‘320 and Up’ starts with a tiny screen stylesheet that contains only reset, colour and typography styles. Media Queries then load assets and layout styles progressively and only as they’re needed. Think of this as responsible responsive design.
4sr is an extension of 4store where we are implementing backward chained reasoning. Currently a subset of RDFS is supported. This set includes: rdfs:subClassOf, rdfs:subPropertyOf, rdfs:domain and rdfs:range.
AgriDrupal is both a “suite of solutions” for agricultural information management and dissemination, built on the Drupal CMS, and the community of practice around these solutions.
AIDA is a framework and online tool for entity detection and disambiguation. Given a natural-language text or a Web table, it maps mentions of ambiguous names onto canonical entities (e.g., individual people or places) registered in the YAGO2 knowledge base.
The consumption of Linked Data is a task of increasing complexity on the Web of Data. This complexity is due to several factors, including the sheer size of the Web of Data, the diversity of vocabularies used to describe this data and the lack of schema information in knowledge bases. ALOE provide a semi-automatic solution to address this problem.
The DL-Learner software learns concepts in Description Logics (DLs) from examples. It extends Inductive Logic Programming to Descriptions Logics and the Semantic Web.
FOX is a framework that integrates the Linked Data Cloud and makes uses of the diversity of NLP algorithms to extract RDF triples of high accuracy out of NL. In its current version, it integrates and merges the results of Named Entity Recognition, Keyword Extraction and Relation Extraction tools.
LIMES is a link discovery framework for the Web of Data. It implements time-efficient approaches for large-scale link discovery based on the characteristics of metric spaces. It is easily configurable via a web interface. It can also be downloaded as standalone tool for carrying out link discovery locally.
A great deal of research has focused on algorithms for learning features from un- labeled data. Indeed, much progress has been made on benchmark datasets like NORB and CIFAR by employing increasingly complex unsupervised learning al- gorithms and deep models. In this paper, however, we show that several very sim- ple factors, such as the number of hidden nodes in the model, may be as important to achieving high performance as the choice of learning algorithm or the depth of the model. Specifically, we will apply several off-the-shelf feature learning al- gorithms (sparse auto-encoders, sparse RBMs and K-means clustering, Gaussian mixtures) to NORB and CIFAR datasets using only single-layer networks. We then present a detailed analysis of the effect of changes in the model setup: the receptive field size, number of hidden nodes (features), the step-size (“stride”) be- tween extracted features, and the effect of whitening. Our results show that large numbers of hidden nodes and dense feature extraction are as critical to achieving high performance as the choice of algorithm itself—so critical, in fact, that when these parameters are pushed to their limits, we are able to achieve state-of-the- art performance on both CIFAR and NORB using only a single layer of features. More surprisingly, our best performance is based on K-means clustering, which is extremely fast, has no hyper-parameters to tune beyond the model structure it- self, and is very easy implement. Despite the simplicity of our system, we achieve performance beyond all previously published results on the CIFAR-10 and NORB datasets (79.6% and 97.0% accuracy respectively).
This is androidpatterns.com, a set of interaction patterns that can help you design Android apps. An interaction pattern is a short hand summary of a design solution that has proven to work more than once. Please be inspired: use them as a guide, not as a law.
An early look at artificial Intelligence. Guests includes Edward Feigenbaum of Stanford University, Nils Nilsson of the AI Center at SRI International, Tom...
Atom Interface is a novel interactive visualization of single/multiple tree structures. It is based on the metaphor of electrons, atoms and molecules. For mo...
Attempto Controlled English (ACE) is a controlled natural language, i.e. a rich subset of standard English designed to serve as knowledge representation language. ACE allows users to express texts precisely, and in the terms of their respective application domain.
Die gezeigten Posts sind eventuell nicht akkurat bei Änderungen, die vor Kurzem vorgenommen worden. Wollen Sie jedoch akkurate Posts mit eingeschränkten Sortierungsmöglichkeiten, folgen Sie dem folgenden Link.
C. Ullrich, und A. Chen. Proceedings of the World Conference on Educational Multimedia, Hypermedia & Telecommunications (ED-MEDIA 2004), Seite 4059--4063. AACE, (2004)
J. Pitrat. COGNITIVA 90: Proceedings of the third COGNITIVA symposium on At the crossroads of artificial intelligence, cognitive science, and neuroscience, Seite 119--128. Amsterdam, The Netherlands, The Netherlands, North-Holland Publishing Co., (1991)
D. Lin. Proceedings of the 17th international conference on Computational linguistics, Seite 768--774. Morristown, NJ, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (1998)
F. Wu, und D. Weld. CIKM '07: Proceedings of the sixteenth ACM conference on Conference on information and knowledge management, Seite 41--50. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2007)
A. Srinivasan, R. King, S. Muggleton, und M. Sternberg. Proceedings of the 7th International Workshop on Inductive Logic Programming, 1297, Seite 273--287. Springer-Verlag, (1997)