas em contextos gerais. Uma solução computacional foi desenvolvida para realizar automaticamente a mesclagem, a fim de promover uma melhor avaliação coletiva por parte dos docentes.
Concept maps are graphical representations of knowledge about a given domain often used in pedagogical approaches with the purpose of promoting meaningful learning and to represent and organize a set of meanings in a propositional framework. In this learning process, concept maps can be considered as a means to identify concepts and their meanings, giving rise to knowledge explicitly. However, monitoring of this learning is performed slowly and individually, in which a collective context, one cannot measure knowledge of a class in a given knowledge. This dissertation proposes a focus on the importance of the fusion of concept maps and their implications in monitoring and evaluating the performance of groups in general contexts approach. A computational solution is designed to automatically perform the merger in order to promote a better collective assessment by teachers. Keywords: Concept maps, merging of maps, assessment of Learning e WordNet.
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VASSOLER, G. A. "MERGE MAPS Um Mecanismo Computacional para Fusão de Mapas Conceituais." Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo, 2014. http://repositorio.ufes.br/handle/10/4265.

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Mapas Conceituais são representações gráficas do conhecimento acerca de um dado domínio freqüentemente utilizadas em abordagens pedagógicas com finalidade de promover aprendizagens significativas. Nesta pesquisa é discutida a importância da fusão de mapas conceituais e suas implicações no acompanhamento e na avaliação de desempenho de turmas em contextos gerais. Uma ferramenta computacional é modelada (MERGE MAPS) e uma prova de conceito é apresentada. Espera-se que, quando se trata de um mesmo domínio de conhecimento, ocorram diversas repetições de conceitos e relações presentes nas versões individualizadas dos mapas, mesmo que representados por meio de sinônimos. Portanto, no processo de fusão deve-se prever e identificar a ocorrência desses fatos. Tal informação pode ser valiosa para o docente pois esses conceitos e relações que se repetem nas diversas versões individualizadas dos mapas podem ser considerados como representações do conhecimento médio da turma, sendo esse um dos fatores que tornam a fusão um serviço relevante para os mapas conceituais. O conhecimento médio da turma pode apontar para o docente, por exemplo, em que grau está o entendimento geral de uma turma dos assuntos que estão sendo trabalhados em sala de aula. Permite identificar, também, aqueles conceitos ainda não formalizados pelos discentes, indicando assim que precisam ser melhor explorados. A fusão de diferentes mapas permite ainda obter uma descrição mais precisa de um determinado domínio de conhecimento. Diferentes textos podem ser descritos por meio de mapas.
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Van, Horn R. Brooks III. "Procedural Reduction Maps." Diss., Georgia Institute of Technology, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/14484.

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Procedural textures and image textures are commonplace in graphics today, finding uses in such places as animated movies and video games. Unlike image texture maps, procedural textures typically suffer from minification aliasing. I present a method that, given a procedural texture on a surface, automatically creates an anti-aliased version of the procedural texture. The new procedural texture maintains the original textures details, but reduces minification aliasing artifacts. This new algorithm creates an image pyramid similar to MIP-Maps to represent the texture. Whereas a MIP-Map stores per-texel color, however, my texture hierarchy stores weighted sums of reflectance functions, allowing a wider-range of effects to be anti-aliased. The stored reflectance functions are automatically selected based on an analysis of the different functions found over the surface. When the texture is viewed at close range, the original texture is used, but as the texture footprint grows, the algorithm gradually replaces the textures result with an anti-aliased one. This results in faster development time for writing procedural textures as well as higher visual fidelity and faster rendering. With the optional addition of authoring guidelines, the analysis phase can be sped up by as much as two orders of magnitude. Furthermore, I developed a method for handling pre-filtered integration of reflectance functions to anti-alias specular highlights. The normal-centric BRDF (NBRDF) allows for fast evaluation over a range of normals appearing on the surface of an object. The NBRDF is easy to implement on the GPU for real-time results and can be combined with procedural reduction maps for real-time procedural texture minification anti-aliasing.
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Ray, Gourab. "Hyperbolic random maps." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/48417.

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Random planar maps have been an object of utmost interest over the last decade and half since the pioneering works of Benjamini and Schramm, Angel and Schramm and Chassaing and Schaeffer. These maps serve as models of random surfaces, the study of which is very important with motivations from physics, combinatorics and random geometry. Uniform infinite planar maps, introduced by Angel and Schramm, which are obtained as local limits of uniform finite maps embedded in the sphere, serve as a very important discrete model of infinite random surfaces. Recently, there has been growing interest to create and understand hyperbolic versions of such uniform infinite maps and several conjectures and proposed models have been around for some time. In this thesis, we mainly address these questions from several viewpoints and gather evidence of their existence and nature. The thesis can be broadly divided into two parts. The first part is concerned with half planar maps (maps embedded in the upper half plane) which enjoy a certain domain Markov property. This is reminiscent of that of the SLE curves. Chapters 2 and 3 are mainly concerned with classi cation of such maps and their study, with a special focus on triangulations. The second part concerns investigating unicellular maps or maps with one face embedded in a high genus surface. Unicellular maps are generalizations of trees in higher genera. The main motivation is that investigating such maps will shed some light into understanding the local limit of general maps via some well-known bijective techniques. We obtain certain information about the large scale geometry of such maps in Chapter 4 and about the local limit of such maps in Chapter 5.
Science, Faculty of
Mathematics, Department of
Graduate
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Books on the topic "Maps"

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map, Ordnance Survey. Index: Pathfinder maps, Outdoor Leisure maps, Explorer maps, Landranger maps. Southampton: Ordnance Survey, 1995.

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Mapas Y Planos (Maps, Maps, Maps). Rosen Publishing Group, 2009.

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Mapas Y Planos (Maps, Maps, Maps). Rosen Publishing Group, 2009.

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Maps, Maps, Maps! Capstone, 2013.

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Maps, maps, maps. New York, N.Y: Rosen Classroom Books and Materials, 2002.

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Maps, Maps, Maps. Rosen Publishing Group, 2009.

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Maps, Maps, Maps. Rosen Publishing Group, 2006.

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Boswell, Kelly. Maps, Maps, Maps! Capstone, 2013.

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Maps, Maps, Maps! 2014.

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Maps, Maps, Maps! Capstone, 2013.

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Book chapters on the topic "Maps"

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Chakravarthy, V. Srinivasa. "Maps, Maps Everywhere." In Demystifying the Brain, 141–68. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-3320-0_6.

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Rössler, Otto E., and Christophe Letellier. "Maps." In Chaos, 107–16. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-44305-4_8.

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Pinion, F. B. "Maps." In A Thomas Hardy Dictionary, 311–22. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-09136-2_27.

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Trautschold, Martin, and Gary Mazo. "Maps." In iPad Made Simple, 377–97. Berkeley, CA: Apress, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4302-3130-1_18.

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Trautschold, Martin, and Gary Mazo. "Maps." In iPhone 4 Made Simple, 553–71. Berkeley, CA: Apress, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4302-3193-6_24.

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Trautschold, Martin, and Gary Mazo. "Maps." In iPad 2 Made Simple, 635–57. Berkeley, CA: Apress, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4302-3498-2_29.

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Trautschold, Martin, Rene Ritchie, and Gary Mazo. "Maps." In iPhone 4S Made Simple, 485–504. Berkeley, CA: Apress, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4302-3588-0_23.

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Rahlf, Thomas. "Maps." In Data Visualisation with R, 327–83. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-28444-2_10.

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Rahlf, Thomas. "Maps." In Data Visualisation with R, 305–51. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-49751-8_10.

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Zukowski, John. "Maps." In Java™ Collections, 183–209. Berkeley, CA: Apress, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4302-0854-9_10.

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Conference papers on the topic "Maps"

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Ceng, J., J. Castrillon, W. Sheng, H. Scharwächter, R. Leupers, G. Ascheid, H. Meyr, T. Isshiki, and H. Kunieda. "MAPS." In the 45th annual conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1391469.1391663.

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Edwards, John D. M., and Chris Hand. "MaPS." In the second symposium. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/253437.253460.

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"Maps." In 2012 IEEE Aerospace Conference. IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/aero.2012.6186988.

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Berberich, Klaus, Manolis Koubarakis, Christos Tryfonopoulos, Gerhard Weikum, and Christian Zimmer. "MAPS." In the 1st international workshop. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1169067.1169069.

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"Maps." In 2010 IEEE Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits Symposium. IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/rfic.2010.5477328.

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Wang, Jinbu, and Brian Y. Chen. "MAPS." In BCB '18: 9th ACM International Conference on Bioinformatics, Computational Biology and Health Informatics. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3233547.3233710.

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Baral, Ramesh, and Tao Li. "MAPS." In RecSys '16: Tenth ACM Conference on Recommender Systems. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2959100.2959187.

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Gurary, Jonathan, Ye Zhu, George Corser, Jared Oluoch, Nahed Alnahash, and Huirong Fu. "MAPS." In the 2015 International Conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2817721.2823479.

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Kumar, Deepak, M. N. Anil Prasad, and A. G. Ramakrishnan. "MAPS." In the Eighth Indian Conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2425333.2425348.

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Carmien, Stefan. "MAPS." In Extended abstracts of the 2004 conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/985921.985974.

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Reports on the topic "Maps"

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White, Howard. Evidence and gap maps: Using maps to support evidence-based development. Centre of Excellence for Development Impact and Learning (CEDIL), November 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.51744/cmb6.

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Evidence mapping began in the early 2000s and has taken off in the last ten years, notably with the innovation of an online interactive visual Evidence and Gap Map by the International Initiative for Impact Evaluation (3ie) and the different types of maps produced by the Campbell Collaboration. In the CEDIL Methods brief, ‘Evidence and gap maps: Using maps to support evidence-based development’, Howard White, Research Director, CEDIL, describes what evidence and gap maps are, what sort of evidence is being mapped, and the various ways in which these maps are being used and how you can commission one.
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2

Nowosad, Jakub. Making Beautiful And Effective Maps In R. Instats Inc., 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.61700/jjmsseyi5ywsn469.

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The aim of the course is to show you how to use R to make pretty, yet appealing maps using the R programming language. Several R packages related to spatial data processing and visualization will be introduced during the course. The course will teach you how create publication-ready static maps, animated maps, interactive maps, and simple map applications using a mixture of lectures and computer exercises. An official Instats certificate of completion is provided at the conclusion of the seminar, and European PhD students receive 1.5 ECTS Equivalent points.
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3

Soramäki, Kimmo. Financial Cartography. FNA, October 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.69701/ertx8007.

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Geographic maps have been of military and economic importance throughout the ages. Rulers have commissioned maps to control the financial, economic, political, and military aspects of their sovereign entities. Large scale projects like the Ordnance Survey in the UK in the late 18th century, and the Lewis and Clark Expedition a few decades later to map the American West, are early examples of trailblazing efforts to create accurate modern maps of high strategic importance. Digitalization, globalization, and a larger urban and educated workforce necessitate a new understanding of the world, beyond traditional maps based on geographic features. Many of today's most critical threats know no geographic borders. For instance, cyber attacks can be orchestrated through globally distributed bot networks; just-in-time manufacturing relies on the free flow of goods across jurisdictions; global markets and the infrastructures that support them relay information and price signals globally within seconds. A lack of understanding financial interdependencies was clearly demonstrated by the freezing of credit markets in the last financial crisis and the uncertainty created by Brexit. Ten years after the financial crisis, we are still only beginning to map, model and visualise these critical maps of the financial world. We call for attention to work on a large scale project of "Financial Cartography" to address this gap. In financial cartography, we replace geographic proximity with logical proximity, such as financial interdependence, similarity (e.g., of portfolio or income streams), a flow of transactions or a magnitude of exposures. Similar to geographic maps, financial maps will find many important uses across business, government and military domains. Critically, they are needed for protection and projection of state power, for optimizing and managing risks in business, and in making policy decisions related to the major challenges of climate change, mass migration and geopolitical instability. Fundamentally, cartography is a way that reality can be modeled to communicate information on “big data” sets. Cartography allows one to simplify and reduce the complexity of the data to highlight salient features of the data, and to filter out noise. This makes maps ideal devices to increase the bandwidth by which information can be communicated to its users, for making quick decision based on complex data. In the following pages, we make a case and provide starting points for a research agenda around "Financial Cartography" in three interrelated parts: Maps of Trade Networks Maps of Financial Markets and Maps of Financial Market Infrastructures
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4

Lawley, C. J. M., P. Giddy, L. Katz, N. Chu, A. Francis, J. Carvajal, M. Pinheiro, et al. Canada geological map compilation. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/pf995j5tgu.

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The Canada Geological Map Compilation (CGMC) is a database of previously published bedrock geological maps sourced from provincial, territorial, and other geological survey organizations. The geoscientific information included within these source geological maps was standardized, translated to English, and combined to provide complete coverage of Canada and support a range of down-stream machine learning applications. Detailed lithological, mineralogical, metamorphic, lithostratigraphic, and lithodemic information was not previously available as one national-scale product. The source map data was also enhanced by correcting geometry errors and through the application of a new hierarchical generalized lithology classification scheme to subdivide the original rocks types into 35 classes. Each generalized lithology is associated with a semi-quantitative measure of classification uncertainty. Lithostratigraphic and lithodemic names included within the source maps were matched with the Lexicon of Canadian Geological Names (Weblex) wherever possible and natural language processing was used to transform all of the available text-based information into word tokens. Overlapping map polygons and boundary artifacts across political boundaries were not addressed as part of this study. As a result, the CGMC is a patchwork of overlapping bedrock geological maps with varying scale (1:30,000-1:5,000,000), publication year (1996-2023), and reliability. Preferred geological and geochronological maps of Canada are presented as geospatial rasters based on the best available geoscientific information extracted from these overlapping polygons for each map pixel. New higher resolution geological maps will be added over time to fill data gaps and to update geoscientific information for future applications of the CGMC.
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5

Lawley, C. J. M., P. Giddy, L. Katz, N. Chu, A. Francis, J. Carvajal, M. Pinheiro, et al. Canada geological map compilation. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/332596.

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The Canada Geological Map Compilation (CGMC) is a database of previously published bedrock geological maps sourced from provincial, territorial, and other geological survey organizations. The geoscientific information included within these source geological maps was standardized, translated to English, and combined to provide complete coverage of Canada and support a range of down-stream machine learning applications. Detailed lithological, mineralogical, metamorphic, lithostratigraphic, and lithodemic information was not previously available as one national-scale product. The source map data was also enhanced by correcting geometry errors and through the application of a new hierarchical generalized lithology classification scheme to subdivide the original rocks types into 35 classes. Each generalized lithology is associated with a semi-quantitative measure of classification uncertainty. Lithostratigraphic and lithodemic names included within the source maps were matched with the Lexicon of Canadian Geological Names (Weblex) wherever possible and natural language processing was used to transform all of the available text-based information into word tokens. Overlapping map polygons and boundary artifacts across political boundaries were not addressed as part of this study. As a result, the CGMC is a patchwork of overlapping bedrock geological maps with varying scale (1:30,000-1:5,000,000), publication year (1996-2023), and reliability. Preferred geological and geochronological maps of Canada are presented as geospatial rasters based on the best available geoscientific information extracted from these overlapping polygons for each map pixel. New higher resolution geological maps will be added over time to fill data gaps and to update geoscientific information for future applications of the CGMC.
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6

Kerr, D. E., A. Plouffe, J. E. Campbell, and I. McMartin. Status of surficial geology mapping in the North. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/330334.

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The GEM program has facilitated the availability of new and converted surficial geology maps and associated digital datasets for large sectors of northern Canada, leading to about 70% of the north being mapped and digitally available. Development of the Surficial Data Model (SDM) and Canadian Geoscience Map (CGM) series have streamlined the publication process and created a common standard digital map format and geodatabase. Based on traditional and more recent remote predictive mapping methodologies, there are now three types of surficial geology CGM maps produced: Surficial Geology, Reconnaissance Surficial Geology, and Predictive Surficial Geology. The considerable number of new surficial geology maps published during GEM-1 and GEM-2, as well as upcoming map publications, has resulted in an increase of 12% map coverage north of 60?, constituting a significant and lasting legacy of the GEM Program.
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7

Kerr, D. E., A. Plouffe, J E Campbell, and I. McMartin. Status of surficial geology mapping in northern Canada. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/331420.

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The Geo-mapping for Energy and Minerals (GEM) program has facilitated the availability of new and converted surficial geology maps and associated digital data sets for large sectors of northern Canada, leading to about 70% of the North being mapped and digitally available. Development of the Surficial Data Model and Canadian Geoscience Map (CGM) series has streamlined the publication process and created a common standard digital-map format and geodatabase. Based on traditional and more recent remote predictive mapping methodologies, there are now three types of surficial geology CGM maps produced: surficial geology, reconnaissance surficial geology, and predictive surficial geology. The considerable number of new surficial geology maps published during the two phases of the GEM program, as well as upcoming map publications, has resulted in an increase of 12% in map coverage north of 60°, constituting a significant legacy of the GEM program.
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8

Athey, J. E. Using geologic maps. Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys, March 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.14509/15754.

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9

Connell, Sean D. Geologic map of the Albuquerque - Rio Rancho metropolitan area and vicinity, Bernalillo and Sandoval counties, New Mexico. New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.58799/gm-78.

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This is the most comprehensive compilation of the geology of the Albuquerque Basin to be printed in 30 years. The area covered by this new compilation, though not as large as the earlier map, is presented at a scale nearly four times the detail (1:50,000 scale compared to the earlier map's 1:190,000 scale). This new geologic map is a compilation of sixteen 7.5-min USGS quadrangle maps and encompasses an area from Tijeras Arroyo on the south to Santa Ana Mesa north of Santa Ana and San Felipe Pueblos, and from the crest of the Sandia Mountains westward across the Rio Grande and onto the Llano de Albuquerque (West Mesa) west of the city limits of Albuquerque and Rio Rancho.This geologic map graphically displays information on the distribution, character, orientation, and stratigraphic relationships of rock and surficial units and structural features. The map and accompanying cross sections were compiled from geologic field mapping and additionally from available aerial photography, satellite imagery, and drill-hole data (many published and unpublished reports, examination of lithologic cuttings, and from the interpretation of borehole geophysical log data).The map and accompanying cross sections represent the most informed interpretations of the known faults in the Albuquerque-Rio Rancho area that are presently available. In addition to the positions of many faults, the cross sections show the approximate vertical extent of poorly consolidated earth materials that may pose liquefaction hazards. This map also contains derivative maps selected to portray geologically important features in the metropolitan area, such as elevations of ground water levels, and the mostly buried boundary between generally poorly consolidated and saturated aquifer materials and the more consolidated underlying materials. The gravity anomaly map is a geophysical dataset that shows major geological structures buried beneath the metropolitan area and vicinity.
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10

Katzir, Nurit, Rafael Perl-Treves, and Jack E. Staub. Map Merging and Homology Studies in Cucumis Species. United States Department of Agriculture, September 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.32747/2000.7575276.bard.

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List of original objectives (1) Construct a saturated map of melon, using RFLP, SSR, RAPD and Inter-SSR genetic markers. (2) Study the homology between the genomes of cucumber and melon. (3) Add to the Cucumis map, biologically important genes that had been cloned in other plant systems. Background Cucumber and melon are important vegetable crops in Israel and the US. Genome analysis of these crops has lagged behind the major plant crops, but in the last few years genetic maps with molecular markers have been developed. The groups that participated in this program were all involved in initial mapping of cucurbit crops. This grant was meant to contribute to this trend and promote some of the more advanced applications of genome analysis, i.e., map saturation and comparative mapping between cucurbit species. Major achievements The main achievements of the research were (a) the construction of melon maps that include important horticultural traits and Resistance Gene Homologues, (b) the development of approximately 200 SSR markers of melon and cucumber, (c) the preliminary map merging of melon maps and of comparative mapping between melon and cucumber. Implications As a result of this program, we have a good estimate of the applicability of different types or markers developed in one cucurbit species to genetic mapping in other species. Since the linkage groups of melon and cucumber can now be related to each other, future identification of important genes in the two crops will be facilitated. Moreover, the further saturation of the maps with additional markers will now allow us to target several disease resistance loci, horticultural traits for marker-assisted selection, fine mapping and positional cloning.
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