Academic literature on the topic 'Visual summaries'

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Journal articles on the topic "Visual summaries"

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de la Puente, Gabrielle, and Zarina Muhammad. "emoji summaries." Journal of Writing in Creative Practice 13, no. 1 (January 1, 2020): 147–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jwcp.13.1.147_3.

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The White Pube present the emoji summaries that accompany their exhibition reviews on thewhitepube.com. The emoji summaries are there to replace the quantitative 1–5 star rating that normally heads typical art and film reviews. Rather than claim the same authoritative objectivity, The White Pube writers will respond to the exhibition with three selective emojis to offer a description of their personal experience.
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Clarke, Irvine, Theresa B. Flaherty, and Michael Yankey. "Teaching the Visual Learner: The Use of Visual Summaries in Marketing Education." Journal of Marketing Education 28, no. 3 (December 2006): 218–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0273475306291466.

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Tiurina, Natalia, Yuri Markov, Michael H. Herzog, and David Pascucci. "Efficient ensemble summaries are inversely related to visual crowding." Journal of Vision 21, no. 9 (September 27, 2021): 2093. http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/jov.21.9.2093.

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Turkay, Cagatay, Aidan Slingsby, Helwig Hauser, Jo Wood, and Jason Dykes. "Attribute Signatures: Dynamic Visual Summaries for Analyzing Multivariate Geographical Data." IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics 20, no. 12 (December 31, 2014): 2033–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tvcg.2014.2346265.

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Ciocca, G., and R. Schettini. "Supervised And Unsupervised Classification Post-Processing for Visual Video Summaries." IEEE Transactions on Consumer Electronics 52, no. 2 (May 2006): 630–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tce.2006.1649689.

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Rudinac, S., A. Hanjalic, and M. Larson. "Generating Visual Summaries of Geographic Areas Using Community-Contributed Images." IEEE Transactions on Multimedia 15, no. 4 (June 2013): 921–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tmm.2013.2237896.

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Westman, Stina. "Evaluation of visual video summaries: user-supplied constructs and descriptions." International Journal on Digital Libraries 11, no. 2 (June 2010): 125–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00799-011-0071-y.

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Tran, Tuan Anh, Jarunee Duangsuwan, and Wiphada Wettayaprasit. "Automatic Aspect-Based Sentiment Summarization for Visual, Structured, and Textual Summaries." ECTI Transactions on Computer and Information Technology (ECTI-CIT) 15, no. 1 (January 27, 2021): 50–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.37936/ecti-cit.2021151.237565.

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Online reviews are valuable sources of information to help companies to make good decisions for business intelligence. In this study, we propose an Automatic Aspect-based Sentiment Summarization (AAbSS) system that has two components and can generate a summary as an output. The first component is the Aspect-based Knowledge Representation and Selection (AKRS) used to represent reviews based on aspects and their polarities for selecting aspect-based knowledge. To represent and selection knowledge, a set of frequency of polarity opinion strength, a summation of frequency of aspect, and an information of aspect are initiated. The second component is the Summary Format Generation (SFG) used to automatically generate three kinds of formats. In this component (SFG), new representations for visual and structured summaries, and a new way of applied natural language generation for a textual summary are proposed. In the experiments, 13 domains from benchmark datasets of customer reviews, e.g. cell phone, digital camera, etc. are used. The proposed system not only fast generates summaries having good performance when compared to other summaries generated by other systems and easily updated when adding new reviews in the same domain but also does not spend memory capacity to save any raw data.
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Kigotho, Mutuota, and Siti Sarah Fitriani. "Summarising an Explanation Text with a Visual Representation as the Guidelines: How Does this Work to Represent Meaning?" Al-Ta lim Journal 25, no. 1 (March 1, 2018): 1–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.15548/jt.v25i1.379.

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Metacognition has been popular in reading area, especially when it is related to comprehension and the representation of meanings. Combining metacognitive strategies to represent meanings from a text has been done by previous scholars to help readers construct meaning. In this paper, we present students’ drawings and writings as the results of successive visualisation and summarisation activities in the classroom. We intended to find out the extent to which students’ visual representations can be the guideline for them to write summaries. By employing qualitative research method, we collected visual representations and summaries from 26 undergraduate students studying at the English Education Department of Syiah Kuala University. To understand students’ drawings, we consulted some literature on visual literacy and multimodality; while for the analysis of students’ writings, we reviewed some literature on functional model to language. Based on the analysis, a productive visual representation leads to a strong summary, and vice versa. This result is further discussed in this paper.
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Köthur, Patrick, Mike Sips, Andrea Unger, Julian Kuhlmann, and Doris Dransch. "Interactive visual summaries for detection and assessment of spatiotemporal patterns in geospatial time series." Information Visualization 13, no. 3 (April 8, 2013): 283–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1473871613481692.

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Numerous measurement devices and computer simulations produce geospatial time series that describe a wide variety of processes of System Earth. A major challenge in the analysis of such data is the complexity of the described processes, which requires a simultaneous assessment of the data’s spatial and temporal variability. To address this task, geoscientists often use automated analyses to compute a compact description of the data, ideally comprising characteristic spatial states of the process under study and their occurrence over time. The results of such automated methods depend on the parameterization, especially the number of extracted spatial states. A particular number of spatial states, however, may only reflect certain spatial or temporal aspects. We introduce a visual analytics approach that overcomes this limitation by allowing users to extract and explore various sets of spatial states to detect characteristic spatiotemporal patterns. To this end, we use the results of hierarchical clustering as a starting point. It groups all time steps of a geospatial time series into a hierarchy of clusters. Users can interactively explore this hierarchy to derive various sets of spatial states. To facilitate detailed inspection of these sets, we employ the concept of interactive visual summaries. A visual summary is the depiction of a set of spatial states and their associated time steps or intervals. It includes interactive means that allow users to assess how well the depicted patterns characterize the original data. Our visual interface comprises a system of visualization components to facilitate both the extraction of sets of spatial states from the hierarchical clustering output and their detailed inspection using interactive visual summaries. This study results from a close collaboration with geoscientists. In an exemplary analysis of observational ocean data, we show how our approach can help geoscientists gain a better understanding of geospatial time series.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Visual summaries"

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Del, Fatto Vincenzo. "Visual summaries of geographic databases by chorems." Lyon, INSA, 2009. http://theses.insa-lyon.fr/publication/2009ISAL0030/these.pdf.

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Ce mémoire a pour objectif d’élaborer une céramique dense et à microstructure la plus fine possible en frittant une alumine de transition. Cette alumine, présentant des phases initiales métastables, suit donc des transformations de phases lors de la montée en température qui interfèrent avec le frittage. Une structure de forme vermiculaire, avec de larges porosités difficiles à éliminer même à haute température, est systématiquement trouvée à cause de ces transformations. Une étude de l’influence de deux états d’empilement différents de particules nanométriques dans le cru sur la transformation de phase et sur la densification a été conduite, en partant de deux méthodes de mise en forme différentes i) le pressage (d’une poudre sèche) et ii) le coulage en barbotine (mise en forme d’une dispersion). Pour une même densité à cru (62% ±1%), la distribution plus homogène des porosités dans le cru coulé, grâce à une meilleure dispersion de la poudre initialement agglomérée, permet le réarrangement des particules et facilite ainsi la transformation vers la phase stable alpha. De plus, l’homogénéité de distribution de porosités de faible taille, après la transformation, limite la formation de colonies vermiculaires et favorise les cinétiques de frittage. Ce réarrangement a donc permis d’avoir une meilleure densification du compact. Malgré l’amélioration de la densité finale du compact coulé (98%) par rapport au compact pressé (78%), la taille des grains obtenue est plus grande que le micron. Afin de réduire la taille des grains dans le fritté, une optimisation des paramètres de frittage a été réalisé sur des crus coulés par variation de vitesse de chauffe et traitement thermique à basse température. La formation de la structure vermiculaire, dont la présence gêne la densification, peut être évitée pendant la transformation. Cela est possible par un traitement thermique à basse température (950°C) sur un cru coulé. Aucun grossissement des grains n’est observé après la transformation en α-Al2O3. Un ‘cru’ en α-Al2O3 avec une densité élevée (58%) et une taille de particules petites de ~30 nm (identique à la taille initiale de la poudre) a été obtenu. L’obtention de cette microstructure a permis de découpler la transformation avec le frittage/coalescence et donc d’éviter la formation d’une structure vermiculaire. Cependant, cette forme vermiculaire apparaît lors du frittage de ce ‘cru’ en α-Al2O3. Ceci montre que la forme vermiculaire n’est pas liée à la transformation de phase elle-même mais qu’elle résulte d’une coalescence/frittage des particules au premier stade de frittage. Le frittage de l’alumine α sous forme de vermicules ou sous forme de petites particules (~30 nm) donne une structure ayant une densité finale de 98% avec une taille de grains de 2 µm, équi-axes et homogènes quel que soit le chemin de frittage parcouru
Traditional cartography is a fundamental tool to visually describe facts and relationships concerning with territory. This is a well-known and well-established approach and decision makers are usually satisfied by its expressiveness when it concerns the cartography of facts. Differently, this kind of cartography may fail when dealing with scenarios referring to heterogeneous issues, such as political, economic and demographic problems, due to the large amount of complex data to represent in a map. Then, more effective solutions in supporting users to locate facts, trends and new patterns should be investigated. In this dissertation the research carried out within an international project is presented, meant to define cartographic solutions able to better represent geographic information extracted from database contents, which refer both to geographic objects and spatio-temporal phenomena. An actual support for human activity to model and analyze the reality of interest may indeed consist of an immediate synthesis of the most relevant data, disregarding details. Such a synthesis may be based on the usage of visual metaphors, which are able to capture and restitute the most salient features of a scenario. Moreover, it may represent the starting point for further processing tasks aimed to derive spatial analysis data, and to support expert users in decision making, thus bridging the gap between the complexity of the adopted applications and the need for rapid and exhaustive responses expected by domain experts. The major contribution of this work along this line has been to define a methodology to visualize geographic database summaries, expressing them through “schematized representations of territories", known as chorems. In particular, two specific contributions have been produced by investigating and implementing the proposed methodology. The former consists of the formal specification of chorems in terms of visual language and structure, in order to both standardize the chorem creation and assembling process and provide a usable framework for computer systems. The latter is represented by the design and the implementation of a system which generates maps containing chorems starting from geographic database content, in a semi-automatic manner
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Tran, Quan Tu. "Visual summaries augmenting memory recall of repetitive actions." Diss., Georgia Institute of Technology, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/37211.

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Throughout a typical day, people complete myriad tasks and activities such as locking the front door as they run errands around the neighborhood, preparing meals and drinks, taking care of family, pets, plants, and so on. In managing the progress of these everyday activities, people may nd themselves needing to recall what they have already done. In this research, I explored how to design an unobtrusive memory aid that reduces the cost of distraction and general multitasking by fluidly supporting memory recall of repetitive actions. I built the Cook's Collage as one example system that captures close-range photographs of ingredient additions during everyday home cooking to display as an ongoing visual summary of the open-ended activity. I contribute this augmentative technology as a memory aid in contrast to more directive, obtrusive, and yet constrained systems that seek to remove human error through automation and scripted guidance. I explored how to evaluate memory augmentation by simulating real-life situations of multitasking and interruptions that distracted cooks participating in my experimental study. From examining their behavior and attitudes with and without the Cook's Collage, I demonstrated that 1) Visually summarizing activities by capturing items used within the activity in the same physical surroundings can provide sufficient context in recalling memory for actions, 2) User interaction with accurate memory support that complements and supplements rather than interferes with memory practices, activity constraints, and environmental surroundings can effectively augment memory recall, and 3) Barriers to using provided memory support can include unawareness of memory need and predilection to own memory ability and routine.
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Köthur, Patrick. "Visual analytics for detection and assessment of process-related patterns in geoscientific spatiotemporal data." Doctoral thesis, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.18452/17397.

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Diese Arbeit untersucht, inwiefern Visual Analytics die Analyse von Prozessen in geowissenschaftlichen raum-zeitlichen Daten unterstützen kann. Hierzu wurden drei neuartige Visual Analytics Ansätze entwickelt. Jeder Ansatz addressiert eine wichtige Analyseperspektive. Der erste Ansatz erlaubt es, wichtige räumliche Zustände in den Daten sowie deren auftreten in der Zeit zu untersuchen. Mittels hierarchischem Clustering werden alle in den Daten enthaltenen räumlichen Zustände in einer Clusterhierarchie verortet. Interaktive visuelle Analyse ermöglicht es, verschiedene räumliche Zustände aus den Daten zu extrahieren und die dazugehörigen raum-zeitlichen Muster zu interpretieren und zu bewerten. Der zweite Ansatz unterstützt die systematische Analyse des in den Daten zu beobachtenden zeitlichen Verhaltens sowie dessen Auftreten im geographischen Raum mittels einer Kombination aus Cluster Ensembles und interaktiver visueller Exploration. Der dritte Ansatz gestattet die Detektion und Analyse von zeitlichen Zusammenhängen in den Daten. Hierzu wurde eine etablierte Methode zur Analyse von zeitlichen Zusammenhängen zwischen zwei einzelnen Zeitreihen, gefensterte Kreuzkorrelation, durch Visual Analytics auf den Vergleich von Zeitreihenensembles erweitert. Dadurch ist es nicht nur möglich, Zusammenhänge zwischen Zeitreihen zu untersuchen, sondern auch Unsicherheiten in den Daten zu berücksichtigen. Alle Ansätze wurden anhand einer nutzer- und aufgabenorientierten Methodik entwickelt und erfolgreich in Anwendungsfällen aus der Erdsystem-Modellierung, der Ozeanmodellierung, der Paläoklimatologie und sogar den Kognitionswissenschaften eingesetzt. Diese Dissertation zeigt, dass Visual Analytics einen wertvollen Ansatz zur Analyse von Prozess-bezogenen Mustern in raum-zeitlichen Daten darstellt. Es kann die Grenzen existierender Analysemethoden erweitern und ermöglicht Geowissenschaftlern neue, aufschlussreiche Sichtweisen auf Daten und die darin beschriebenen Prozesse.
This thesis studied how visual analytics can facilitate the analysis of processes in geoscientific spatiotemporal data. Three novel visual analytics solutions were developed, each addressing an important analysis perspective. The first solution addresses the analysis of prominent spatial situations in the data and their occurrence over time. Hierarchical clustering is used to arrange all spatial situations in the data in a hierarchy of clusters. The combination with interactive visual analysis enables geoscientists to explore and alter the resulting hierarchy, to extract different sets of representative spatial situations, and to interpret and assess the corresponding spatiotemporal patterns. The second solution supports geoscientists in the analysis of prominent types of temporal behavior and their location in geographic space. Cluster ensembles are integrated with interactive visual exploration to enable users to systematically detect and interpret various types of temporal behavior in different data sets and to use this information for assessment of simulation model output. The third solution enables geoscientists to detect and analyze interrelations of temporal behavior in the data. Windowed cross-correlation, a technique for comparison of two individual time series, was extended to the comparison of entire ensembles of time series through visual analytics. This not only allows scientists to study interrelations, but also to assess how much these interrelations vary between two ensembles. All visual analytics solutions were developed following a rigorous user- and task-centered methodology and successfully applied to use cases in Earth system modeling, ocean modeling, paleoclimatology, and even cognitive science. The results of this thesis demonstrate that visual analytics successfully addresses important analysis perspectives and that it is a valuable approach to the analysis of process-related patterns in geoscientific spatiotemporal data.
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Carletti, Marco. "Saliency-based approaches for multidimensional explainability of deep networks." Doctoral thesis, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/11562/1016496.

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In deep learning, visualization techniques extract the salient patterns exploited by deep networks to perform a task (e.g. image classification) focusing on single images. These methods allow a better understanding of these complex models, empowering the identification of the most informative parts of the input data. Beyond the deep network understanding, visual saliency is useful for many quantitative reasons and applications, both in the 2D and 3D domains, such as the analysis of the generalization capabilities of a classifier and autonomous navigation. In this thesis, we describe an approach to cope with the interpretability problem of a convolutional neural network and propose our ideas on how to exploit the visualization for applications like image classification and active object recognition. After a brief overview on common visualization methods producing attention/saliency maps, we will address two separate points: firstly, we will describe how visual saliency can be effectively used in the 2D domain (e.g. RGB images) to boost image classification performances: as a matter of fact, visual summaries, i.e. a compact representation of an ensemble of saliency maps, can be used to improve the classification accuracy of a network through summary-driven specializations. Then, we will present a 3D active recognition system that allows to consider different views of a target object, overcoming the single-view hypothesis of classical object recognition, making the classification problem much easier in principle. Here we adopt such attention maps in a quantitative fashion, by building a 3D dense saliency volume which fuses together saliency maps obtained from different viewpoints, obtaining a continuous proxy on which parts of an object are more discriminative for a given classifier. Finally, we will show how to inject this representations in a real world application, so that an agent (e.g. robot) can move knowing the capabilities of its classifier.
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Books on the topic "Visual summaries"

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America, Optical Society of, and American Academy of Optometry, eds. Ophthalmic and visual optics: Summaries of papers presented at the Opththalmic and Visual Optics topical meeting, February 19-20, 1993, Monterey, California. Noninvasive assessment of the visual system : summaries of papers presented at the Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System topical meeting, February 21-23,1993, Monterey, California. Washington, DC: The Society, 1993.

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Ophthalmic and Visual Optics Topical Meeting (1993 Monterey, Calif.). Ophthalmic and visual optics: Summaries of papers presented at the Ophththalmic and Visual Optics Topical Meeting, February 19-20, 1993, Monterey, California. Noninvasive assessment of the visual system : summaries of papers presented at the Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System Topical Meeting, February 21-23, 1993, Monterey, California. Washington, DC: The Society, 1993.

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Ophthalmic, and Visual Optics Topical Meeting (1992 Santa Fe New Mexico). Ophthalmic and visual optics: Summaries of papers presented at Ophthalmic and Visual Optics Topical Meeting, January 28-30, 1992, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Washington, DC (2010 Massachusetts Ave., NW, Washington 20036): The Society, 1992.

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Ophthalmic and Visual Optics Topical Meeting (1991 Santa Fe, N.M.). Ophthalmic and visual optics: Summaries of papers presented at the Opthalmic and Visual Optics Topical Meeting, February 6-8, 1991, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Washington, DC: The Society, 1991.

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Applied Vision Topical Meeting (1989 San Francisco, Calif.). Applied vision: Summaries of papers presented at the Applied Vision Topical Meeting : topical meeting, July 12-14, 1989, San Francisco, California. Washington, D.C: The Society, 1989.

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Topical Meeting on Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System (1990 Incline Village, Nev.). Noninvasive assessment of visual system: Summaries of papers presented at the Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System Topical Meeting, February 5-8, 1990, Incline Village, Nevada. Washington, D.C: Optical Society of America, 1990.

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Topical, Meeting on Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System (1990 Incline Village Nev ). Noninvasive assessment of the visual system: Summaries of papers presented at the Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System Topical Meeting, February 5-8, 1990, Incline Village, Nevada. Washington, DC: The Society, 1990.

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Topical Meeting on Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System (1988 Incline Village, Nev.). Noninvasive assessment of the visual system: Summaries of papers presented at the Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System Topical Meeting, February 16-18, 1988, Incline Village, Nevada. Washington, D.C: OSA, 1988.

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Topical Meeting on Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System (1991 Santa Fe, N.M.). Noninvasive assessment of the visual system: Summaries of papers presented at the Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System Topical Meeting, February 4-7, 1991, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Washington, DC: The Society, 1991.

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Topical Meeting on Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System (1989 Santa Fe, N.M.). Noninvasive assessment of the visual system: Summaries of papers presented at the Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System Topical Meeting, February 13-15, 1989, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Washington, D.C: The Society, 1989.

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Book chapters on the topic "Visual summaries"

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Westman, Stina. "Evaluation Constructs for Visual Video Summaries." In Research and Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries, 67–79. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-15464-5_9.

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Tan, Reuben, Bryan A. Plummer, Kate Saenko, JP Lewis, Avneesh Sud, and Thomas Leung. "NewsStories: Illustrating Articles with Visual Summaries." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 644–61. Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-20059-5_37.

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Kannappan, Sivapriyaa, Yonghuai Liu, and Bernard Paul Tiddeman. "Performance Evaluation of Video Summaries Using Efficient Image Euclidean Distance." In Advances in Visual Computing, 33–42. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-50832-0_4.

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Laurini, Robert. "Towards Visual Summaries of Geographic Databases Based on Chorems." In Lecture Notes in Geoinformation and Cartography, 219–34. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-88244-2_15.

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Del Fatto, Vincenzo, Robert Laurini, Karla Lopez, Rosalva Loreto, Françoise Milleret-Raffort, Monica Sebillo, David Sol-Martinez, and Giuliana Vitiello. "Potentialities of Chorems as Visual Summaries of Geographic Databases Contents." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 537–48. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-76414-4_52.

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Kas, Miray, and Bongwon Suh. "Computational Framework for Generating Visual Summaries of Topical Clusters in Twitter Streams." In Social Networks: A Framework of Computational Intelligence, 173–99. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-02993-1_9.

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Ling, Jin, and Nadezda Sorokina. "Visualizing and Comparing Online Travel Reviews of the Great Walls: A Data Mining Approach." In Information and Communication Technologies in Tourism 2022, 423–27. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-94751-4_39.

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AbstractThis research employs two samples of heritage sites of the Great Wall of China (Ba daling Great Wall and Mu tianyu Great Wall) and their 21000 reviews on TripAdvisor to visualize and induce feature-related comparisons. Word2vec and D3.js are applied for statistical computing and graphing Minimal Spanning Tree (MST) and ThemeRiver. The applications of MST and ThemeRiver are used to delineate outstanding features and clearer feature relationships. In terms of methodology, we applied an innovative research route to combine MST with ThemeRiver to visualize travellers’ online comments. At the same time, the visual results obtained are combined with qualitative analysis to generate valuable, intuitive summaries that can be used for reference in future research. Practically, the results disclose that although both sites are highly enjoyed by tourists, they are significantly different in terms of service, infrastructure and scenery. This article has implications for policymakers and practitioners with regard to making use of online reviews to gather authentic visitor comments on the Great Wall.
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Zabulis, Xenophon, Jon Sporring, and Stelios C. Orphanoudakis. "Scale Summarized and Focused Browsing of Primitive Visual Content." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 269–78. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-40053-2_24.

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Chaker, Sarah. "Hear - Taste - See: UISGE BEATHA - Waters of Life." In Forum Musikvermittlung - Perspektiven aus Forschung und Praxis, 169–78. Bielefeld, Germany: transcript Verlag, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/9783839456811-013.

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A special kind of synaesthetic experience could be seen, heard and tasted at the lecture series back in 2019/2020 about the format »Works and Whiskies«, as very different tastes of Scotch whisky flavours were transformed into notes and pieces of music for contrabass clarinet by composer Petra Stump-Linshalm. These were rendered audible by musician Heinz-Peter Linshalm and found their visual equivalent in paintings by Jutta Goldgruber. Based on an interview with the artists, Sarah Chaker summarises in this article their thoughts towards this special kind of Musikvermittlung, which was retrospectively described by many of those present as particularly innovative and expedient.
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Bornaetxea, Txomin, Andrée Blais-Stevens, and Brendan Miller. "Landslide Inventory Map of the Valemount Area, British Columbia, Canada. A Detailed Methodological Description." In Progress in Landslide Research and Technology, Volume 1 Issue 2, 2022, 373–81. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-18471-0_27.

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AbstractLandslides are a recurring geomorphological process in high mountainous areas like Valemount in the Canadian Rocky Mountains, British Columbia. The compilation of detailed information about the spatial distribution and characteristics of past landslides is essential for assessing future potential hazards. To provide baseline geoscience information to stakeholders and decision-makers, we carried out a landslide inventory that covers roughly 1200 km2. Using visual interpretation of aerial orthophotos, a digital elevation model of 5 × 5 m resolution and satellite imagery, we compiled up to 1286 landslides and classified them into 11 categories and three levels of certainty. The current paper describes the mapping methodology and summarizes our results.
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Conference papers on the topic "Visual summaries"

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Wolff, Annika L., Paul Mulholland, and Zdenek Zdrahal. "Visual summaries of data." In the 21st ACM conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1810617.1810678.

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Koop, David, Juliana Freire, and Claudio T. Silva. "Visual summaries for graph collections." In 2013 IEEE Pacific Visualization Symposium (PacificVis). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/pacificvis.2013.6596128.

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Wulms, Jules, Juri Buchmuller, Wouter Meulemans, Kevin Verbeek, and Bettina Speckmann. "Stable Visual Summaries for Trajectory Collections." In 2021 IEEE 14th Pacific Visualization Symposium (PacificVis). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/pacificvis52677.2021.00016.

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Carenini, Giuseppe, and Gabriel Murray. "Visual structured summaries of human conversations." In the first international workshop. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2002353.2002366.

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Raguram, Rahul, and Svetlana Lazebnik. "Computing iconic summaries of general visual concepts." In 2008 IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops (CVPR Workshops). IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cvprw.2008.4562959.

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Jacobs, Nathan, and Robert Pless. "Real-time constant memory visual summaries for surveillance." In the 4th ACM international workshop. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1178782.1178805.

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Calic, Janko, Marta Mrak, and Ahmet Kondoz. "Dynamic layout of visual summaries for scalable video." In 2008 International Workshop on Content-Based Multimedia Indexing (CBMI). IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cbmi.2008.4564926.

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Girgensohn, A. "A fast layout algorithm for visual video summaries." In 2003 International Conference on Multimedia and Expo. ICME '03. Proceedings (Cat. No.03TH8698). IEEE, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icme.2003.1221557.

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Chen, Wei-Chao, Agathe Battestini, Natasha Gelfand, and Vidya Setlur. "Visual summaries of popular landmarks from community photo collections." In the seventeen ACM international conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1631272.1631415.

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Bezerra, F. N., and E. Lima. "Low cost soccer video summaries based on visual rhythm." In the 8th ACM international workshop. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1178677.1178690.

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Reports on the topic "Visual summaries"

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Bornaetxea, T., A. Blais-Stevens, and B. Miller. Landslide inventory map of the Valemount area, British Columbia. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/330911.

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Landslides are a recurring geomorphological process in high mountainous areas like Valemount (Canadian Rocky Mountains, British Columbia). The compilation of detailed information about the spatial distribution and characteristics of past landslides is essential for assessing future potential hazards. To provide baseline geoscience information to stakeholders and decision-makers, we carried out a landslide inventory that covers roughly 1200 km2. Using visual interpretation of aerial orthophotos, a digital elevation model of 5x5 meter resolution and satellite imagery, we compiled up to 1286 landslides and classified each into 12 categories and three confidence levels. The current paper describes the mapping methodology and summarizes our results.
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wu, ruiqing. Efficacy and Complications of Extreme Lateral Interbody Fusion (XLIF) for lumbar spinal stenosis:A Meta-Analysis and Systematic Review. INPLASY - International Platform of Registered Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Protocols, February 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37766/inplasy2022.2.0085.

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Review question / Objective: P? Patients with Lumbar Spinal Stenosis. I? Extreme Lateral Interbody Fusion (XLIF). C? Other lumbar interbody fusions. O?Predefined outcome measures were preoperative and postoperative visual analogue scale back and/or leg pain (VAS-BP) and Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) score; operation time; intraoperative blood loss; length of hospital stay; and the complications, reoperation and fusion rate. S: randomized controlled trials (RCTs) or nonrandomized cohort studies. Condition being studied: Extreme Lateral Interbody Fusion (XLIF) can be widely used for the treatment of lumbar spinal stenosis, and this study aims to summarize the efficacy and complications of this procedure for lumbar spinal stenosis. Extreme Lateral Interbody Fusion (XLIF) for the treatment of Lumbar Spinal Stenosis.for the treatment of lumbar spinal stenosis, and this study aims to summarize the efficacy and complications of this procedure for lumbar spinal stenosis.Extreme Lateral Interbody Fusion (XLIF) for the treatment of Lumbar Spinal Stenosis.
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Anilkumar, Rahul, Benjamin Melone, Michael Patsula, Christopher Tran, Christopher Wang, Kevin Dick, Hoda Khalil, and G. A. Wainer. Canadian jobs amid a pandemic : examining the relationship between professional industry and salary to regional key performance indicators. Department of Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton University, June 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.22215/dsce/220608.

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The COVID-19 pandemic has contributed to massive rates of unemployment and greater uncertainty in the job market. There is a growing need for data-driven tools and analyses to better inform the public on trends within the job market. In particular, obtaining a “snapshot” of available employment opportunities mid-pandemic promises insights to inform policy and support retraining programs. In this work, we combine data scraped from the Canadian Job Bank and Numbeo globally crowd-sourced repository to explore the relationship between job postings during a global pandemic and Key Performance Indicators (e.g. quality of life index, cost of living) for major cities across Canada. This analysis aims to help Canadians make informed career decisions, collect a “snapshot” of the Canadian employment opportunities amid a pandemic, and inform job seekers in identifying the correct fit between the desired lifestyle of a city and their career. We collected a new high-quality dataset of job postings from jobbank.gc.ca obtained with the use of ethical web scraping and performed exploratory data analysis on this dataset to identify job opportunity trends. When optimizing for average salary of job openings with quality of life, affordability, cost of living, and traffic indices, it was found that Edmonton, AB consistently scores higher than the mean, and is therefore an attractive place to move. Furthermore, we identified optimal provinces to relocate to with respect to individual skill levels. It was determined that Ajax, Marathon, and Chapleau, ON are each attractive cities for IT professionals, construction workers, and healthcare workers respectively when maximizing average salary. Finally, we publicly release our scraped dataset as a mid-pandemic snapshot of Canadian employment opportunities and present a public web application that provides an interactive visual interface that summarizes our findings for the general public and the broader research community.
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