Academic literature on the topic 'Public and hidden manuscripts'

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Journal articles on the topic "Public and hidden manuscripts"

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Arazan, Christine L., Brianna A. Barrios, Meredith S. Brown, and Natalia O. Dmitrieva. "Measuring Health in Jails: Limitations and Opportunities in Measurement of Health-Related Constructs." Practicing Anthropology 41, no. 4 (September 1, 2019): 21–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.17730/0888-4552.41.4.21.

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Limited research exists concerning measurement issues of health-related constructs among those incarcerated in American jails. This gap in the literature impedes research on health outcomes and health care access among jailed populations and may render the public health concerns of jailed populations hidden from societal view. The current article examines a research team's experience in conducting a related study (see Trotter et al. 2018) by highlighting the methodological limitations and opportunities faced during the study and provides suggestions for future research. The manuscript provides future researchers with a foundation for implementing health-focused studies within a jail, with special attention paid to the obstacles the research team overcame.
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Sharpe, Richard. "Further hidden manuscripts." Studia Hibernica 44 (September 2018): 129–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/sh.2018.5.

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Nikolova-Houston, Tatiana. "Discovery of the hidden manuscripts." Art Libraries Journal 31, no. 2 (2006): 35–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307472200014462.

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Slavic manuscripts present unique problems to the librarian, curator and scholar. Slavic works are marginalized in Western library institutions and educational curricula due to misconceptions about their intellectual value, the difficulties of studying them in Soviet and then post-Soviet Eastern Europe, and their lack of documentation, preservation and conservation. Cross-disciplinary interest, however, has expanded research beyond geographical and temporal boundaries to incorporate the technologies and viewpoints of literary criticism, historiography and even information architecture and hypertext theory. This article describes the author’s discovery of Slavic medieval manuscripts and her efforts to preserve, catalog, digitize, study and popularize them in a West that views the Middle Ages through the clouded lens of contemporary popular culture.
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Hammond, F. "The hidden world of Frescobaldi manuscripts." Early Music 38, no. 4 (November 1, 2010): 589–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/em/caq082.

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Keeler, Mary. "The Hidden Treasure of C. S. Peirce’s Manuscripts." Chinese Semiotic Studies 16, no. 1 (February 25, 2020): 155–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/css-2020-0008.

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AbstractThis article presents a short but detailed account of the current issues facing Peirce scholarship in efforts to preserve and interpret Peirce’s massive corpus archived at Harvard. The significance of Peirce’s multimodal writings (including colorful graphics and text), along with his convoluted processes of inquiry in the development of his philosophy, are examined to indicate why the representational experiments in his manuscripts, and their topological continuity, defy the limitations of conventional publishing. With full and effective access to his entire corpus, scholars could trace the self-critical evolution of Peirce’s ideas, from origins to mature expressions, and thereby gain a more complete understanding of his immense intellectual offering to humanity. Here, in this first article (in a series of four), we begin to identify what will be required.
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Khorsheed, M. S. "Recognising handwritten Arabic manuscripts using a single hidden Markov model." Pattern Recognition Letters 24, no. 14 (October 2003): 2235–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0167-8655(03)00050-3.

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Calcagno, V., E. Demoinet, K. Gollner, L. Guidi, D. Ruths, and C. de Mazancourt. "Flows of Research Manuscripts Among Scientific Journals Reveal Hidden Submission Patterns." Science 338, no. 6110 (October 11, 2012): 1065–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1227833.

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Azarbadegan, Zeinab, and Mohammad Sadegh Ansari. "Making a Hidden Collection Visible: Columbia’s Collection of Muslim World Manuscripts." Philological Encounters 5, no. 3-4 (November 24, 2020): 255–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/24519197-12340075.

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Ljungström, Åsa. "The Missing Books of Magic from Sandvik: In search for hidden books and secret knowledge." Approaching Religion 4, no. 1 (May 7, 2014): 73–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.30664/ar.67539.

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This article aims at defining a privately-owned manuscript from the end of the eighteenth century; a notebook of charms, recipes and ritual prescriptions, presumed to be connected with known manuscripts of magic, that were kept secret and hidden away. The study attempts to reconstruct the context of ‘The Sandvik Notebook’, in order to find out who penned it, when, and why. What kind of knowledge was sought: was it collected for antiquarian reasons, for esoteric interest, or for practical use – such as curing livestock and human beings? Was it copied from books or collected from peasant informants, and could it be related to the extant manuscripts ‘The Black Book’ and ‘The Red Book’, objects of the same line of enquiry? The three manuscripts are from Sandvik Manor, of the joint parish Burseryd-Sandvik, Sweden.
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Kaneva, Nadia, and Elza Ibroscheva. "Hidden in Public View." Feminist Media Studies 13, no. 2 (May 2013): 337–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14680777.2011.604341.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Public and hidden manuscripts"

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Rosas, Blanch Faye, and faye blanch@flinders edu au. "Nunga rappin: talkin the talk, walkin the walk: Young Nunga males and Education." Flinders University. Yunggorendi First Nations Centre, 2009. http://catalogue.flinders.edu.au./local/adt/public/adt-SFU20090226.102604.

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Abstract This thesis acknowledges the social and cultural importance of education and the role the institution plays in the construction of knowledge – in this case of young Nunga males. It also recognizes that education is a contested field. I have disrupted constructions of knowledge about young Nunga males in mainstream education by mapping and rapping - or mappin and rappin Aboriginal English - the theories of race, masculinity, performance, cultural capital, body and desire and space and place through the use of Nunga time-space pathways. Through disruption I have shown how the theories of race and masculinity underpin ways in which Blackness and Indignity are played out within the racialisation of education and how the process of racialisation informs young Nunga males’ experiences of schooling. The cultural capital that young Nunga males bring to the classroom and schooling environment must be acknowledged to enable performance of agency in contested time, space and knowledge paradigms. Agency privileges their understanding and desire for change and encourages them to apply strategies that contribute to their own journeys home through time-space pathways that are (at least in part) of their own choosing.
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Healey, Dan. "Homosexual desire in revolutionary Russia, public and hidden transcripts, 1917-1941." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1998. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape11/PQDD_0013/NQ41437.pdf.

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Park, Carolyn. "Propaganda exposed a glimpse into the truth of hidden agendas." Honors in the Major Thesis, University of Central Florida, 2012. http://digital.library.ucf.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ETH/id/597.

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Government propaganda has been a topic of interest since America was founded, and today is no exception. Every recent Presidential Administration has been accused of using taxpayer dollars to fund propaganda. Although the funding of propaganda has been prohibited by the Consolidated Appropriations Act since 1951, it still occurs frequently. There is no entity that reviews government correspondence before it is released to the public, so government agencies are free to produce what they feel is appropriate even if it is prohibited by the Act. Furthermore, there is no law that specifically forbids government propaganda, and the current punishments amount to a slap on the wrist making the production covert propaganda worth the risk. This thesis will also look at the Smith-Mundt Act and the media that it funds for foreign audiences. The material produced through this Act is banned from being disseminated in the U.S. The Smith-Mundt Act's ban does not take into account for the technological advances that have occurred since 1948 making the ban problematic for public diplomacy. The intent of this thesis is to evaluate the current state of government propaganda and determine what changes need to occur in order to curtail or eliminate government propaganda. This research will analyze the current laws and types of propaganda that are being used while taking into account the relevant history, frequently used types, and methods of propaganda.
B.A. and B.S.
Bachelors
Health and Public Affairs
Legal Studies
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Chou, Lin-Yi. "Improving the performance of Hierarchical Hidden Markov Models on Information Extraction tasks." The University of Waikato, 2006. http://adt.waikato.ac.nz/public/adt-uow20070212.152608/index.html.

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Al-Muhtaseb, Husni Abdulghani. "Arabic text recognition of printed manuscripts : efficient recognition of off-line printed Arabic text using Hidden Markov Models, Bigram Statistical Language Model, and post-processing." Thesis, University of Bradford, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/4426.

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Arabic text recognition was not researched as thoroughly as other natural languages. The need for automatic Arabic text recognition is clear. In addition to the traditional applications like postal address reading, check verification in banks, and office automation, there is a large interest in searching scanned documents that are available on the internet and for searching handwritten manuscripts. Other possible applications are building digital libraries, recognizing text on digitized maps, recognizing vehicle license plates, using it as first phase in text readers for visually impaired people and understanding filled forms. This research work aims to contribute to the current research in the field of optical character recognition (OCR) of printed Arabic text by developing novel techniques and schemes to advance the performance of the state of the art Arabic OCR systems. Statistical and analytical analysis for Arabic Text was carried out to estimate the probabilities of occurrences of Arabic character for use with Hidden Markov models (HMM) and other techniques. Since there is no publicly available dataset for printed Arabic text for recognition purposes it was decided to create one. In addition, a minimal Arabic script is proposed. The proposed script contains all basic shapes of Arabic letters. The script provides efficient representation for Arabic text in terms of effort and time. Based on the success of using HMM for speech and text recognition, the use of HMM for the automatic recognition of Arabic text was investigated. The HMM technique adapts to noise and font variations and does not require word or character segmentation of Arabic line images. In the feature extraction phase, experiments were conducted with a number of different features to investigate their suitability for HMM. Finally, a novel set of features, which resulted in high recognition rates for different fonts, was selected. The developed techniques do not need word or character segmentation before the classification phase as segmentation is a byproduct of recognition. This seems to be the most advantageous feature of using HMM for Arabic text as segmentation tends to produce errors which are usually propagated to the classification phase. Eight different Arabic fonts were used in the classification phase. The recognition rates were in the range from 98% to 99.9% depending on the used fonts. As far as we know, these are new results in their context. Moreover, the proposed technique could be used for other languages. A proof-of-concept experiment was conducted on English characters with a recognition rate of 98.9% using the same HMM setup. The same techniques where conducted on Bangla characters with a recognition rate above 95%. Moreover, the recognition of printed Arabic text with multi-fonts was also conducted using the same technique. Fonts were categorized into different groups. New high recognition results were achieved. To enhance the recognition rate further, a post-processing module was developed to correct the OCR output through character level post-processing and word level post-processing. The use of this module increased the accuracy of the recognition rate by more than 1%.
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Al-Muhtaseb, Husni A. "Arabic text recognition of printed manuscripts. Efficient recognition of off-line printed Arabic text using Hidden Markov Models, Bigram Statistical Language Model, and post-processing." Thesis, University of Bradford, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/4426.

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Arabic text recognition was not researched as thoroughly as other natural languages. The need for automatic Arabic text recognition is clear. In addition to the traditional applications like postal address reading, check verification in banks, and office automation, there is a large interest in searching scanned documents that are available on the internet and for searching handwritten manuscripts. Other possible applications are building digital libraries, recognizing text on digitized maps, recognizing vehicle license plates, using it as first phase in text readers for visually impaired people and understanding filled forms. This research work aims to contribute to the current research in the field of optical character recognition (OCR) of printed Arabic text by developing novel techniques and schemes to advance the performance of the state of the art Arabic OCR systems. Statistical and analytical analysis for Arabic Text was carried out to estimate the probabilities of occurrences of Arabic character for use with Hidden Markov models (HMM) and other techniques. Since there is no publicly available dataset for printed Arabic text for recognition purposes it was decided to create one. In addition, a minimal Arabic script is proposed. The proposed script contains all basic shapes of Arabic letters. The script provides efficient representation for Arabic text in terms of effort and time. Based on the success of using HMM for speech and text recognition, the use of HMM for the automatic recognition of Arabic text was investigated. The HMM technique adapts to noise and font variations and does not require word or character segmentation of Arabic line images. In the feature extraction phase, experiments were conducted with a number of different features to investigate their suitability for HMM. Finally, a novel set of features, which resulted in high recognition rates for different fonts, was selected. The developed techniques do not need word or character segmentation before the classification phase as segmentation is a byproduct of recognition. This seems to be the most advantageous feature of using HMM for Arabic text as segmentation tends to produce errors which are usually propagated to the classification phase. Eight different Arabic fonts were used in the classification phase. The recognition rates were in the range from 98% to 99.9% depending on the used fonts. As far as we know, these are new results in their context. Moreover, the proposed technique could be used for other languages. A proof-of-concept experiment was conducted on English characters with a recognition rate of 98.9% using the same HMM setup. The same techniques where conducted on Bangla characters with a recognition rate above 95%. Moreover, the recognition of printed Arabic text with multi-fonts was also conducted using the same technique. Fonts were categorized into different groups. New high recognition results were achieved. To enhance the recognition rate further, a post-processing module was developed to correct the OCR output through character level post-processing and word level post-processing. The use of this module increased the accuracy of the recognition rate by more than 1%.
King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (KFUPM)
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Zardini, Agnese. "Modeling the transmission of viral diseases: understanding hidden processes to inform public health policies." Doctoral thesis, Università degli studi di Trento, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/11572/313656.

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The diffusion of viral diseases may critically depend on hidden processes, like human mobility, people’s behavior, or underlying environmental conditions. The thesis focuses on the investigation of those variables that remain partially unobserved but that could strongly influence the spread of infectious diseases. First, an innovative method is introduced to estimate the overall abundance of mosquitoes over time across all sites of interest in Europe and the Americas, on the basis of only freely available eco-climatic data. The model, calibrated against a large set of entomological data, is used to highlight which mosquito species could contribute to the disease transmission across different regions and identify the areas at higher risk of autochthonous transmission of dengue, chikungunya, and zika fever. A similar approach is also discussed to investigate the potential burden of Usutu virus (USUV) in the northeast of Italy. The conducted analysis estimates the potential USUV prevalence expected among Culex pipiens mosquitoes and human blood donors. The second part of the thesis focuses on the study of the global pandemic of COVID-19. Results obtained with an epidemiological model based on novel age-specific contact data, collected across different geographical contexts of Ethiopia is presented. The analysis aims at assessing how socio-demographic factors and observed mixing patterns can impact the burden of COVID-19 in the scenario of an unmitigated SARS-CoV-2 epidemic and under a school closure mandate. Finally, an epidemiological analysis of individual COVID-19 records collected during the first epidemic wave in the Lombardy region (Italy) is presented. Leveraging an unbiased sample of infections, the performed analysis quantifies all the main parameters related to the natural and healthcare burden caused by the natural history of SARS-CoV-2. Estimates provided are essential for modeling activities aimed at investigating the disease spread or projecting the impact of alternative public measures on the disease and healthcare burden.
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Paton, Kirsteen. "The hidden injuries and hidden rewards of urban restructuring on working-class communities : a case study of gentrification in Partick, Glasgow." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 2010. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/1812/.

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This thesis explores the relationship between urban restructuring and working-class communities in the context of post-industrial neoliberalism. While working-class communities were the bedrock of classical sociological analysis in the industrial period, it is thought that class no longer provides a meaningful social identity and increasing individualisation is often said to signify that agency is set free from the confines of structure. In this thesis, I attempt to, first, confront these assertions by reasserting the relationship between urban restructuring working-class communities and, second, represent contemporary working-class lives, through an ethnographic case study of gentrification in working-class neighbourhood, Partick in Glasgow. Substantively, in this thesis I take gentrification as a key process of class restructuring which is spatially articulated and is the leading edge of urban policy both in the UK and globally. While gentrification intimates that urban restructuring and working-class communities are inextricably connected, this relationship is not always fully explicated within research; orthodox definitions separate economic and cultural fields and working-class experiences are underrepresented. Thus theoretically, in this thesis, I attempt to attend to these shortcomings by using hegemony as framework. Hegemony refers to a form of rule relevant to how transformations in social relations are managed whilst the capitalist system is maintained overall. This involves a mix of consent and coercion which combine structural and agential processes, highlighting the reciprocal relationship between material and the phenomenological levels. Within this, gentrification is conceived as a political strategy, which not only seeks to create space for the more affluent user; it seeks to, consensually, create the more affluent user which, in the context of neoliberalism, relates to a moral and financial economy. This new sociological perspective on gentrification combines cultural and material understandings, whilst making working-class communities and their everyday lives the centre point of analysis. This focus is imperative since working-class people and places are the principal targets of policy-led gentrification, yet current representations of and conceptual language used to describe working-class lives have waned within mainstream sociology. I examine how working-class residents receive, negotiate and resist gentrification processes to reveal the ‘hidden injuries’ as well as the ‘hidden rewards’ of urban restructuring. This study aims to do this by collecting ‘locational narratives’ of 49 residents of Partick. These accounts revealed that respondents’ rejection of traditional class identity did not signify the end of class, rather, it demonstrated that there was a material rationale underpinning individualisation and their disassociation with class, which relate to neoliberal ideologies that decontextualise class and promote self-determination. Residents’ place-based attachment is revealed to be a crucial class signifier – on both phenomenological and material levels. Elective fixity describes the choice and control residents’ have over their ability to stay fixed within their neighbourhood. Respondents are shown to have a paradoxical relationship with gentrification whereby they are invited to participate in processes as consumer citizens, through homeownership or consuming privatised neighbourhoods services, yet are not provided with the means to consume. Residents’ experiences of gentrification are characterised by tensions around control and choice and lack thereof. While gentrification brought new rewards whereby working-class respondents could, provided they had the means, act as gentrifiers, they were also confronted with novel forms of displacement, identified as new typologies which relate to the increased privatisation of social housing. Thus, an emergent negotiated culture of contemporary working-class communities is revealed which is set within the confines of structure within a post-industrial neoliberal context. Using a framework of hegemony to understand the political project of gentrification reveals the reciprocal relationship between urban restructuring and the remaking of the working-class subject.
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Mathers, Alice Robin. "Hidden voices: The participation of people with learning disabilities in the expereince of public open space." Thesis, University of Sheffield, 2007. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.489130.

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The self-advocacy of people with learning disabilities is an issue of high current importance. In the UK 210,000 people have severe and profound learning disabilities, whilst twenty-five in every thousand of the population in England has a mild to moderate learning disability (Department of Health, 2001). At the most restricted end of the communication spectrum, people with learning disabilities are often forgotten members of their communities, whose label learning disabled wrongly causes confusion and fear.
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Mancheva, Marta. "Hidden Transcripts on Public Transportation: A Meta-Methodological Exploration of Visual Ethnography in Qualitative Transportation Research." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för geovetenskaper, 2015. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-259147.

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Better understanding of urban travelers is necessary, as sustainable development is becoming an integral part of transportation policy and practice. A volume of research shows people’s expressed willingness to adopt more sustainable urban travel behaviours, but a general sense of resistance to change is often encountered. Current methods in transportation research are not able to fully grasp on individual motivations such as discontent with public transport. This gap of knowledge in qualitative transportation research calls for the development of new methods. James Scott’s concept of the hidden transcript allows for the assumption that there are expressions of dissatisfaction towards public transportation at grassroots level. In order to access hidden transcripts on public transportation in Stockholm there is a need for a new method, which is developed in this thesis. The proposed visual mixed method draws from principles of visual ethnography, virtual ethnography, nethnography and social media research. The methodology is then tested and assessed as a platform to give voice to hidden transcripts on public transportation. The choice of method for developing the method is meta-methodology. The discussion sheds light on the potential of the framework (1) to grant access to hidden transcripts; (2) to fill a knowledge gap in transportation qualitative research; (3) to assist planners towards sustainable development of urban transportation.
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Books on the topic "Public and hidden manuscripts"

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Schnitzler's hidden manuscripts. New York: Peter Lang, 2010.

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Leerssen, Joseph Th. Hidden Ireland, public sphere. Galway: Arlen House for the Centre for Irish Studies, 2002.

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Hidden Mistress, Public Wife. Richmond: Mills & Boon, 2011.

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Leerssen, Joseph Th. Hidden Ireland, public sphere. Galway: Arlen House for the Centre for Irish Studies, 2002.

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The hidden Maya. Santa Fe, N.M: Bear & Co., 1998.

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The "hidden" debt. Dordrecht [Netherlands]: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1990.

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Stevens, Redburn F., ed. Hidden unemployment: Discouraged workers and public policy. New York: Praeger, 1988.

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Forum, Police Executive Research, and United States. Bureau of Justice Assistance., eds. Public record and other information on hidden assets. [Washington, D.C.]: U.S. Dept. of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance, 1992.

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Booth, Frank R. Public record and other information on hidden assets. [Washington, D.C.]: U.S. Dept. of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance, 1992.

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Booth, Frank R. Public record and other information on hidden assets. [Washington, D.C.]: U.S. Dept. of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance, 1992.

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Book chapters on the topic "Public and hidden manuscripts"

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Ding, Jintai, Albrecht Petzoldt, and Dieter S. Schmidt. "Hidden Field Equations." In Multivariate Public Key Cryptosystems, 61–88. New York, NY: Springer US, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-0987-3_4.

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Rizzo, Ilde. "The public debt perception issue." In The ‘Hidden’ Debt, 21–42. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-1958-7_3.

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Lemieux, Pierre. "The Hidden Welfare State." In The Public Debt Problem, 45–60. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137313027_4.

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Rizzo, Ilde. "Public choice implications of unfunded debt." In The ‘Hidden’ Debt, 55–79. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-1958-7_5.

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Kjølsrød, Lise. "The Hidden Democracy." In Leisure as Source of Knowledge, Social Resilience and Public Commitment, 1–32. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-46287-9_1.

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Rizzo, Ilde. "Notes on a definition of the concept of public debt." In The ‘Hidden’ Debt, 5–19. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-1958-7_2.

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Dusso, Aaron. "Hidden State and the Punitive Public." In Personality and the Challenges of Democratic Governance, 109–28. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-53603-3_5.

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Bcheiry, Iskandar. "SYRIAC MANUSCRIPTS IN NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY." In Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies (volume 11), edited by George Kiraz, 141–60. Piscataway, NJ, USA: Gorgias Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.31826/9781463222550-009.

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Camenisch, Jan, Maria Dubovitskaya, Gregory Neven, and Gregory M. Zaverucha. "Oblivious Transfer with Hidden Access Control Policies." In Public Key Cryptography – PKC 2011, 192–209. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-19379-8_12.

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McGee, Robert W. "Should Taxes be Visible or Hidden?" In The Philosophy of Taxation and Public Finance, 179–82. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-9140-9_20.

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Conference papers on the topic "Public and hidden manuscripts"

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Fischer, Andreas, Volkmar Frinken, Alicia Fornés, and Horst Bunke. "Transcription alignment of Latin manuscripts using hidden Markov models." In the 2011 Workshop. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2037342.2037348.

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Zuo, Cong, Jun Shao, Zhe Liu, Yun Ling, and Guiyi Wei. "Hidden-Token Searchable Public-Key Encryption." In 2017 IEEE Trustcom/BigDataSE/ICESS. IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/trustcom/bigdatase/icess.2017.244.

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Iovanovici, Alexandru, Lilla Pellegrini, Anca-Maria Moscovici, and Monica Leba. "Network motifs uncovering hidden characteristics of urban public transportation." In 2019 IEEE 15th International Scientific Conference on Informatics. IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/informatics47936.2019.9119289.

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Sorio, Enrico, Alberto Bartoli, and Eric Medvet. "A look at hidden web pages in Italian public administrations." In 2012 Fourth International Conference on Computational Aspects of Social Networks (CASoN). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cason.2012.6412417.

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Fassi, Davide, Laura Galluzzo, and Liat Rogel. "Hidden public spaces: when a university campus becomes a place for communities." In Design Research Society Conference 2016. Design Research Society, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.21606/drs.2016.377.

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Wu, Jain-Shing, Xiangning Chen, and Tian-Hsiang Huang. "Discovering the Hidden Connections between Genes and Proteins from the Undiscovered Public Literature." In the The 3rd Multidisciplinary International Social Networks Conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2955129.2955181.

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Leong, Wai Kay, Aditya Kulkarni, Yin Xu, and Ben Leong. "Unveiling the hidden dangers of public IP addresses in 4G/LTE cellular data networks." In HotMobile '14: 15th Workshop on Mobile Computing Systems and Applications. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2565585.2565599.

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Balaji, S. "P441 Confronting the hidden public health threat: Emerging and re-emerging sexually transmitted infections." In Abstracts for the STI & HIV World Congress, July 14–17 2021. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/sextrans-2021-sti.457.

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Jolley, Victoria. "Central Lancashire New Town: the hidden polycentric supercity." In 24th ISUF 2017 - City and Territory in the Globalization Age. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/isuf2017.2017.5945.

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From 1962 Lancashire, in England, became the focus of a major renewal scheme: the creation of a ‘super-city’ for 500,000 people. The last and largest New Town designated under the 1965 Act, Central Lancashire New Town (CLNT) differed from other New Towns. Although influenced by the ideals and example of Garden City model, its master plan followed new and proposed infrastructure to connect the sub-region’s poly-centricity. By unifying and expanding existing towns and settlements it aimed to generate prosperity on a sub-regional scale using the New Towns Act, rather than creating a single new self-sufficient urban development. CLNT’s scale, poly-centricity and theoretical growth made it unique compared to other new town typologies and, although not realised, its planning can be traced across Lancashire’s urban and rural landscape by communication networks and city-scale public and civic buildings. With reference to diagrams for the British New Towns of Hook, Milton Keynes and Civilia, this paper will contextualize and evaluate CLNT’s theoretical layout and its proposed expansion based on interdependent townships, districts and ‘localities’. The paper will conclude by comparing CLNT’s theoretical diagram with its proposed application and adaptation to the sub-region’s topographical physical setting. Keywords (3-5): Lancashire, New Towns, urban centres and pattern Conference topics and scale: Reading and regenerating the informal city References (100 words) RMJM (1967) in Ministry of Housing and Local Government (1967). Central Lancashire: Study for a City: Consultants’ Proposals for Designation, HMSO. Ministry of Housing and Local Government (1967). Central Lancashire: Study for a City: Consultants’ Proposals for Designation, HMSO.
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Ebadian, Soroush, and Xin Huang. "Fast Algorithm for K-Truss Discovery on Public-Private Graphs." In Twenty-Eighth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence {IJCAI-19}. California: International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2019/313.

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In public-private graphs, users share one public graph and have their own private graphs. A private graph consists of personal private contacts that only can be visible to its owner, e.g., hidden friend lists on Facebook and secret following on Sina Weibo. However, existing public-private analytic algorithms have not yet investigated the dense subgraph discovery of k-truss, where each edge is contained in at least k-2 triangles. This paper aims at finding k-truss efficiently in public-private graphs. The core of our solution is a novel algorithm to update k-truss with node insertions. We develop a classification-based hybrid strategy of node insertions and edge insertions to incrementally compute k-truss in public-private graphs. Extensive experiments validate the superiority of our proposed algorithms against state-of-the-art methods on real-world datasets.
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Reports on the topic "Public and hidden manuscripts"

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Detter, Dag. Public Commercial Assets: The Hidden Goldmine. Asian Development Bank, March 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.22617/brf200110.

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Hungerman, Daniel. Public Goods, Hidden Income, and Tax Evasion: Some Nonstandard Results from the Warm-Glow Model. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, January 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w19804.

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Dalglish, Chris, and Sarah Tarlow, eds. Modern Scotland: Archaeology, the Modern past and the Modern present. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, September 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.9750/scarf.09.2012.163.

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The main recommendations of the panel report can be summarised under five key headings:  HUMANITY The Panel recommends recognition that research in this field should be geared towards the development of critical understandings of self and society in the modern world. Archaeological research into the modern past should be ambitious in seeking to contribute to understanding of the major social, economic and environmental developments through which the modern world came into being. Modern-world archaeology can add significantly to knowledge of Scotland’s historical relationships with the rest of the British Isles, Europe and the wider world. Archaeology offers a new perspective on what it has meant to be a modern person and a member of modern society, inhabiting a modern world.  MATERIALITY The Panel recommends approaches to research which focus on the materiality of the recent past (i.e. the character of relationships between people and their material world). Archaeology’s contribution to understandings of the modern world lies in its ability to situate, humanise and contextualise broader historical developments. Archaeological research can provide new insights into the modern past by investigating historical trends not as abstract phenomena but as changes to real lives, affecting different localities in different ways. Archaeology can take a long-term perspective on major modern developments, researching their ‘prehistory’ (which often extends back into the Middle Ages) and their material legacy in the present. Archaeology can humanise and contextualise long-term processes and global connections by working outwards from individual life stories, developing biographies of individual artefacts and buildings and evidencing the reciprocity of people, things, places and landscapes. The modern person and modern social relationships were formed in and through material environments and, to understand modern humanity, it is crucial that we understand humanity’s material relationships in the modern world.  PERSPECTIVE The Panel recommends the development, realisation and promotion of work which takes a critical perspective on the present from a deeper understanding of the recent past. Research into the modern past provides a critical perspective on the present, uncovering the origins of our current ways of life and of relating to each other and to the world around us. It is important that this relevance is acknowledged, understood, developed and mobilised to connect past, present and future. The material approach of archaeology can enhance understanding, challenge assumptions and develop new and alternative histories. Modern Scotland: Archaeology, the Modern past and the Modern present vi Archaeology can evidence varied experience of social, environmental and economic change in the past. It can consider questions of local distinctiveness and global homogeneity in complex and nuanced ways. It can reveal the hidden histories of those whose ways of life diverged from the historical mainstream. Archaeology can challenge simplistic, essentialist understandings of the recent Scottish past, providing insights into the historical character and interaction of Scottish, British and other identities and ideologies.  COLLABORATION The Panel recommends the development of integrated and collaborative research practices. Perhaps above all other periods of the past, the modern past is a field of enquiry where there is great potential benefit in collaboration between different specialist sectors within archaeology, between different disciplines, between Scottish-based researchers and researchers elsewhere in the world and between professionals and the public. The Panel advocates the development of new ways of working involving integrated and collaborative investigation of the modern past. Extending beyond previous modes of inter-disciplinary practice, these new approaches should involve active engagement between different interests developing collaborative responses to common questions and problems.  REFLECTION The Panel recommends that a reflexive approach is taken to the archaeology of the modern past, requiring research into the nature of academic, professional and public engagements with the modern past and the development of new reflexive modes of practice. Archaeology investigates the past but it does so from its position in the present. Research should develop a greater understanding of modern-period archaeology as a scholarly pursuit and social practice in the present. Research should provide insights into the ways in which the modern past is presented and represented in particular contexts. Work is required to better evidence popular understandings of and engagements with the modern past and to understand the politics of the recent past, particularly its material aspect. Research should seek to advance knowledge and understanding of the moral and ethical viewpoints held by professionals and members of the public in relation to the archaeology of the recent past. There is a need to critically review public engagement practices in modern-world archaeology and develop new modes of public-professional collaboration and to generate practices through which archaeology can make positive interventions in the world. And there is a need to embed processes of ethical reflection and beneficial action into archaeological practice relating to the modern past.
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