Academic literature on the topic 'Relationship rules'

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Journal articles on the topic "Relationship rules"

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Dunn, Craig P., and F. Neil Brady. "From Rules to Relationship." Proceedings of the International Association for Business and Society 6 (1995): 91–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/iabsproc199569.

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Omar, Mussa, Abdulrhman Alsheky, and Balha Faiz. "Novel rules for extracting the entities of entity relationship models." Journal of Pure & Applied Sciences 20, no. 2 (August 19, 2021): 29–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.51984/jopas.v20i2.1329.

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Extracting entities from natural language text to design conceptual models of the entity relationships is not trivial and novice designers and students can find it especially difficult. Researchers have suggested linguistic rules/guidelines for extracting entities from natural language text. Unfortunately, while these guidelines are often correct they can, also, be invalid. There is no rule that is true at all times. This paper suggests novel rules based on the machine learning classifiers, the RIPPER, the PART and the decision trees. Performance comparison was made between the linguistic and the machine learning rules. The results shows that there was a dramatic improvement when machine learning rules were used.
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Argyle, Michael, Monika Henderson, Michael Bond, Yuichi Iizuka, and Alberta Contarello. "Cross-Cultural Variations in Relationship Rules." International Journal of Psychology 21, no. 1-4 (January 1986): 287–315. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00207598608247591.

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CARRUBBA, CLIFFORD J., and TOM S. CLARK. "Rule Creation in a Political Hierarchy." American Political Science Review 106, no. 3 (July 30, 2012): 622–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s000305541200024x.

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Principal-agent relations are replete in politics; politicians are agents of electorates, bureaucrats are agents of executives, lower courts are agents of upper courts, and much more. Commonly, principals are modeled as the rule-making body and agents as the rule-implementing body. However, principals often delegate the authority to make the rules themselves to their agents. The relationship between the lower federal courts and the Supreme Court is one such example; a considerable portion of the law (rules) is made in the lower federal courts with the Supreme Court serving primarily as the overseer of those lower courts’ decisions. In this article, we develop and test a principal-agent model of law (rule) creation in a judicial hierarchy. The model yields new insights about the relationship among various features of the judicial hierarchy that run against many existing perceptions. For example, we find a non-monotonic relationship between the divergence in upper and lower court preferences over rules and the likelihood of review and reversal by the Supreme Court. The empirical evidence supports these derived relationships. Wider implications for the principal-agent literature are also discussed.
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Le, Bac Hoai, and Bay Dinh Vo. "MINING ESSENTIAL RULES USING FREQUENT CLOSED ITEMSETS LATTICE." Science and Technology Development Journal 12, no. 11 (June 15, 2009): 49–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.32508/stdj.v12i11.2311.

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In traditional mining of association rules, finding all association rules from databases that satisfy minSup and minConf faces with some problems in case of the number of frequent itemsets is large. Thus, it is necessary to have a suitable method for mining fewer rules but they still embrace all rules of traditional mining method. One of the approaches that is the mining method of essential rules: it only keeps the rule that its left hand side is minimal and its right side is maximal (follow in parent-child relationship). In this paper, we propose a new algorithm for mining the essential rules from the frequent closed itemsets lattice to reduce the time of mining rules. We use the parent-child relationship in lattice to reduce the cost of considering parent-child relationship and lead to reduce the time of mining rules.
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Zhang, Xian-kun, Xin-ya Gao, Qian Zhang, and Jia Jia. "Research on the Rough Extension of Ontology Description Language of SWRL." Journal of Electrical and Computer Engineering 2016 (2016): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/5636254.

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Although ontology has strong ability to express knowledge, it is difficult to express uncertain or imprecise information using the language of ontology. In order to improve the ability to express uncertain information, this paper extends the Semantic Web Rule Language (SWRL) and gives the extension of reasoning rules. According to the rough ontology and the rules of SWRL, it updates the knowledge base. Firstly, the concept of rough ontology and the extension of rough relationship of ontology are put forward; secondly, it gives the extension method for concepts, relationships, axioms, examples, and rules of SWRL. Finally, a psychological counseling case shows that the method can well express the uncertainty of knowledge, and it is able to well express the reasoning rules.
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Christiansen, John K., and Claus J. Varnes. "Drivers of changes in product development rules." European Journal of Innovation Management 18, no. 2 (May 11, 2015): 218–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ejim-08-2013-0086.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate the drivers that induce companies to change their rules for managing product development. Most companies use a form of rule-based management approach, but surprisingly little is known about what makes companies change these rules. Furthermore, this management technology also has developed over time into different versions, but what drives firms from one version to another has only been suggested, not empirically studied. Design/methodology/approach – The dynamics of the rules of five companies are analyzed over a period of more than ten years based on three rounds of interviews with 40 managers. Findings – Previous research has assumed that the dynamics of product development rules are based on internal learning processes, and that increasingly competent management will stimulate the implementation of newer and more complex rule regimes. However, the analysis here indicates that there are different drivers, both internal and external, that cause companies to adopt new rules or modify their existing ones, such as changes in organizational structures, organizational conflicts and changes in ownership or strategy. In addition, contrary to the predictions in previous research, companies sometimes move back and forth between different generations of rules. Companies that have moved to a more flexible third generation of rules might revert to their second generation rules, or supplement their flexibility with an increased level of management control and information systems. A model is proposed to explain the relationship between the drivers of rule change and the actual dynamics of rules, incorporating two sets of moderators: organizational moderators and rule-related moderators. Research limitations/implications – The findings indicate that many factors influence the modification of rules, and that there is no simple linear progression from one generation to another. Organizational learning is one among several other factors that influences the dynamics of rules for managing product development. Further research is needed to explore the dynamic relationship between different factors, the proposed moderators and changes to rules. Lack of historical record keeping in companies puts special requirements on research concerning rules. Practical implications – Companies need to consider how and why their present versions of rules have emerged, whether or not the existing rules can actually solve the challenges they face today, whether or not the rules support the intended company strategy, and what mechanisms influence their product development rules. Originality/value – A great deal of research has investigated the relationship between the uses of structured rule-based approaches to manage product development, but little is known about what makes these rules change. This is the first study to uncover the multitude of drivers that stimulate change in product development rules and to suggest sets of moderators that influence the outcome.
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WANG, PEI-ZHUANG, and ALEX JIANG. "RULES DETECTING AND RULES-DATA MUTUAL ENHANCEMENT BASED ON FACTORS SPACE THEORY." International Journal of Information Technology & Decision Making 01, no. 01 (March 2002): 73–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0219622002000087.

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This paper presents a new method of rules detecting about exploring hidden rules from a given knowledge base. The expended rule set forms a lattice that can be generated by the core. Not only does this method produce detecting rules, but also enhance data integrity and completeness. In addition, this paper introduces the concept of rules-data mutual enhancement, which can detect the ultimate relationship between data and rules with the utilization of two types of information resources: databases and knowledge bases. As a result, this paper makes initial endeavors to combine those two quite separated fields to promote the development of information technology.
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Teng, Hui, Yukun Ma, and Di Teng. "Algorithm and Simulation of Association Rules of Drug Relationship Based on Network Model." Complexity 2020 (November 10, 2020): 1–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8839563.

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Studying drug relationships can provide deeper information for the construction and maintenance of biomedical databases and provide more important references for disease treatment and drug development. The research model has expanded from the previous focus on a certain drug to the systematic analysis of the pharmaceutical network formed between drugs. Network model is suitable for the study of the nonlinear relationship of the pharmaceutical relationship by modeling the data learning. Association rule mining is used to find the potential correlations between the various sets of massive data. Therefore, based on the network model, this research proposed an algorithm for drug interaction under improved association rules, which achieved accurate analysis and decision-making of drug relationship. Meanwhile, this research applied the established association rule algorithm to discuss the relationship between Chinese medicine and mental illness medicine and conducted the algorithm research and simulation analysis of the association relationship. The results showed the association rule algorithm based on the network model constructed was better than other association algorithms. It had reliability and superiority in decision-making in improving the drug-drug relationship. It also promoted the rational use of medicines and played a guiding role in pharmaceutical research. This provides scientific research personnel with research basis and research ideas for disease-related diagnosis.
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Shen, Jin, Bin Wu, and Li Yu. "Personalized configuration rules extraction in product service systems by using Local Cluster Neural Network." Industrial Management & Data Systems 115, no. 8 (September 14, 2015): 1529–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/imds-03-2015-0092.

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Purpose – Configuration systems are used as a means for efficient design of customer tailored product service systems (PSS). In PSS configuration, mapping customer needs with optimal configuration of PSS components have become much more challenging, because more knowledge with personalization aspects has to be considered. However, the extant techniques are hard to be applied to acquire personalized configuration rules. The purpose of this paper is to extract the configuration rule knowledge in symbolism formulation from historical data. Design/methodology/approach – Customer characteristics (CCs) are defined and introduced into the construction of configuration rules. Personalized PSS configuration rules (PCRs) are thereby proposed to collect and represent more knowledge. An approach combining Local Cluster Neural Network and Rulex algorithm is proposed to extract rule knowledge from historical data. Findings – The personalized configuration rules with CCs are able to alleviate the burden of customers in expressing functional requirements. Furthermore, in the long-term relationship with a customer in PSS realization, PSS offerings can be reconfigured according to the changing CCs with the guide of PCRs. Originality/value – The contribution of this paper lies in introducing the attribute of CCs into the antecedents of PCRs and proposing the neural networks-based approach to extracting the rule knowledge from historical data.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Relationship rules"

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West, Alexandra Elizabeth, and res cand@acu edu au. "Relational Standards: Rules and Expectations in Romantic Relationships." Australian Catholic University. School of Psychology, 2006. http://dlibrary.acu.edu.au/digitaltheses/public/adt-acuvp135.05022007.

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Romantic relationships are assumed to be guided by norms and rules, however research in the field of personal relationships has not directly addressed the area of relationship rules in romantic relationships, but has investigated their violations, with a specific focus on examples such as infidelity and deception. The present research program provides the first comprehensive study of rules and expectations in romantic relationships. The overall aim of the research is to explore the types of rules and expectations, or relational standards that exist in romantic relationships, how they come to exist, and their function within relationships. Given the lack of research on relational standards, a program of four studies, utilising both qualitative and quantitative methods was proposed to address the research aims. A combination of methods was deemed appropriate as qualitative methods would allow exploration of the types of relational standards that exist in romantic relationships, while quantitative methods could be used to explore their structure, function, and potential correlates. An initial study of the use of deception was based on previous work by the author. This study aimed to combine research on the strategies of deceptive use, with the motivations that are provided for engaging in deception, in order to further understand how deception is used in romantic relationships. A survey of 152 individuals currently in romantic relationships demonstrated that individuals tend to use multiple strategies when they engage in deception, and prefer to use less overt strategies than lying. Consistent with research on victim and perpetrator accounts, individuals believed their partners would view the deception as more serious than they themselves would. Deception can be viewed as one example of the violation of major relationship rules and expectations regarding trust and honesty, which prompted the question of what other rules and expectations exist in romantic relationships. This question provided the impetus for the subsequent studies, the aims of which were to explore what rules and expectations exist in romantic relationship, and how they come to exist. A qualitative study using focus groups and interviews with couples enabled the development of 16 categories about which rules and expectations typically exist. These categories described both the emotional aspects of a relationship, such as loyalty, fidelity, help and support, and the day-to-day functioning of a relationship, such as those regarding roles and time allocation. A third study, using quantitative methods, presented the 16 categories to 106 individuals in order to validate the categories, investigate how they come to exist (whether they are discussed or exist as expectations) and explore their function in terms of their importance to the relationship and levels of threat and (un)forgivability when they are violated. It also sought to explore whether relational standards were related to a measure of adjustment, specifically one.s self-restraint. All 16 categories were endorsed, and were generally seen as being common in most relationships, and important to a relationship.s functioning. The categories differed in their importance, threat and unforgivability, with rules and expectations about the emotional aspects of a relationship consistently rated as more important than rules and expectations about the procedural aspects of a relationship. The number of rules endorsed, and the types of rules discussed and expected, were not related to an individual.s adjustment. A final study of 45 couples aimed to replicate the results from the third study, as well as explore whether there was agreement in partners. responses. The final study also investigated whether relational standards were related to individual factors such as adjustment, personality, and the tendency to betray, and relationship variables such as trust, satisfaction and commitment. The results confirmed the pattern of endorsement found in the third study, that rules and expectations regarding the emotional aspects of relationship are regarded as the most important, and the most threatening and unforgivable when violated. Rules and expectations regarding the procedural aspects or the day-to-day functioning of the relationship are seen as least important to therelationship, and least threatening and easily forgiven when violated. The present research program demonstrated that there are identifiable areas about which couples have rules and expectations, and that these form a hierarchy based on their importance to the relationship. No differences were found in the way that relational standards come to exist, and relational standards were not found to be related to either individual or relationship factors. The identification of rule and expectation categories may help couples clarify their expectations of each other, and reduce potential areas of conflict. They also provide a starting point from which to further explore the importance of relational standards to relationship functioning.
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Elazmeh, William Wasim. "A new search technique for mining relationship rules." Thesis, University of Ottawa (Canada), 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/9205.

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Data Mining is extracting knowledge from data. Knowledge may be presented using rules which express relationships between sets of items involved in the rule. The nature and strength of the relationship is determined by an evaluation measure used to evaluate the rules. A relationship may correspond to an association, an implication, a correlation, a causality, a dependency, etc. This thesis considers the problem of finding the strongest N rules from transaction data. Existing algorithms (e.g. Apriori) employ search techniques based on Best-First Search methods which impose high demands on memory. Searching Depth-First solves this memory problem but can demand long execution time. This drawback can be avoided by using iterative deepening search where the Depth-First Search is run with a progressively relaxed search bound on each successive iteration. Relaxing the search bound can be based on various characteristics of the search space, such as a change in the tree depth (MSDD algorithm), or a change in the quality of states being explored. The key issue is the strategy by which the search bound is relaxed for subsequent iterations. We propose an iterative deepening search algorithm IDGmax using a search bound strategy based on the quality of states explored. We explore different methods for relaxing the search bound to improve the performance. We present experimental results to evaluate the performance of these search bound relaxation strategies and compare them to the MSDD algorithm. We also show that the choice of the search bound relaxation method can significantly influence the performance of the rule mining algorithm in both memory and time.
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Mwendapole, Chinandu. "Design knowledge and intellectual property rules : an investigation into the relationship between design knowledge and intellectual property rules." Thesis, De Montfort University, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/2086/4306.

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Laurie, Emma Jane. "The enduring appeal of #reasonable preference' : public sector housing allocations within the context of the central local government relationship." Thesis, University of Southampton, 2002. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.270686.

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Feinauer, Ian David. "The Relationship of Implicit Family Process Rules to Adolescent Presentation of Psychological Systems." Diss., CLICK HERE for online access, 2006. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd1328.pdf.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--Brigham Young University. Dept. of Marriage and Family Therapy, 2006.
Title of electronic copy: Relationship of implicit family process rules to adolescent presentation of psychological systems. Includes bibliographical references (p. 66-76).
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Gerhart, Natalie. "Decision-Making with Big Information: The Relationship between Decision Context, Stopping Rules, and Decision Performance." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2016. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc862880/.

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Ubiquitous computing results in access to vast amounts of data, which is changing the way humans interact with each other, with computers, and with their environments. Information is literally at our fingertips with touchscreen technology, but it is not valuable until it is understood. As a result, selecting which information to use in a decision process is a challenge in the current information environment (Lu & Yuan, 2011). The purpose of this dissertation was to investigate how individual decision makers, in different decision contexts, determine when to stop collecting information given the availability of virtually unlimited information. Decision makers must make an ultimate decision, but also must make a decision that he or she has enough information to make the final decision (Browne, Pitts, & Wetherbe, 2007). In determining how much information to collect, researchers found that people engage in ‘satisficing' in order to make decisions, particularly when there is more information than it is possible to manage (Simon, 1957). A more recent elucidation of information use relies on the idea of stopping rules, identifying five common stopping rules information seekers use: mental list, representational stability, difference threshold, magnitude threshold, and single criterion (Browne et al., 2007). Prior research indicates a lack of understanding in the areas of information use (Prabha, Connaway, Olszewski, & Jenkins, 2007) and information overload (Eppler & Mengis, 2004) in Information Systems literature. Moreover, research indicates a lack of clarity in what information should be used in different decision contexts (Kowalczyk & Buxmann, 2014). The increase in the availability of information further complicates and necessitates research in this area. This dissertation seeks to fill these gaps in the literature by determining how information use changes across decision contexts and the relationships between stopping rules. Two unique methodologies were used to test the hypotheses in the conceptual model, which both contribute to research on information stopping rules. One tracks the participant during an online search, the second asks follow-up survey questions on a Likert scale. One of four search tasks (professional or personal context and a big data analytics understanding or restaurant location search) was randomly assigned to each participant. Results show different stopping rules are more useful for different decision contexts. Specifically, professional tasks are more likely to use stopping rules with an a priori decision on how much information to collect, while personal tasks encourage users to determine how much information to collect during the search process. The analysis also shows that different stopping rules have different emphases on quality and quantity of information. Specifically, representational stability requires both a high quality and quantity of information, while other stopping rules indicate a preference for one of the two. Finally, information quality and quantity ultimately have a positive relationship with decision confidence, satisfaction, and efficiency. The findings of this research are useful to practitioners and academics tackling issues with the availability of more information. As systems are designed for information search, understanding information stopping rules become increasingly important.
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Kaufmann, Renee Monique. "TEACHER DISCLOSURE: DEVELOPING PRIVACY RULES, MANAGING BOUNDARIES AND BUILDING RELATIONSHIPS." UKnowledge, 2011. http://uknowledge.uky.edu/gradschool_theses/154.

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The roles and responsibilities of middle school teachers are never ending. From instructing students on state-mandated curriculum to the enrichment of character and inquiry, teachers make daily decisions about how and what to disclose to their students. The current study reexamines Hosek and Thompson’s (2009) study on how teachers develop privacy rules and coordinate boundaries using Petronio’s Communication Privacy Management as the theoretical framework. Studying middle school teachers, in lieu of college instructors, allows for a better understanding of how privacy rules and boundaries are constructed and used within the middle school. This provides a better understanding of the important factors that influence teachers’ communicative decision making within the classroom.
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Azzout, Boudjelal T. "Rethinking the relationship between international trade rules and human rights under the framework of the WTO." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2006. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.441774.

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Meng, Karl Nathan. "Couple Implicit Rules for Facilitating Disclosure and Relationship Quality with Romantic Relational Aggression as a Mediator." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2013. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/3836.

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This study examines the association between couple implicit rules related to facilitating disclosure and marital quality with husband and wife romantic relational aggression as potential mediators. Couples (N-353 couples) who participated in the Flourishing Families Project, reported on their use of couple implicit rules related to disclosure. Results indicated that implicit rules for couple disclosure were positively related to marital quality for both husbands and wives. Those couples who reported more use of implicit rules related to disclosure were also likely to use less romantic relational aggression. In turn, both husband and wife romantic relational aggression was negatively related to their own as well as their partner's marital quality. Romantic relational aggression was a significant mediator between couple implicit rules for disclosure and marital quality for both husbands and wives. Implications for marital therapy are discussed.
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ALCURE, FABIO NEFFA. "CURRENT PROBLEMS OF RENTAL RELATIONSHIP: RESULT ACHIEVED FROM THE DIRECT AND INDIRECT USE OF CONSTITUTIONAL RULES." PONTIFÍCIA UNIVERSIDADE CATÓLICA DO RIO DE JANEIRO, 2014. http://www.maxwell.vrac.puc-rio.br/Busca_etds.php?strSecao=resultado&nrSeq=29251@1.

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PONTIFÍCIA UNIVERSIDADE CATÓLICA DO RIO DE JANEIRO
A Constituição de 1988 promoveu uma notável transformação no ordenamento jurídico e, então, submeteu não só o Código Civil, mas todas as normas infraconstitucionais à conformidade com os valores e princípios constitucionais. Essa metodologia, intitulada direito civil-constitucional, modificou qualitativamente as bases do direito privado tradicional, com isso, retirando do centro das preocupações do ordenamento os interesses patrimoniais individualistas e colocando em seu lugar a proteção da pessoa humana. O presente trabalho busca capturar esse fenômeno e, assim tomando consciência, analisar questões intrincadas que afligem as relações locatícias e oferecer soluções orientandas pelo sistema axiológico-teleológico do direito civil-constitucionalizado. O necessário diálogo da Lei do Inquilinato com o Código de Defesa do Consumidor, com o Código Civil e demais leis infraconstitucionais, a potencial antijuridicidade da possibilidade de renúncia antecipada do locatário em relação ao direito de indenização pelas benfeitorias necessárias e a abusividade da denunciação imotivada do contrato de locação, como forma de alcançar objetivos ilícitos, são as matérias postas para a deslindação. Objetiva-se, desse modo, oferecer uma hermenêutica atenta ao direito constitucional à propriedade, mas imbuída de interesses metaindividuais e existenciais, como direito constitucional à moradia, de forma reafirmar a necessidade de funcionalização das titularidades e evitar a vulneração da figura do locatário como pessoa concreta, dotada de dignidade.
The Brazilian Constitution dated 1988 promoted a notable transformation of the jurisdictional order. It submitted not only the Civil Code but all the nonconstitutional normative to be in accordance to the Constitutional values and principles. This methodology, entitled Civil-Constitutional Law, changed in a qualitative manner the foundation of the traditional private law, subtracting the center of the ordainment concerns of the individual interests of the patrimony, replacing it by the protection of the human rights. This study intends to present this phenomenon and in good conscience of its use, be able to analyze intricate cases of the rental relationships, offering solutions guided by the axiologicalteleological of the Civil-Constitutional Law. The parts for debate are: the needed dialog between the Consumers Code, the Tenant Code, the Civil Code and other non constitutional laws; the potential anti-juridical possibility of previous renouncement of the landlord to its legal right to be compensated for the repairs needed; the abuse of an unmotivated denounce of the rental contract as a way to accomplish illegal objectives. This study aims to present an hermeneutic that pays attention to the Constitutional Right to Housing, enriched with meta-individual and existential interests, as in the Constitutional Rights to Housing, as a form of reassuring the necessity to the functionalization of the entitled and to avoid the susceptibility of the tenant figure as a concrete person, possessed of dignity.
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Books on the topic "Relationship rules"

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The mate relationship: Cross-cultural applications of a rules theory. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1997.

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The dog rules: The 14 secrets to a great dog relationship. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2009.

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Hickman, Trice. Breaking all my rules. New York: Dafina Books/Kensington Publishing Corp., 2015.

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Valerie, Graham, ed. Mama Rock's rules: Ten lessons for raising a houseful of successful children. New York: Collins Living, 2009.

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Varlamov, Oleg. Mivar databases and rules. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/1508665.

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The multidimensional open epistemological active network MOGAN is the basis for the transition to a qualitatively new level of creating logical artificial intelligence. Mivar databases and rules became the foundation for the creation of MOGAN. The results of the analysis and generalization of data representation structures of various data models are presented: from relational to "Entity — Relationship" (ER-model). On the basis of this generalization, a new model of data and rules is created: the mivar information space "Thing-Property-Relation". The logic-computational processing of data in this new model of data and rules is shown, which has linear computational complexity relative to the number of rules. MOGAN is a development of Rule - Based Systems and allows you to quickly and easily design algorithms and work with logical reasoning in the "If..., Then..." format. An example of creating a mivar expert system for solving problems in the model area "Geometry"is given. Mivar databases and rules can be used to model cause-and-effect relationships in different subject areas and to create knowledge bases of new-generation applied artificial intelligence systems and real-time mivar expert systems with the transition to"Big Knowledge". The textbook in the field of training "Computer Science and Computer Engineering" is intended for students, bachelors, undergraduates, postgraduates studying artificial intelligence methods used in information processing and management systems, as well as for users and specialists who create mivar knowledge models, expert systems, automated control systems and decision support systems. Keywords: cybernetics, artificial intelligence, mivar, mivar networks, databases, data models, expert system, intelligent systems, multidimensional open epistemological active network, MOGAN, MIPRA, KESMI, Wi!Mi, Razumator, knowledge bases, knowledge graphs, knowledge networks, Big knowledge, products, logical inference, decision support systems, decision-making systems, autonomous robots, recommendation systems, universal knowledge tools, expert system designers, logical artificial intelligence.
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MacAdam, Lea. You and the rules in your family / Lea MacAdam. New York: Rosen Pub. Group, 2001.

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Oyediran, Muriel A. The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world: Exploring the relationship between maternal and child health. Lagos: University of Lagos Press, 2006.

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Mutti, John H. The significance of international tax rules for sourcing income: The relationship between income taxes and trade taxes. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 1996.

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Forere, Malebakeng Agnes. The relationship of WTO law and regional trade agreements in dispute settlement: From fragmentation to coherence. Alphen aan den Rijn, The Netherlands: Kluwer Law International, 2015.

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Center, Arroyo, and Rand Corporation, eds. Supplier relationship management at army life cycle management commands: Gap analysis of best practices. Santa Monica, CA: Rand Corporation, 2012.

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Book chapters on the topic "Relationship rules"

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Reynaud, Bénédicte. "Trust and the Wage Relationship." In Operating Rules in Organizations, 9–24. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781403914422_2.

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Curran, Louise. "Chasing the Dragon: The Emerging EU-China Relationship and Its Impact on Business." In China Rules, 192–215. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230274181_8.

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Wuttke, Jörg. "Simple Rules for a Complex Relationship." In Chinese FDI in the EU and the US, 59–67. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-6071-8_7.

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Brimm, Linda. "Relationship Challenges: Invisible Rules, Silent Voices." In Global Cosmopolitans, 76–94. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230289796_5.

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Pozzebon, Marlei. "Tecnologia Social: A South American View of the Regulatory Relationship between Technology and Society." In Materiality, Rules and Regulation, 33–51. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137552648_2.

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Wannous, Rouaa, Jamal Malki, Alain Bouju, and Cécile Vincent. "Modelling Mobile Object Activities Based on Trajectory Ontology Rules Considering Spatial Relationship Rules." In Modeling Approaches and Algorithms for Advanced Computer Applications, 249–58. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-00560-7_29.

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Hoekstra, Johanna. "The roles of non-state rules in the contractual relationship." In Non-State Rules in International Commercial Law, 60–86. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2021.|: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367220846-5.

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Gulla, Jon Atle, Terje Brasethvik, and Gøran Sveia Kvarv. "Association Rules and Cosine Similarities in Ontology Relationship Learning." In Enterprise Information Systems, 201–12. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-00670-8_15.

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Pfahrer, Marcel, and Konrad Walser. "Die Bedeutung von Business Rules im Customer Relationship Management." In CRM-Systeme mit EAI, 137–55. Wiesbaden: Vieweg+Teubner Verlag, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-663-05775-8_6.

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Deszczyński, Bartosz. "Validating the Relationship Management Maturity Concept." In Firm Competitive Advantage Through Relationship Management, 121–58. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-67338-3_4.

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AbstractThis chapter operationalizes and tests the preliminary proposal of the RM maturity model in field research. The first section discusses the design of the 40-question questionnaire, which aims to verify the links between RM maturity and sustainable competitive advantage. Different classes of research biases are addressed on a semantic level, and a scoring method based on the Net Promoter Score methodology is introduced. The second section presents the analytical strategy and the design of the empirical test, encompassing the self-reporting of business respondents and machine learning analytical techniques. The product of this analysis is a set of association rules, which separate a ‘basket’ of 10 critical RM activities and approaches linked by 16 rules, typically in a reciprocal way. The third section comments on the detailed empirical results on RM maturity and sustainable competitive advantage, which are found to be much in line with business ethics. The hallmark of an ethical RM-mature firm is open internal vertical and horizontal communication, which enables the company to be a meaningful partner in the relationships with its customers and other stakeholders.
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Conference papers on the topic "Relationship rules"

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Rayate, Vikrant C., and Joshua D. Summers. "Representations: Reconciling Design for Disassembly Rules With Design for Manufacturing Rules." In ASME 2012 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2012-70987.

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The paper presents a tool for selecting appropriate Design for Manufacturing and Design for Assembly rules during product design while considering Design for Disassembly rules and end-of-life recovery conditions. This tool exposes the relations between the various types of design rules and end-of-life recovery parameters. Four different relationship types are developed in this research: recovery conditions and recovery options relationship, Design for Disassembly rules and recovery options relationship, Design for Disassembly rules and recovery conditions relationship, Design for Disassembly rules, and Design for Manufacturing and Design for Assembly rules relationship. The purpose of this research is to build these relations and transform these relationships into a database. The database serves as tool from which design rules can be retrieved by running queries. In addition to design rule retrieval, the tool also shows the relationships with various design rules, recovery options, and recovery conditions. This provides designers with information as to which rules are in conflict and which are complementary for the specific situation under consideration. To illustrate this tool, it is applied to motor-drive assembly and thermal gun sight, which are already design products. Additionally the application of the tool is demonstrated using a hypothetical scenario which involves products like coffee cup, cell phone and stapler.
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Song, Il-Yeol, Trevor H. Jones, and E. K. Park. "Binary relationship imposition rules on ternary relationships in ER modeling." In the second international conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/170088.170104.

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Bouker, S., R. Saidi, S. B. Yahia, and E. M. Nguifo. "Ranking and Selecting Association Rules Based on Dominance Relationship." In 2012 IEEE 24th International Conference on Tools with Artificial Intelligence (ICTAI 2012). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ictai.2012.94.

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Wolfson, Ouri, Hasanat M. Dewan, Salvatore J. Stolfo, and Yechiam Yemini. "Incremental evaluation of rules and its relationship to parallelism." In the 1991 ACM SIGMOD international conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/115790.115799.

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Ylönen, M. "Licensee’s relationship with the suppliers—simple rules, lessons learned." In The 2nd International Conference on Engineering Sciences and Technologies. CRC Press Taylor & Francis Group 6000 Broken Sound Parkway NW, Suite 300 Boca Raton, FL 33487-2742: CRC Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781315210469-397.

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Li, Jinjiu, Can Wang, Longbing Cao, and Philip S. Yu. "Efficient Selection of Globally Optimal Rules on Large Imbalanced Data Based on Rule Coverage Relationship Analysis." In Proceedings of the 2013 SIAM International Conference on Data Mining. Philadelphia, PA: Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1137/1.9781611972832.24.

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Li, Xiaolin, and Jiaying Fan. "Entity Relationship Extraction Method Based on Dependency Syntax Analysis and Rules." In the 2019 International Conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3366715.3366740.

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Somyanonthanakul, Rachasak, Monnapat Roonsamrarn, and Thanaruk Theeramunkong. "Semantic-based Relationship between Objective Interestingness Measures in Association Rules Mining." In 2018 International Joint Symposium on Artificial Intelligence and Natural Language Processing (iSAI-NLP). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/isai-nlp.2018.8692839.

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Tong, Hengqing, and Xiaochuan Lu. "Consumption Psychoanalysis and Customer Relationship Management Based on Association Rules Mining." In 2009 WRI World Congress on Computer Science and Information Engineering. IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/csie.2009.897.

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Dan, Muzhen. "Study on the Relationship Between Tibetan Buddhist Discipline and Temple Rules." In 3rd International Conference on Contemporary Education, Social Sciences and Humanities (ICCESSH 2018). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/iccessh-18.2018.323.

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Reports on the topic "Relationship rules"

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Burton, Michael A. Rules of Engagement: What is the Relationship Between Rules of Engagement and the Design of Operations. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, May 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada184917.

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Mutti, John, and Harry Grubert. The Significance of International Tax Rules for Sourcing Income: The Relationship Between Income Taxes and Trade Taxes. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, April 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w5526.

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Clausen, Jay, D. Moore, L. Cain, and K. Malinowski. VI preferential pathways : rule or exception. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), July 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/41305.

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Trichloroethylene (TCE) releases from leaks and spills next to a large government building occurred over several decades with the most recent event occurring 20 years ago. In response to a perceived conventional vapor intrusion (VI) issue a sub-slab depressurization system (SSDS) was installed 6 years ago. The SSDS is operating within design limits and has achieved building TCE vapor concentration reductions. However, subsequent periodic TCE vapor spikes based on daily HAPSITE™ measurements indicate additional source(s). Two rounds of smoke tests conducted in 2017 and 2018 involved introduction of smoke into a sanitary sewer and storm drain manholes located on effluent lines coming from the building until smoke was observed exiting system vents on the roof. Smoke testing revealed many leaks in both the storm sewer and sanitary sewer systems within the building. Sleuthing of the VI source term using a portable HAPSITE™ indicate elevated vapor TCE levels correspond with observed smoke emanation from utility lines. In some instances, smoke odors were perceived but no leak or suspect pipe was identified suggesting the odor originates from an unidentified pipe located behind or enclosed in a wall. Sleuthing activities also found building roof materials explain some of the elevated TCE levels on the 2nd floor. A relationship was found between TCE concentrations in the roof truss area, plenum space above 2nd floor offices, and breathing zone of 2nd floor offices. Installation of an external blower in the roof truss space has greatly reduced TCE levels in the plenum and office spaces. Preferential VI pathways and unexpected source terms may be overlooked mechanisms as compared to conventional VI.
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Megersa, Kelbesa. Tax Transparency for an Effective Tax System. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), January 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/k4d.2021.070.

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This rapid review examines evidence on the transparency in the tax system and its benefits; e.g. rising revenue, strengthen citizen/state relationship, and rule of law. Improvements in tax transparency can help in strengthening public finances in developing countries that are adversely affected by COVID-19. The current context (i.e. a global pandemic, widespread economic slowdown/recessions, and declining tax revenues) engenders the urgency of improving domestic resource mobilisation (DRM) and the fight against illicit financial flows (IFFs). Even before the advent of COVID-19, developing countries’ tax systems were facing several challenges, including weak tax administrations, low taxpayer morale and “hard-to-tax” sectors. The presence of informational asymmetry (i.e. low tax transparency) between taxpayers and tax authorities generates loopholes for abuse of the tax system. It allows the hiding of wealth abroad with a limited risk of being caught. Cases of such behaviour that are exposed without proper penalty may result in a decline in the morale of citizens and a lower level of voluntary compliance with tax legislation. A number of high-profile tax leaks and scandals have undermined public confidence in the fairness of tax systems and generated a strong demand for effective counteraction and tax transparency. One of the key contributing factors to lower tax revenues in developing countries (that is linked to low tax transparency) is a high level of IFFs. These flows, including international tax evasion and the laundering of corruption proceeds, build a major obstacle to successful DRM efforts. Research has also identified an association between organisational transparency (e.g. transparency by businesses and tax authorities) and stakeholder trust (e.g. between citizens and the state). However, the evidence is mixed as to how transparency in particular influences trust and perceptions of trustworthiness.
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Colomb, Claire, and Tatiana Moreira de Souza. Regulating Short-Term Rentals: Platform-based property rentals in European cities: the policy debates. Property Research Trust, May 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.52915/kkkd3578.

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Short-term rentals mediated by digital platforms have positive and negative impacts that are unevenly distributed among socio-economic groups and places. Detrimental impacts on the housing market and quality of life of long-term residents have been particular contentious in some cities. • In the 12 cities studied in the report (Amsterdam, Barcelona, Berlin, Brussels, Lisbon, London, Madrid, Milan, Paris, Prague, Rome and Vienna), city governments have responded differently to the growth of short-term rentals. • The emerging local regulations of short-term rentals take multiple forms and exhibit various degrees of stringency, ranging from rare cases of laissez-faire to a few cases of partial prohibition or strict quantitative control. Most city governments have sought to find a middle-ground approach that differentiates between the professional rental of whole units and the occasional rental of one’s home/ primary residence. • The regulation of short-term rentals is contentious and highly politicised. Six broad categories of interest groups and non-state actors actively participate in the debates with contrasting positions: advocates of the ‘sharing’ or ‘collaborative’ economy; corporate platforms; professional organisatons of short-term rental operators; new associations of hosts or ‘home-sharers’; the hotel and hospitality industry; and residents’ associations/citizens’ movements. • All city governments face difficulties in implementing and enforcing the regulations, due to a lack of sufficient resources and to the absence of accurate and comprehensive data on individual hosts. That data is held by corporate platforms, which have generally not accepted to release it (with a few exceptions) nor to monitor the content of their listings against local rules. • The relationships between platforms and city governments have oscillated between collaboration and conflict. Effective implementation is impossible without the cooperation of platforms. • In the context of the European Union, the debate has taken a supranational dimension, as two pieces of EU law frame the possibility — and acceptable forms — of regulation of online platforms and of short-term rentals in EU member states: the 2000 E-Commerce Directive and the 2006 Services Directive. • For regulation to be effective, the EU legal framework should be revised to ensure platform account- ability and data disclosure. This would allow city (and other ti ers of) governments to effectively enforce the regulations that they deem appropriate. • Besides, national and regional governments, who often control the legislative framework that defines particular types of short-term rentals, need to give local governments the necessary tools to be able to exercise their ‘right to regulate’ in the name of public interest objectives.
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