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In the earliest recorded poetry of the Insular Celtic literature, the occurrence intra-linear phoneme recurrences in addition to the rather common feature of alliteration suggest that they served an indexical motivation of the metrical constraints. This is in particular suggested by the indexical use of personal names. This practice may perhaps even reach back to Continental Celtic metrical practices which already seem to bear witness of the use of such language skills. It is particularly interesting to note that the initial mutations of the lexemes do not obstruct indexicality. It is suggested that the orally trained poets may perhaps have received specific grammatical instructions as part of their prolongued poetic education.
1H NMR Lanthanideinduced Shift (LIS) investigations of highly flexible molecules : a new approach
(1993)
Rainfall erosivities as defined by the R factor from the universal soil loss equation were determined for all events during a two-year period at the station La Cuenca in western Amazonia. Three methods based on a power relationship between rainfall amount and erosivity were then applied to estimate event and daily rainfall erosivities from the respective rainfall amounts. A test of the resulting regression equations against an independent data set proved all three methods equally adequate in predicting rainfall erosivity from daily rainfall amount. We recommend the Richardson model for testing in the Amazon Basin, and its use with the coefficient from La Cuenca in western Amazonia.
This paper presents a new methodology for examining the phenomenon of subitizing. Subjects were presented with a standard numerosity-detection task but for a range of presentation times to allow Task-Accuracy Functions to be computed for individual subjects. The data appear to show a continuous change in processing for numerosities from 2 to 5 when the data are aggregated across subjects. At the level of individual subjects, there appear to be qualitative shifts in enumeration processing after 3 or 4 objects. The approach used in this experiment may be used to test the claim that subitizing is a distinct enumeration process that can be used for small numbers of objects.
Using quantities of symbolic dynamics, such as mutual information, Shannon information and algorithmic complexity, we have searched for interrelations of spikes emitted simultaneously at different frequencies during the impulsive phase of a flare event. As the spikes are related to the flare energy release and are interpreted as emissions originating at different sites having different magnetic field strengths, any relation in frequency is interpretated as a relation in space. This approach is appropriate to characterize such spatio-temporal patterns, whereas the popular estimate of fractal dimensions can be applied to low-dimensional systems only. Depending on the energy release and emission processes, two types of fragmentation are possible: a scenario of global organization (spikes are emitted in a succession of similar events by the same system) or a scenario of local organization (many systems triggered by an initial event). Mutual information which is a generalization of correlation indicates a relation in frequency beyond the bandwidth of individual spikes. The scans in the spectrograms with large mutual information also show a low level of Shannon information and algorithmic complexity, indicating that the simultaneous appearance of spikes at other frequencies is not a completely stochastic phenomenon (white noise). It may be caused by a nonlinear deterministic system or by a Markov process. By means of mutual information we find a memory over frequency intervals up to 60 MHz. Shannon information and algorithmic complexity concern the mbox{whole} frequency region, i.e. the global source region. A global organization is also apparent in quasi-periodic changes of the Shannon information and algorithmic complexity in the range of 2 - 8 seconds. The finding is compatible with a scenario of local organization in which the information of one event spreads spatially and triggers further events at different places. The region is not an ensemble of independently flashing sources, each representing a system that cascades in energy after an initial trigger. On the contrary, there is a causal connection between the sources at any time. The analysis of the four spike events suggests that the structure in frequency is not stochastic but a process in which spikes at nearby locations are simultaneously triggered by a common exciter.
We look for structural properties in the light curve of the dwarf nova SS Cyg by means of techniques from nonlinear dynamics. Applying the popular Grassberger-Procaccia procedure, Cannizzo and Goddings (1988) showed that there is no evidence for a low-dimensional attractor underlying this record. Because there are some hints for order in the light curve, we search for other signatures of deterministic systems. Therefore, we use other methods recently developed in this theory, such as local linear prediction and recurrence maps. Our main findings are: i] the prediction error grows exponentially during outburst phases, but via a power law in the quiescent states, ii] there are some rather regular patterns in this light curve which sometimes recur, but the recurrence is not regular. This leads to the following conclusions: i] The outburst dynamics shows a higher degree of order than the quiescent one. There are some hints for deterministic chaos in the outburst behavior. ii] The light curve is a complex mixture of deterministic and stochastic structures. The analysis presented in this paper shows that methods of nonlinear dynamics can be an efficient tool for the study of complex processes, even if there is no evidence for a low-dimensional attractor.
Arbeitszeit und Wertewandel
(1993)
Arbeitszeit und Wertewandel
(1993)
Inhalt: 1. Arbeitszeit und Wertwandel als personal- und tarifpolitische Kategorien 1.1. Dauer und Lage der Arbeitszeit als Reflex von Wertvorstellungen 1.2. Wertewandel als Ergebnis der Veränderung der Arbeitszeit 1.3. Personal- und tarifpolitische Konsequenzen 2. Zur Diskussion des Wertewandels in der Arbeitswelt 2.1. Ansichten über den Verlauf des Wertewandels 2.2. Ansichten über die Ursachen des Wertewandels 2.3. Ansichten über die Auswirkungen des Wertewandels 3. Wertvorstellungen der Arbeitnehmer zur Arbeitszeitgestaltung 3.1. Wünsche zur Arbeitszeitverkürzung 3.2. Wünsche zur Umgestaltung der Arbeitszeit 4. Personal- und tarifpolitische Gestaltungsfelder 4.1. Arbeitszeit und Wertewandel aus der Sicht der Tarifpartner 4.2. Arbeitszeit und Wertewandel aus betrieblicher Sicht 4.3. Arbeitszeit und Wertewandel als individuelles Problem
ASuG-Materialien
(1993)
Ausgehend von den semantischen Kategorien der Bewertung und Konnotation wird am Beispiel von Kunderas "Unerträgliche Leichtigkeit des Seins" und "Scherz" die Problematik der Übersetzbarkeit dargestellt. Dabei werden unterschiedliche Übersetzungsverfahren vorgestellt und an Hand der serbischen, deutschen und anderer Übersetzungen problematisiert. Der Artikel knüpft an frühere Untersuchungen zur entsprechenden Problematik an (vgl. Kosta 1986 passim).