Books on the topic 'Metric mapping'

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1

Lin, Shou, and Ziqiu Yun. Generalized Metric Spaces and Mappings. Paris: Atlantis Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/978-94-6239-216-8.

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Hariri, Parisa, Riku Klén, and Matti Vuorinen. Conformally Invariant Metrics and Quasiconformal Mappings. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-32068-3.

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3

Nussbaum, Roger D. Hilbert's projective metric and iterated nonlinear maps. Providence, R.I., USA: American Mathematical Society, 1988.

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4

Martin, Karen. Metrics-based process mapping: An Excel-based solution. New York: Productivity Press, 2008.

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5

Martin, Karen. Metrics-based process mapping: An Excel-based solution. New York: Productivity Press, 2008.

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6

Todorčević, Vesna. Harmonic Quasiconformal Mappings and Hyperbolic Type Metrics. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-22591-9.

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7

Nussbaum, Roger D. Iterated nonlinear maps and Hilbert's projective metric, II. Providence, R.I., USA: American Mathematical Society, 1989.

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8

Moltó, Aníbal. A nonlinear transfer technique for renorming. Berlin: Springer, 2009.

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9

Martin, Karen. Metrics-based process mapping: Identifying and eliminating waste in office and service processes. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, 2013.

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10

Gehring, Frederick W. The ubiquitous quasidisk. Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society, 2012.

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11

Steven, Rosenberg, and Clara L. Aldana. Analysis, geometry, and quantum field theory: International conference in honor of Steve Rosenberg's 60th birthday, September 26-30, 2011, Potsdam University, Potsdam, Germany. Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society, 2012.

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12

Frohn, Robert C. Remote Sensing for Landscape Ecology: New Metric Indicators for Monitoring, Modeling, and Assessment of Ecosystems (Mapping Sciences). CRC, 1997.

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13

Farb, Benson, and Dan Margalit. Teichmuller Geometry. Princeton University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691147949.003.0012.

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This chapter focuses on the metric geometry of Teichmüller space. It first explains how one can think of Teich(Sɡ) as the space of complex structures on Sɡ. To this end, the chapter defines quasiconformal maps between surfaces and presents a solution to the resulting Teichmüller's extremal problem. It also considers the correspondence between complex structures and hyperbolic structures, along with the Teichmüller mapping, Teichmüller metric, and the proof of Teichmüller's uniqueness and existence theorems. The fundamental connection between Teichmüller's theorems, holomorphic quadratic differentials, and measured foliations is discussed as well. Finally, the chapter describes the Grötzsch's problem, whose solution is tied to the proof of Teichmüller's uniqueness theorem.
14

Lin, Shou, and Ziqiu Yun. Generalized Metric Spaces and Mappings. Atlantis Press (Zeger Karssen), 2016.

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15

Scribble, 2. Book for Mapping Technicians - Pro Series Three: 150-Page Lined Work Decor for Professionals to Write in, with Individually Numbered Pages and Metric/Imperial Conversion Charts. Vibrant and Glossy Color Cover. Independently Published, 2019.

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16

Farb, Beₙsoₙ, and Dan Margalit. Overview. Princeton University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691147949.003.0001.

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This book deals with two fundamental objects attached to a surface S and how they relate to each other: a group and a space. The group is the mapping class group of S, denoted by Mod(S). It is defined as the group of isotopy classes of orientation-preserving diffeomorphisms of S. The space is the Teichmüller space of S, a metric space homeomorphic to an open ball. The book considers the relations between the algebraic structure of Mod(S), the geometry of Teich(S), and the topology of M(S). Underlying these connections is the combinatorial topology of the surface S. The Nielsen–Thurston classification theorem, which gives a particularly nice representative for each element of Mod(S), is also discussed.
17

Hariri, Parisa, Riku Klén, and Matti Vuorinen. Conformally Invariant Metrics and Quasiconformal Mappings. Springer International Publishing AG, 2021.

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18

Hariri, Parisa, Riku Klén, and Matti Vuorinen. Conformally Invariant Metrics and Quasiconformal Mappings. Springer, 2020.

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19

Todorčević, Vesna. Harmonic Quasiconformal Mappings and Hyperbolic Type Metrics. Springer International Publishing AG, 2020.

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20

Todorčević, Vesna. Harmonic Quasiconformal Mappings and Hyperbolic Type Metrics. Springer, 2019.

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21

Ampadu, Clement. Higher-Order Fixed Point Theory in Metric and Multiplicative Metric Space under R-Compatibility of Mappings and Related Concepts. Lulu Press, Inc., 2018.

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22

Habermann, Lutz. Riemannian Metrics of Constant Mass and Moduli Spaces of Conformal Structures. Springer London, Limited, 2007.

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23

Habermann, Lutz. Riemannian Metrics of Constant Mass and Moduli Spaces of Conformal Structures. Springer, 2000.

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24

Lagerkvist, Amanda. Existential Media. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190925567.001.0001.

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This book offers a reappreciation and revisiting of existential philosophy—and in particular of Karl Jaspers’s philosophy—for media theory in order to remedy the existential deficit in the field. The book thereby also offers an introduction to the young field of existential media studies. Jaspers’s concept of the limit situation is chosen as a privileged reality which allows for bringing limits, in all their shapes and forms, onto the radar when interrogating digital existence. Despite their all-pervasiveness the book argues that media speak to and about limits and limitations in a variety of ways. The book furthermore argues that the present age of deep technocultural saturation—and of escalating multifaceted and interrelated global crises—is a digital limit situation, in which there are both existential and politico-ethical stakes of media. To enter into these terrains, the book places the margin of mourners and the meek—the coexisters—at the center of media studies. The book provides an alternative mapping for approaching digital cultures in contexts of both the mundane and the extraordinary, and on scales traversing the individual and the global. Empirically Existental Media attends to mourning, commemorating, and speaking to the dead online as well as to the digital afterlife. It interrogates four cases that center on the voices from the field of online bereavement, and provides an arc of media instantiations of the digital limit situation: chapter 5: Metric Media; chapter 6: Caring Media, chapter 7: Transcendent Media and chapter 8: Anticipatory media.
25

Ampadu, Clement. Higher-Order Fixed Point Theory in Dislocated Metric Spaces under R-Compatibility of Mappings and Related Concepts. Lulu Press, Inc., 2018.

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26

Ryan, Kevin M. Prosodic Weight. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198817949.001.0001.

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Prosodic weight plays a central role in metrical systems, including stress, poetic meter, prosodic word minimality, and prosodic end-weight. In each, constraints regulate the interaction of weight and phonological strength. For example, in English, increasingly heavy syllables are increasingly likely to attract stress. Depending on the language and system, weight can be binary (heavy vs. light), higher n-ary (ternary, etc., but still categorical), or gradient (continuous on a ratio scale). Gradient weight is widely attested in stress, meter, and end-weight. The book emphasizes the typology and analysis of complex and gradient scales for weight as well as properties of weight that obtain universally across languages, systems, and scales. For example, across phenomena, greater sonority contributes to weight in the syllable rime but detracts from it in the onset. Scales are analyzed in terms of prominence mapping (varying stressability of elements) as opposed to moraic coercion. Prosodic minimality is analyzed in the context of larger prosodic constituents, revealing new issues. The book also offers the first detailed study of a minimum to which only certain final consonants contribute. Syllable weight in metrics is treated extensively, as complex weight in meter has been largely overlooked previously. Finally, prosodic end-weight is argued to be driven by phrasal stress, manifesting ultimately the same stress–weight interface as does word phonology. Among other things, this analysis captures that prosodic end-weight is confined to prosodically head-final contexts. Finally, complex and gradient weight brings questions concerning the phonetics-phonology interface into sharp focus.
27

Trotter, Henry, Catherine Kell, Michelle Willmers, Eve Gray, and Thomas K. C. King. Seeking Impact and Visibility: Scholarly Communication in Southern Africa. African Minds, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.47622/978-1-920677-51-0.

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African scholarly research is relatively invisible globally because even though research production on the continent is growing in absolute terms, it is falling in comparative terms. In addition, traditional metrics of visibility, such as the Impact Factor, fail to make legible all African scholarly production. Many African universities also do not take a strategic approach to scholarly communication to broaden the reach of their scholars'work. To address this challenge, the Scholarly Communication in Africa Programme (SCAP) was established to help raise the visibility of African scholarship by mapping current research and communication practices in Southern African universities and by recommending and piloting technical and administrative innovations based on open access dissemination principles. To do this, SCAP conducted extensive research in four faculties at the Universities of Botswana, Cape Town, Mauritius and Namibia.
28

Chekhov, Leonid. Two-dimensional quantum gravity. Edited by Gernot Akemann, Jinho Baik, and Philippe Di Francesco. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198744191.013.30.

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This article discusses the connection between large N matrix models and critical phenomena on lattices with fluctuating geometry, with particular emphasis on the solvable models of 2D lattice quantum gravity and how they are related to matrix models. It first provides an overview of the continuum world sheet theory and the Liouville gravity before deriving the Knizhnik-Polyakov-Zamolodchikov scaling relation. It then describes the simplest model of 2D gravity and the corresponding matrix model, along with the vertex/height integrable models on planar graphs and their mapping to matrix models. It also considers the discretization of the path integral over metrics, the solution of pure lattice gravity using the one-matrix model, the construction of the Ising model coupled to 2D gravity discretized on planar graphs, the O(n) loop model, the six-vertex model, the q-state Potts model, and solid-on-solid and ADE matrix models.
29

Lennartz, Norbert, ed. Byron and Marginality. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474439411.001.0001.

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The collection of essays intends to show that everything about Byron’s poetic work baffles the scholarly desire for neat categorisations. Various attempts at re-mapping Romanticism have given ample evidence of the fact that, as one of the ‘big six’ in the Romantic canon, Byron outgrows Romanticism and epitomises the fallacious character of a period that has always been compared to a dangerous quicksand. In his self-incurred marginality, Byron subjects the entire genre of poetry to a severe process of deconstruction: his œuvre ranges from verse tale to “epic narratives”, versified romances and poems which subvert the rigorous metrical and formal requirements and turn poetic forms into leaky vessels of incoherent quotations, intertextual reference and Molly Bloomian soliloquies.Taking to his role as a cultural fence-sitter, scoffer and outsider who watches his literary ambience from the stern perspective of a Neo-Classicist, Byron unveils and lays bare the repressed strata of human savagery which Romantic poetry normally glosses over and ignores.Doing the exact opposite of what Novalis and others circumscribed as the ‘poeticisation’ of prosaic 19th-century reality, Byron subscribes to the idea that man is irretrievably a bête humaine, much more akin to the liver-devouring vulture than to Prometheus. It is this premise of ontological marginality that is eventually reflected in all aspects of Byron’s textual, generic, thematic and topographical marginality.
30

Bonk, Mario, and Daniel Meyer. Expanding Thurston Maps. American Mathematical Society, 2018.

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