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  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . Conference object . 2006
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Arosha K. Bandara; Antonis C. Kakas; Emil Lupu; Alessandra Russo;

    Firewalls are important perimeter security mechanisms that imple-ment an organisation's network security requirements and can be notoriously difficult to configure correctly. Given their widespread use, it is crucial that network administrators have tools to translate their security requirements into firewall configuration rules and ensure that these rules are consistent with each other. In this paper we propose an approach to firewall policy specification and analysis that uses a formal framework for argumentation based preference reasoning. By allowing administrators to define network abstractions (e.g. subnets, protocols etc) security requirements can be specified in a declarative manner using high-level terms. Also it is possible to specify preferences to express the importance of one requirement over another. The use of a formal framework means that the security requirements defined can be automatically analysed for inconsistencies and firewall configurations can be automatically generated. We demonstrate that the technique allows any inconsistency property, including those identified in previous research, to be specified and automatically checked and the use of an argumentation reasoning framework provides administrators with information regarding the causes of the inconsistency.

  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . Conference object . 2001
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Christopher B. Jones; Harith Alani; Douglas Tudhope;
    Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
    Country: United Kingdom

    Geographical context is required of many information retrieval tasks in which the target of the search may be documents, images or records which are referenced to geographical space only by means of place names. Often there may be an imprecise match between the query name and the names associated with candidate sources of information. There is a need therefore for geographical information retrieval facilities that can rank the relevance of candidate information with respect to geographical closeness of place as well as semantic closeness with respect to the information of interest. Here we present an ontology of place that combines limited coordinate data with semantic and qualitative spatial relationships between places. This parsimonious model of geographical place supports maintenance of knowledge of place names that relate to extensive regions of the Earth at multiple levels of granularity. The ontology has been implemented with a semantic modelling system linking non-spatial conceptual hierarchies with the place ontology. An hierarchical spatial distance measure is combined with Euclidean distance between place centroids to create a hybrid spatial distance measure. This is integrated with thematic distance, based on classification semantics, to create an integrated semantic closeness measure that can be used for a relevance ranking of retrieved objects.

  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . 2015
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Elliott-Bowman, B.; Qin, R.;

    The influence of electropulsing on metallic materials is reviewed, with a focus on phase transformations and grain refinement. While a large and growing body of literature exists on the topic of electropulsing, the mechanisms governing the process are not currently fully understood. Furthermore, the effects of electropulsing on microstructure and mechanical properties are not yet clearly defined. This review seeks to summarise the existing literature in order to highlight and understand research trends across a variety of metals and alloys, and to clarify the state of the art. Research has shown that the electropulsing process is capable of inducing low temperature recrystallisation in metallic materials at an accelerated rate compared to more traditional heat treatment methods. These microstructural changes often alter the mechanical properties of the materials such as ductility, tensile strength and hardness. Crack healing as a result of electropulsing treatment has also been observed in damaged or work hardened materials and pre-deformation of the sample has been shown to enhance the effects of electropulsing.

  • Publication . Other literature type . Part of book or chapter of book . Conference object . 2017
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Damian J. J. Farnell; Jennifer Galloway; Alexei I. Zhurov; Stephen Richmond; Pertti Perttiniemi; Višnja Katić;
    Publisher: Springer International Publishing
    Country: Croatia

    Traditionally, active shape models (ASMs) do not make a distinction between groups in the subject population and they rely on methods such as (single-level) principal components analysis (PCA). Multilevel principal components analysis (mPCA) allows one to model between- group effects and within-group effects explicitly. Three dimensional (3D) laser scans were taken from 250 subjects (38 Croatian female, 35 Croatian male, 40 English female, 40 English male, 23 Welsh female, 27 Welsh male, 23 Finnish female, and 24 Finnish male) and 21 landmark points were created subsequently for each scan. After Procrustes transformation, eigenvalues from mPCA and from single-level PCA based on these points were examined. mPCA indicated that the first two eigenvalues of largest magnitude related to within-groups components, but that the next eigenvalue of largest magnitude related to between-groups components. Eigenvalues from single-level PCA always had a larger magnitude than either within-group or between-group eigenvectors at equivalent eigenvalue number. An examination of the first mode of variation indicated possible mixing of between-group and within-group effects in single-level PCA. Component scores for mPCA indicated clustering with country and gender for the between-groups components (as expected), but not for the within-group terms (also as expected). Clustering of component scores for single-level PCA was harder to resolve. In conclusion, mPCA is viable method of forming shape models that offers distinct advantages over single-level PCA when groups occur naturally in the subject population.

  • Publication . Article . Part of book or chapter of book . Other literature type . 2009
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Raphael Kaplinsky; Mike Morris;
    Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
    Country: South Africa

    Dans le cadre de l'intérêt porté aux impacts des investissements chinois en Afrique sub-saharienne (ASS), cet article porte sur l'engagement de ces pays africains dans un partenariat avec des grandes entreprises d'Etat chinoises qui investissent dans les secteurs d'infrastructures et de ressources naturelles. Après avoir démontré l'ampleur des différents types d'investissements chinois, l'attention porte sur les caractéristiques propres à ces grandes entreprises publiques. Ces investissements chinois sont étroitement liés à l'aide et au commerce. L’article conclut que les pays d’ASS devraient adopter une réponse également intégrée et ciblée vis-à-vis les investisseurs chinois ainsi qu’aux autres investisseurs à grande échelle qui cherchent à exploiter leurs ressources afin de maximiser les opportunités qui leur sont offertes du fait des dotations en ressources naturelles du continent.European Journal of Development Research (2009) 21, 551–569. doi:10.1057/ejdr.2009.24

  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . 2002
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Ramage, Magnus;
    Publisher: Springer London

    Summarises findings of two international workshops on legacy systems, held in conjunction with an EPSRC managed programme. Issues covered include the nature and dynamics of legacy systems, the co-evolution of software and organisations, issues around software as a technology (its engineering and its management), and organisational/people issues.

  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . Preprint . Conference object . Article . 2012
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    M. Feroci; JW den Herder; JW Bozzo; E. Barret; D. Brandt; S. Hernanz; M. van der Klis; M. Pohl; M. Santangelo; A. Stella; +190 more
    Countries: Netherlands, France, Italy, France, France, France, France, Switzerland, Italy

    The LOFT mission concept is one of four candidates selected by ESA for the M3 launch opportunity as Medium Size missions of the Cosmic Vision programme. The launch window is currently planned for between 2022 and 2024. LOFT is designed to exploit the diagnostics of rapid X-ray flux and spectral variability that directly probe the motion of matter down to distances very close to black holes and neutron stars, as well as the physical state of ultra-dense matter. These primary science goals will be addressed by a payload composed of a Large Area Detector (LAD) and a Wide Field Monitor (WFM). The LAD is a collimated (<1 degree field of view) experiment operating in the energy range 2-50 keV, with a 10 m^2 peak effective area and an energy resolution of 260 eV at 6 keV. The WFM will operate in the same energy range as the LAD, enabling simultaneous monitoring of a few-steradian wide field of view, with an angular resolution of <5 arcmin. The LAD and WFM experiments will allow us to investigate variability from submillisecond QPO's to year-long transient outbursts. In this paper we report the current status of the project. Proceedings of SPIE, Vol. 8443, Paper No. 8443-85, 2012

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Page, Susan; Rieley, Jack; Hoscilo, Agata; Spessa, Allan; Weber, Ulrich;
    Publisher: Kessel

    The Southeast Asian region is experiencing some of the world’s highest rates of deforestation and forest degradation, the principle drivers of which are agricultural expansion and wood extraction in combination with an increased incidence of fire. Recent changes in fire regimes in Southeast Asia are indicative of increased human-causd forest disturbance, but El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events also play a role in exacerbating fire occurrence and severity. Fires are now occurring on a much more extensive scale - in part because forest margins are at greater risk of fire as a result of disturbance through logging activities, but also as a result of rapid, large-scale forest clearance for the establish-ment of plantations. Millions of hectares have been deforested and drained to make way for oil palm and pulpwood trees, and many plantation companies, particularly in Indonesia, have employed fire as a cheap land clearance tool; uncontrolled fires have entered adjacent forests or plantation estates, and burnt both the forest biomass and, in peatland areas, underlying peat. Forest fires cause changes to forest structure, biodiversity, soil and hydrology. Repeated fires over successive or every few years lead to a progressive decline in the number of primary forest species. Fire leads to reduction in both aboveground and below ground organic carbon stocks and also changes carbon cycling patterns. In non-peatland areas, losses of carbon from fire affected forest vegetation exceed greatly soil carbon losses, but on carbon-rich substrates, e.g. peat, combustion losses can be considerable. Peatland fires make a major contribution to atmospheric emissions of greenhouse gases, fine particular matter and aerosols and thus contribute to climate change as well as presenting a problem for human health. The scale of emissions is unlikely to reduce in coming decades, since climate modelling studies have predicted that parts of this region will experience lower rainfall in future and greater seasonality. Protecting the rainforests of this region from further fire disasters should be at the top of the global environmental agenda, with highest priority given to peatland areas.

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Andrew Linn; Guro Refsum Sanden; Rebecca Piekkari;
    Publisher: De Gruyter
    Country: Denmark

    This chapter addresses the issue of language standardization from two perspectives, bringing together a theoretical perspective offered by the discipline of sociolinguistics with a practical example from international business. We introduce the broad concept of standardization and embed the study of language standardization in the wider discussion of standards as a means of control across society. We analyze the language policy and practice of the Danish multinational, Grundfos, and use it as a “sociolinguistic laboratory” to “test” the theory of language standardization initially elaborated by Einar Haugen to explain the history of modern Norwegian. The table is then turned and a model from international business by Piekkari, Welch and Welch is used to illuminate recent Norwegian language planning. It is found that the Grundfos case works well with the Haugen model, and the international business model provides a valuable practical lesson for national language planners, both showing that a “comparative standardology” is a valuable undertaking. More voices “at the table” will allow both theory and practice to be further refined and for the role of standards across society to be better understood.

  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . 2007
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Caddell, Martha;
    Publisher: Symposium
Advanced search in
Research products
arrow_drop_down
Searching FieldsTerms
Any field
arrow_drop_down
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arrow_drop_down
Include:
16 Research products, page 1 of 2
  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . Conference object . 2006
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Arosha K. Bandara; Antonis C. Kakas; Emil Lupu; Alessandra Russo;

    Firewalls are important perimeter security mechanisms that imple-ment an organisation's network security requirements and can be notoriously difficult to configure correctly. Given their widespread use, it is crucial that network administrators have tools to translate their security requirements into firewall configuration rules and ensure that these rules are consistent with each other. In this paper we propose an approach to firewall policy specification and analysis that uses a formal framework for argumentation based preference reasoning. By allowing administrators to define network abstractions (e.g. subnets, protocols etc) security requirements can be specified in a declarative manner using high-level terms. Also it is possible to specify preferences to express the importance of one requirement over another. The use of a formal framework means that the security requirements defined can be automatically analysed for inconsistencies and firewall configurations can be automatically generated. We demonstrate that the technique allows any inconsistency property, including those identified in previous research, to be specified and automatically checked and the use of an argumentation reasoning framework provides administrators with information regarding the causes of the inconsistency.

  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . Conference object . 2001
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Christopher B. Jones; Harith Alani; Douglas Tudhope;
    Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
    Country: United Kingdom

    Geographical context is required of many information retrieval tasks in which the target of the search may be documents, images or records which are referenced to geographical space only by means of place names. Often there may be an imprecise match between the query name and the names associated with candidate sources of information. There is a need therefore for geographical information retrieval facilities that can rank the relevance of candidate information with respect to geographical closeness of place as well as semantic closeness with respect to the information of interest. Here we present an ontology of place that combines limited coordinate data with semantic and qualitative spatial relationships between places. This parsimonious model of geographical place supports maintenance of knowledge of place names that relate to extensive regions of the Earth at multiple levels of granularity. The ontology has been implemented with a semantic modelling system linking non-spatial conceptual hierarchies with the place ontology. An hierarchical spatial distance measure is combined with Euclidean distance between place centroids to create a hybrid spatial distance measure. This is integrated with thematic distance, based on classification semantics, to create an integrated semantic closeness measure that can be used for a relevance ranking of retrieved objects.

  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . 2015
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Elliott-Bowman, B.; Qin, R.;

    The influence of electropulsing on metallic materials is reviewed, with a focus on phase transformations and grain refinement. While a large and growing body of literature exists on the topic of electropulsing, the mechanisms governing the process are not currently fully understood. Furthermore, the effects of electropulsing on microstructure and mechanical properties are not yet clearly defined. This review seeks to summarise the existing literature in order to highlight and understand research trends across a variety of metals and alloys, and to clarify the state of the art. Research has shown that the electropulsing process is capable of inducing low temperature recrystallisation in metallic materials at an accelerated rate compared to more traditional heat treatment methods. These microstructural changes often alter the mechanical properties of the materials such as ductility, tensile strength and hardness. Crack healing as a result of electropulsing treatment has also been observed in damaged or work hardened materials and pre-deformation of the sample has been shown to enhance the effects of electropulsing.

  • Publication . Other literature type . Part of book or chapter of book . Conference object . 2017
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Damian J. J. Farnell; Jennifer Galloway; Alexei I. Zhurov; Stephen Richmond; Pertti Perttiniemi; Višnja Katić;
    Publisher: Springer International Publishing
    Country: Croatia

    Traditionally, active shape models (ASMs) do not make a distinction between groups in the subject population and they rely on methods such as (single-level) principal components analysis (PCA). Multilevel principal components analysis (mPCA) allows one to model between- group effects and within-group effects explicitly. Three dimensional (3D) laser scans were taken from 250 subjects (38 Croatian female, 35 Croatian male, 40 English female, 40 English male, 23 Welsh female, 27 Welsh male, 23 Finnish female, and 24 Finnish male) and 21 landmark points were created subsequently for each scan. After Procrustes transformation, eigenvalues from mPCA and from single-level PCA based on these points were examined. mPCA indicated that the first two eigenvalues of largest magnitude related to within-groups components, but that the next eigenvalue of largest magnitude related to between-groups components. Eigenvalues from single-level PCA always had a larger magnitude than either within-group or between-group eigenvectors at equivalent eigenvalue number. An examination of the first mode of variation indicated possible mixing of between-group and within-group effects in single-level PCA. Component scores for mPCA indicated clustering with country and gender for the between-groups components (as expected), but not for the within-group terms (also as expected). Clustering of component scores for single-level PCA was harder to resolve. In conclusion, mPCA is viable method of forming shape models that offers distinct advantages over single-level PCA when groups occur naturally in the subject population.

  • Publication . Article . Part of book or chapter of book . Other literature type . 2009
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Raphael Kaplinsky; Mike Morris;
    Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
    Country: South Africa

    Dans le cadre de l'intérêt porté aux impacts des investissements chinois en Afrique sub-saharienne (ASS), cet article porte sur l'engagement de ces pays africains dans un partenariat avec des grandes entreprises d'Etat chinoises qui investissent dans les secteurs d'infrastructures et de ressources naturelles. Après avoir démontré l'ampleur des différents types d'investissements chinois, l'attention porte sur les caractéristiques propres à ces grandes entreprises publiques. Ces investissements chinois sont étroitement liés à l'aide et au commerce. L’article conclut que les pays d’ASS devraient adopter une réponse également intégrée et ciblée vis-à-vis les investisseurs chinois ainsi qu’aux autres investisseurs à grande échelle qui cherchent à exploiter leurs ressources afin de maximiser les opportunités qui leur sont offertes du fait des dotations en ressources naturelles du continent.European Journal of Development Research (2009) 21, 551–569. doi:10.1057/ejdr.2009.24

  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . 2002
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Ramage, Magnus;
    Publisher: Springer London

    Summarises findings of two international workshops on legacy systems, held in conjunction with an EPSRC managed programme. Issues covered include the nature and dynamics of legacy systems, the co-evolution of software and organisations, issues around software as a technology (its engineering and its management), and organisational/people issues.

  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . Preprint . Conference object . Article . 2012
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    M. Feroci; JW den Herder; JW Bozzo; E. Barret; D. Brandt; S. Hernanz; M. van der Klis; M. Pohl; M. Santangelo; A. Stella; +190 more
    Countries: Netherlands, France, Italy, France, France, France, France, Switzerland, Italy

    The LOFT mission concept is one of four candidates selected by ESA for the M3 launch opportunity as Medium Size missions of the Cosmic Vision programme. The launch window is currently planned for between 2022 and 2024. LOFT is designed to exploit the diagnostics of rapid X-ray flux and spectral variability that directly probe the motion of matter down to distances very close to black holes and neutron stars, as well as the physical state of ultra-dense matter. These primary science goals will be addressed by a payload composed of a Large Area Detector (LAD) and a Wide Field Monitor (WFM). The LAD is a collimated (<1 degree field of view) experiment operating in the energy range 2-50 keV, with a 10 m^2 peak effective area and an energy resolution of 260 eV at 6 keV. The WFM will operate in the same energy range as the LAD, enabling simultaneous monitoring of a few-steradian wide field of view, with an angular resolution of <5 arcmin. The LAD and WFM experiments will allow us to investigate variability from submillisecond QPO's to year-long transient outbursts. In this paper we report the current status of the project. Proceedings of SPIE, Vol. 8443, Paper No. 8443-85, 2012

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Page, Susan; Rieley, Jack; Hoscilo, Agata; Spessa, Allan; Weber, Ulrich;
    Publisher: Kessel

    The Southeast Asian region is experiencing some of the world’s highest rates of deforestation and forest degradation, the principle drivers of which are agricultural expansion and wood extraction in combination with an increased incidence of fire. Recent changes in fire regimes in Southeast Asia are indicative of increased human-causd forest disturbance, but El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events also play a role in exacerbating fire occurrence and severity. Fires are now occurring on a much more extensive scale - in part because forest margins are at greater risk of fire as a result of disturbance through logging activities, but also as a result of rapid, large-scale forest clearance for the establish-ment of plantations. Millions of hectares have been deforested and drained to make way for oil palm and pulpwood trees, and many plantation companies, particularly in Indonesia, have employed fire as a cheap land clearance tool; uncontrolled fires have entered adjacent forests or plantation estates, and burnt both the forest biomass and, in peatland areas, underlying peat. Forest fires cause changes to forest structure, biodiversity, soil and hydrology. Repeated fires over successive or every few years lead to a progressive decline in the number of primary forest species. Fire leads to reduction in both aboveground and below ground organic carbon stocks and also changes carbon cycling patterns. In non-peatland areas, losses of carbon from fire affected forest vegetation exceed greatly soil carbon losses, but on carbon-rich substrates, e.g. peat, combustion losses can be considerable. Peatland fires make a major contribution to atmospheric emissions of greenhouse gases, fine particular matter and aerosols and thus contribute to climate change as well as presenting a problem for human health. The scale of emissions is unlikely to reduce in coming decades, since climate modelling studies have predicted that parts of this region will experience lower rainfall in future and greater seasonality. Protecting the rainforests of this region from further fire disasters should be at the top of the global environmental agenda, with highest priority given to peatland areas.

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Andrew Linn; Guro Refsum Sanden; Rebecca Piekkari;
    Publisher: De Gruyter
    Country: Denmark

    This chapter addresses the issue of language standardization from two perspectives, bringing together a theoretical perspective offered by the discipline of sociolinguistics with a practical example from international business. We introduce the broad concept of standardization and embed the study of language standardization in the wider discussion of standards as a means of control across society. We analyze the language policy and practice of the Danish multinational, Grundfos, and use it as a “sociolinguistic laboratory” to “test” the theory of language standardization initially elaborated by Einar Haugen to explain the history of modern Norwegian. The table is then turned and a model from international business by Piekkari, Welch and Welch is used to illuminate recent Norwegian language planning. It is found that the Grundfos case works well with the Haugen model, and the international business model provides a valuable practical lesson for national language planners, both showing that a “comparative standardology” is a valuable undertaking. More voices “at the table” will allow both theory and practice to be further refined and for the role of standards across society to be better understood.

  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . 2007
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Caddell, Martha;
    Publisher: Symposium
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