Most Popular Books by Dan Wang

Dan Wang is the author of Breakneck (2025), The Demoralization of Teachers (2013), Signal Processing and Networking for Big Data Applications (2017), Sublinear Algorithms for Big Data Applications (2015), China Contemporary (2008).

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Breakneck

release date: Aug 26, 2025
Breakneck
A riveting, firsthand investigation of China’s seismic progress, its human costs, and what it means for America. For close to a decade, technology analyst Dan Wang—“a gifted observer of contemporary China” (Ross Douthat)—has been living through the country’s astonishing, messy progress. China’s towering bridges, gleaming railways, and sprawling factories have improved economic outcomes in record time. But rapid change has also sent ripples of pain throughout the society. This reality—political repression and astonishing growth—is not a paradox, but rather a feature of China’s engineering mindset. In Breakneck, Wang blends political, economic, and philosophical analysis with reportage to reveal a provocative new framework for understanding China—one that helps us see America more clearly, too. While China is an engineering state, relentlessly pursuing megaprojects, the United States has stalled. America has transformed into a lawyerly society, reflexively blocking everything, good and bad Blending razor-sharp analysis with immersive storytelling, Wang offers a gripping portrait of a nation in flux. Breakneck traverses metropolises like Shanghai, Chongqing, and Shenzhen, where the engineering state has created not only dazzling infrastructure but also a sense of optimism. The book also exposes the downsides of social engineering, including the surveillance of ethnic minorities, political suppression, and the traumas of the one-child policy and zero-Covid. In an era of animosity and mistrust, Wang unmasks the shocking similarities between the United States and China. Breakneck reveals how each country points toward a better path for the other: Chinese citizens would be better off if their government could learn to value individual liberties, while Americans would be better off if their government could learn to embrace engineering—and to produce better outcomes for the many, not just the few.

The Demoralization of Teachers

release date: May 16, 2013
The Demoralization of Teachers
The educational system in China is marked by its dramatic inequality between rural and urban schools. The challenges facing rural schools are usually understood as disadvantages in funding, facilities, and staffing, which consequently result in undesirable student performance in general. This book, however, penetrates these phenomena on the surface and brings forth a much deeper moral crisis in rural education, a crisis that is entrenched in the complicated interlocking of formal and informal institutions within and beyond the school. The Demoralization of Teachers describes the work and workplace in a rural school from the perspective of teachers who were working there. It faithfully depicts the lamentable state of teachers’ work morale in the school and, little by little as if a detective story, reveals the reasons for the teachers’ demoralization by vivid narratives. The book demonstrates the profound impact on the meanings of teaching exerted by the state curriculum reform, the formal and informal norms and regulations in the school, and the erosion of moral integrity in the state bureaucracy and the society at large. The crisis in the rural school stops to be a “rural” or educational problem in nature, but mirrors the societal-wide transformation in political economy as well as in ideology in the current reform China. The sheer complexity of the moral crisis in this ethnography calls for renewed efforts to identify and investigate the educational problems in rural China from fresh theoretical perspectives that situate rural education in broader historical and social contexts and processes.

Signal Processing and Networking for Big Data Applications

release date: Apr 27, 2017
Signal Processing and Networking for Big Data Applications
This unique text helps make sense of big data in engineering applications using tools and techniques from signal processing. It presents fundamental signal processing theories and software implementations, reviews current research trends and challenges, and describes the techniques used for analysis, design and optimization. Readers will learn about key theoretical issues such as data modelling and representation, scalable and low-complexity information processing and optimization, tensor and sublinear algorithms, and deep learning and software architecture, and their application to a wide range of engineering scenarios. Applications discussed in detail include wireless networking, smart grid systems, and sensor networks and cloud computing. This is the ideal text for researchers and practising engineers wanting to solve practical problems involving large amounts of data, and for students looking to grasp the fundamentals of big data analytics.

Sublinear Algorithms for Big Data Applications

release date: Jul 16, 2015
Sublinear Algorithms for Big Data Applications
The brief focuses on applying sublinear algorithms to manage critical big data challenges. The text offers an essential introduction to sublinear algorithms, explaining why they are vital to large scale data systems. It also demonstrates how to apply sublinear algorithms to three familiar big data applications: wireless sensor networks, big data processing in Map Reduce and smart grids. These applications present common experiences, bridging the theoretical advances of sublinear algorithms and the application domain. Sublinear Algorithms for Big Data Applications is suitable for researchers, engineers and graduate students in the computer science, communications and signal processing communities.

China Contemporary

release date: Jan 01, 2008
China Contemporary
China is booming, not only in its rapidly growing economy, but also through innovation in decorative and fine arts, interior design and architecture. This is the first major survey of the new directions in style and design taken by the architects, designers and homeowners of China's leading urban centres. China Contemporary showcases 35 examples of the new wave of Chinese design through the stunning photography of Michael Freeman and the perceptive commentary and interviews of Chinese journalist Xiao Dan Wang.

Yan xia wan gu lou pian ti wen liu juan

Lyric Personhood

release date: Jan 01, 2025
Lyric Personhood
"What does it mean to be a person? In the West, we might identify traits like possessing a "voice," having the capacity for love, and being self-determined. But if words like "person," "human," or "love" seem to carry an internal meaning, where does this meaningfulness come from? Dan Wang turns to romantic comedies, action-thrillers, queer melodramas, and opera for answers. Lyric Personhood explores the low-brow aesthetics of the sentimental and the melodramatic in these genres, arguing that a "person" has always been an aesthetic concept, and not just a legal, moral, political, or philosophical one, in the history of European culture since the Enlightenment. Part of the reason this unspoken register of personhood has such enduring force, Wang asserts, is that they do not only exist as language or as ideas but are also encoded into the audiovisual fabric of Western storytelling. In other words, when someone watches a romantic comedy, they are absorbing not only arguments or ideas about love and its place in a life worth living, but also configurations of space and time, sonic phrasings of foreground and background, and other aesthetic patterns that produce a felt sense of what it means to be a fully realized person. Lyric Personhood traces a formal imagination of personhood that threads through opera and film aesthetics, allowing a longer story to be told about the conditions that make personhood imaginable in the West"-- Provided by publisher.

Research on Deep Learning of High School Mathematics Based on Smart Classroom

release date: Jul 30, 2025

Chine, le défi

release date: Jan 01, 1999
Chine, le défi
" Tant que l'opposition est émiettée, elle n'est pas dangereuse. La hantise de la direction du parti " d'éliminer dans l'œuf " les facteurs qui pourraient fédérer le mécontentement général vient de là. La nouvelle ligne pour 1999 en a distingué trois principaux, les organisations politiques ou syndicales non contrôlées, les anniversaires historiques et la corruption de l'administration et du parti. Le pouvoir central a donc déclaré une guerre sur ces trois fronts. Par ailleurs, l'impact des événements de Tian'anmen (avril à juin 1989) reste dans tous les esprits. Le parti a pris, et prendra des précautions extraordinaires en raison des anniversaires liés à l'année 1999 : incidents de Lhassa et fuite du Dalaï Lama en mars 1959, quatre-vingtième anniversaire du mouvement du 4 mai 1919, manifestation patriotique de la jeunesse chinoise contre les clauses du traité de Versailles, et quatre juin, dixième anniversaire de la répression du mouvement étudiant sur la place Tian'anmen.

Suppression of a Nonsense Mutation in a Mouse Model of Hurler Syndrome

release date: Jan 01, 2012

Viral Protein Complex Assembly in Influenza A Virus Replication

release date: Jan 01, 2011

Three Essays on Bank Technology, Cost Structure, and Performance

release date: Jan 01, 2007
Three Essays on Bank Technology, Cost Structure, and Performance
This dissertation addresses the issues around the technology and cost structure in commercial banking industries in both industrialized economy (US) and transitional economy (China). In addition, internal and external factors that affect bank performance, in terms of technical change, technical efficiency and total factor productivity, are examined to provide policy and business implications to regulatory authorities and banking managers.

An Empirical Study on the Influence of Social Networks and Menu Labeling on Calorie Intake in a University Dining Hall

release date: Jan 01, 2014
An Empirical Study on the Influence of Social Networks and Menu Labeling on Calorie Intake in a University Dining Hall
Obesity is a major health problem for both adults and children. It is particularly important for college students to focus on weight management due to weight persistence from adolescent to adult. This study analyzes the influence of peer effects and menu labeling on calorie intake at a university dining hall with posted nutrition facts. Data were collected at the Citrus Dining Hall on Polytechnic Campus of Arizona State University by means of a questionnaire. Groups of four members each were interviewed for a total of 112 individual observations. The results show that individuals who are dining in a group with at least one obese member consume more calories. Also food-related interactions in a group influence the amount of calorie consumption regarding pizza and interactions in a group influence the amount of calorie consumption regarding pizza and pasta. Looking at nutrition facts when ordering the food decreases the amount of calories but the effects of menu labeling on calorie intake are not amplified through peer effects. The strength of ties indicated by closeness does not significantly influence calorie intake. There is a need for future research in which more approaches related to social networks need to be tested regarding healthy diets.

Surface Modification of Poly(dimethylsiloxane) with a Perfluorinated Alkoxysilane for Selectivity Toward Fluorous Tagged Peptides

release date: Jan 01, 2008
Surface Modification of Poly(dimethylsiloxane) with a Perfluorinated Alkoxysilane for Selectivity Toward Fluorous Tagged Peptides
Poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) and similar polymers have proved to be of widespread interest for use in microfluidic and similar microanalytical devices. Surface modification of PDMS is required to extend the range of applications for devices made of this polymer, however. Here we report on the grafting of perfluorooctyltriethoxysilane via hydrolysis onto an oxidized PDMS substrate in order to form a fluorinated microchannel. Such a fluorinated device could be used for separating fluorous tagged proteins or peptides, similar to that which has been recently demonstrated in a capillary electrophoresis system, or in an open tubular capillary column. The modified polymer is characterized using chemical force titrations, contact angle measurements and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). We also report on a novel means of performing electroosmotic measurements on this material to determine the surface zeta potential. As might be expected, contact angle and chemical force titration measurements indicate the fluorinated surface to be highly hydrophobic. XPS indicates that fluorocarbon groups segregate to the surface of the polymer over a period of days following the initial surface modification, presumably driven by a lower surface free energy. One of the most interesting results is the zeta potential measurements, which show that significant surface charge can be maintained across a wide range of pH on this modified polymer, sufficient to promote electroosmotic flow in a microfluidic chip. Matrix-assisted time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) measurements show that a fluorous-tagged peptide will selectively adsorb on the fluorinated PDMS in aqueous solution, demonstrating that the fluorinated polymer could be used in devices designed forenrichment or enhanced detection of fluorous-labeled proteins and peptides. However, the non-specific adsorption of other proteins may interfere with the test results. The adsorption of four different proteins (cytochrome-C, carbonic anhydrase, insulin and ubiquitin) onto the unmodified, oxidized and fluorinated PDMS surfaces respectively was studied here with MALDI-TOF MS measurements. The results showed us that when rinsed in water/methanol solutions of high methanol concentration, cytochrome-C strongly adheres to the fluorinated surface. Carbonic anhydrase shows the opposite trend. Retention of ubiquitin on the surface shows relatively little sensitivity to either the nature of the substrate or the solution composition. Finally, the results using insulin demonstrated that this protein adheres relatively strongly to the oxidized PDMS surface as compared to the fluorinated or unmodified PDMS and showed a relative independence on the composition of the washing solution. The influence of the hydrophilicity of the protein, the surface and solvents, stability and size of proteins are discussed in the context of these observations.

Engineered Cardiac Troponin C Structure-function Studies

release date: Jan 01, 2012
Engineered Cardiac Troponin C Structure-function Studies
The functional effects of mutations associated with cardiomyopathies generally suggest that the Ca2 responsiveness of the myofilament was affected. This functional change appears to be independent of which protein contains the mutation and therefore indicates that the altered Ca2 sensitivity could be a critical or causative component of disease expression and progression. However, the correlation underlying this functional change with the disease phenotype is still unclear. Thus, in this work a series of single amino acid-substituted cardiac troponin C (cTnC) variants with altered Ca2+ binding affinities were studied to determine how they influence the Ca2+ activation pathway in myofilament contraction and whether this change in Ca2+ binding will result in adaptive changes in intact cardiomyocytes. These variants have not been identified as associated with any cardiomyopathies and therefore may eventually provide clues as to whether altered Ca2+ signaling of myofilament contraction is causal or an adaptive response in diseased hearts. Firstly, we sought structural and mechanistic explanations for the increased/decreased Ca2+ sensitivity of contraction for the cTnC variants using an array of biophysical techniques. The properties of these cTnC variants were characterized by determining their effects on Ca2+ binding ability, cTnC-cTnI interaction and their modulation by PKA phosphorylation in solution, and their structural alterations using molecular dynamic simulations. We found that cTnC variants have different effects on both binding of Ca2+ and cTnI to cTnC, and they also respond differently upon PKA phosphorylation. MD simulations show, for the first time, that cTnC variants could disrupt crucial hydrophobic interactions so that the closed form of cTnC or the Ca2+ binding loop is destabilized. The findings emphasize the importance of the regulatory domain of cTnC's conformation in the regulation of contraction and suggest that mutations in cTnC that alter myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity can do so by modulating Ca2+ and cTnI binding. Secondly, the functional capacity of the Ca2+ desensitizing variants was characterized by expressing them in cardiomyocytes using adenovirus. Additionally, we demonstrate that engineered cTnC variants can correct the disease-induced abnormal Ca2+ binding sensitivity. Our study provides insights for the development of novel therapeutic strategies for the treatment of cardiomyopathies.

The Context of Parents and Peers

release date: Jan 01, 2014
The Context of Parents and Peers
"The contexts of family and peer group play critical roles in shaping children's lives over their development. Biological theory suggests that these two contexts are interlinked to impact children's daily lives and should be examined in integrated models. The present study examined relationship quality with peers as a potential mediator that links maternal parenting style to children's school adjustment. Two dimensions of parenting style--maternal responsiveness and behavioral control, and three aspects of school adjustment--academic grades, problem behaviors in the school setting, and school related experiences of stress, were investigated. The mediation models were tested concurrently and longitudinally in a sample of 347 children during their 4th to 5th grades. Biological theory also suggests personal characteristics as one of the defining factors that influence developmental outcomes. Thus, child gender and child ethnicity were included as moderators in the proposed models. /DISS_para DISS_paraUsing multiple regressions, results of the study indicated both dimensions of maternal parenting style and peer relationship quality were linked to children's well-being at school concurrently. Surprisingly, peer relationship quality was unassociated with behavioral problems. Short-term longitudinal associations were found between behavioral control and GPA and between responsiveness and school related stress. In terms of mediation, only maternal responsiveness had indirect effects on one of children's outcome variables via its influence on peer relationships concurrently. Also, moderation effects were not found in the proposed mediation models."--Abstract from author supplied metadata.

Development and Validation of Specific Nomograms for Individualized Treatment Options in Gastrointestinal Cancers

release date: Jan 01, 2022

The days of my youth

release date: Jan 01, 1999

An Integrated Approach to Exploring Cross-cultural Competence

release date: Jan 01, 2011
An Integrated Approach to Exploring Cross-cultural Competence
With the emergence of multinational enterprises (MNEs) from the People's Republic of China, Chinese expatriates are increasingly being posted overseas to manage international assignments. It has been reported that expatriates often face significant challenges in understanding the host culture, which negatively impact on their performance overseas. Thus the importance of cross-cultural competence (CCC) has been emphasized as it may assist expatriates to successfully manage the local workforce. The theoretical underpinnings of CCC are socio-analytic theory and social learning theory. Socio-analytic theory explains the role personality plays in leading to discrepant performance on international assignments, whilst social learning theory emphasizes the role of learning in developing cross-cultural skills. However, both theories are developed from a developed country context, and the transferability of those theories to emerging markets has not been examined. In order to address the theoretical deficiencies of CCC, this study explores expatriates from a large and significant emerging economy, namely, China. The broad research problem addressed is "how to develop CCC of Chinese expatriate managers in Chinese MNEs' overseas operations".In particular, this study investigates antecedents of CCC including personal attributes (Research question 1a) and personal skills (Research question 2a), as well as how these antecedents contribute to CCC (Research question 1b, 2b). A qualitative research design was adopted due to the exploratory nature of the study, and 50 in-depth interviews were conducted to gather information. The sample comprised 25 Chinese expatriate managers, 15 foreign colleagues, and 10 expatriate supervisors or cross-cultural consultants. The respondents selected were based on criteria for each group. For instance, the criteria for expatriate managers include working experience (i.e., working on overseas assignments for at least six months) and location (i.e., working in both developed and developing countries). The snowballing techniques were used to recruit appropriate respondents.The findings of this study lead to the development of a theoretical model of CCC, which highlights the cultural-embedded factors as important antecedents. In addition to confirming CCC antecedents of Chinese expatriates that are similar to those for Western expatriates (i.e., openness, communication skills, interpersonal skills, perceptual skills), two new cultural-embedded factors were also identified, including endurance and coordination skills. More importantly, the findings demonstrate that cross-cultural contexts play an important role in how certain antecedents function in different situations. A range of institutional factors have been identified which are able to influence perceptions of expatriates and local employees on CCC antecedents, including ambiguous or sophisticated regulation systems, relationship-based or rule-based corporate governance, supervisor-subordinate relationships and work-life relationships. This study advances the theoretical development of CCC by integrating institutional theory with socio-analytic theory and social learning theory, which leads to a more comprehensive explanation of CCC. It also highlights significant methodological and practical implications for future expatriate studies and international human resource management in Chinese MNEs.

Real-time 3D Visualization of Organ Deformations Based on Structured Dictionary

release date: Jan 01, 2012
Real-time 3D Visualization of Organ Deformations Based on Structured Dictionary
Minimally invasive technique (MIS) revolutionized the field of surgery for its shorter hospitalization time, lower complication rates, and ultimately reduced morbidity and mortality. However, one of the critical challenges that prevent it from reaching the full potentials is the restricted visualization from the traditional monocular camera systems at the presence of tissue deformations. This dissertation aims to design a new approach which can provide the surgeons with real time 3D visualization of complete organ deformations during the MIS operation. This new approach even allows the surgeon to see through the wall of an organ rather than just looking at its surface. The proposed design consists of two stages. The first training stage identified the deformation subspaces from a training data set in the transformed spherical harmonic domain, such that each surface can be sparsely represented in the structured dictionary with low dimensionality. This novel idea is based on our experimental discovery that the spherical harmonic coefficients of any organ surface lie in specific low dimensional subspaces. The second reconstruction stage reconstructs the complete deformations in real-time using surface samples obtained with an optical device from a limited field of view while applying the structured dictionary. The sparse surface representation algorithm is also applied to ultrasound image enhancement and efficient surgical simulation. The former is achieved by fusing ultrasound samples 5 with optical data under proper weighting strategies. The high speed of surgical simulation is obtained by decreasing the computational cost based on the high compactness of the surface representation algorithm. In order to verify the proposed approaches, we first use the computer models to demonstrate that the proposed approach matches the accuracy of complex mathematical modeling techniques. Then ex-vivo experiments are conducted on freshly excised porcine kidneys utilizing a 3D MRI machine, a 3D optical device and an ultrasound machine to further test the feasibility under practical settings.

A Broad Iceland Plume Associated with Two Phase Transitions at the 660 Km Discontinuity

release date: Jan 01, 2020
A Broad Iceland Plume Associated with Two Phase Transitions at the 660 Km Discontinuity
"In spite of the fact that Iceland is frequently regarded as the archetypal example of mantle plumes, the existence, depth extent, origin, dimension and excess temperature of the hypothesized plume remain enigmatic and hotly debated. The controversy mostly originates from the limited vertical resolution of seismic tomography techniques and the associated uncertainty in the depth and lateral extents of the lower wavespeed anomaly. Here we utilize a robust receiver-function-based technique to image the topography of the 410 and 660 km discontinuities bordering the mantle transition zone beneath Iceland and surrounding oceanic regions, and construct thermal and seismic wavespeed models of the upper mantle and mantle transition zone based on the observations. The preferred model invokes a broad plume laterally extending ~1000 km originated from the lower mantle. The dominant phase transition across the 660-km discontinuity is the post-spinel transition in the peripheral area, but becomes the post-garnet transition in the central portion of the plume stem due to the excessive temperature anomaly. This phase transition variation significantly enlarges the plume dimension and enhances upwelling of plume material"--Abstract, page iv.

Impact of a Consultative Approach on HRM Practices in a Chinese State-owned Enterprise

Government Revenue Forecasting During Exceptional Times

release date: Jan 01, 2018
Government Revenue Forecasting During Exceptional Times
Government revenue forecasting errors have become larger, especially in exceptional times such as the periods surrounding economic recessions. Inaccurate revenue estimates stem from unanticipated revenue increases or decreases from a previous trend. Unfortunately, current forecasting methods relying primarily on trend analysis do not incorporate these kinds of sudden changes easily. When revenue punctuations occur, the revenue forecasting errors increase.To reduce forecasting errors caused by revenue punctuations in government revenue collections, I argued that analysts must not dismiss outliers as extraneous or useless phenomena. My research revealed an approach to incorporate outliers or punctuations into revenue forecasting. First, this research studied the criterion for judging the appearance of revenue punctuations using state governments’ quarterly collections of the five largest taxes from 1977 to 2016. Second, the research explored the patterns of these revenue punctuations, specifically the relationship between the changes in dollar amount and the amount of time from one revenue punctuation to another. Inspired by the few statistical techniques for identifying outliers, this research applied the studentized residuals method to detect the revenue punctuations. The result revealed that all five tax categories for each state have revenue punctuations, except Motor Fuels Tax in the state of Tennessee. Furthermore, this research disclosed that while not all the states and all the tax categories have statistically significant relationships between the depth and length of revenue punctuations, some states still have valid relationships. For the states that have statistically significant relationships, a forecaster, knowing depth, could calculate length and vice versa. Thus, the forecasting errors caused by revenue punctuations could be reduced when the protocols my research identified are used.

Displaced Lognormal and Displaced Heston Volatility Skews: Analysis and Applications to Stochastic Volatility Simulations

release date: Jan 01, 2010
Displaced Lognormal and Displaced Heston Volatility Skews: Analysis and Applications to Stochastic Volatility Simulations
Finally we discuss the convergency of the discretisation schemes of the stochastic processes encountered in the Monte Carlo simulations. Under some regularity conditions, we give a partial strong convergency result for the stochastic volatility process. Moreover, we give a strong convergency result for the mean-reverting CEV process.

Hierarchical Task Recognition and Planning in Smart Homes with Partial Observability

release date: Jan 01, 2017
Hierarchical Task Recognition and Planning in Smart Homes with Partial Observability
Older adults with cognitive impairment have significantly burdened their families and the society due to costly caring and waste of labors. Developing intelligent assistant agents (IAAs) in smart homes that can help those people accomplishing activities of daily living (ADLs) independently has attracted tremendous attention, from both academia and industry. Ideally, IAAs should recognize older adults' goals and reason about further steps needed for the goals. This paper proposed a goal recognition and planning algorithm to support an IAA in smart home. The algorithm addresses several important issues. First it can deal with partial observability by Bayesian inference for step recognition. Even advanced sensors are not guaranteed to be 100% reliable. Besides, due to limited accessibility or privacy, not all attributes of physical objects can be measured by sensors. The proposed algorithm can reason about ongoing goals with some sensors missing or unreliable. Second, the algorithm reasons about concurrent goals. For everyday life, a person is typically involved in multi-tasks by switching back and forth. Based on the context, the proposed algorithm can assign a step to the correct goal and keep tracks of the goal's ongoing status. The context involves status of ongoing goals inferred from a recognition procedure, and desired next steps and tasks, which are obtained through a planning procedure. Last but not least, the algorithm can handle incorrectly executed steps. For older adults with cognitive impairment, executing unrelated or wrong steps towards certain goals is common in their daily life. A module is designed to hand wrong steps by detecting and then prompt the person with correct steps. The algorithm is based on Hierarchical Task Network (HTN), of which the knowledge base is composed of methods (for tasks) and operators (for steps). Such hierarchical modeling of tasks and steps enables the algorithm to deal with partially ordered subtasks and alternative plans. Furthermore, the preconditions of methods and operators enable to generate feasible hints of next steps and tasks by considering uncertainties in belief states. In the experiment, a simulator is designed to simulate the virtual sensors and a virtual human executing a sequence of steps predefined in a test case. The algorithm is tested on many simulated easy or difficult cases. For example single goal and correct steps are easy test cases. Having multiple goals with wrong steps makes the problem more difficult. Also cases of sensors missing are experimented. The results shows that the algorithm works very well on simple cases, achieving nearly 100% accuracy. Even for the hardest cases, the performance is acceptable when sensor reliabilities are above 0.95. Test cases with missing sensors also provide meaningful guideline for setting up sensors for an intelligent assistant agent.

Determination of the Effective Calcium Content of Quicklime by Regression Analysis Using the Digestion Temperatures

release date: Jan 01, 2018
Determination of the Effective Calcium Content of Quicklime by Regression Analysis Using the Digestion Temperatures
This research involved randomly choosing 155 sets of experimental data that were collected from building companies. These sets of data were the result of lime analyses by sucrose titration done within 12 months by the laboratory attendants. The results of this experimental data were then gathered to be analyzed using the linear fitting formula. The results indicate that the analysis can accurately determine quicklime's effective calcium content by regression analysis using the digestion temperatures. In addition, the X-ray diffraction method was used to test the quicklime's calcium content, which verified that the method of linear fitting has good representativeness and practicability. This can greatly optimize the traditional process and has the prospect of being used widely.

Human-Water-GHG Nexus in China: Water Stress Assessment, Mitigation and Related GHG Emissions Within the Societal Water Cycle

release date: Jan 01, 2024

Machine Learning Approaches to Facial and Text Analysis

release date: Jan 01, 2018
Machine Learning Approaches to Facial and Text Analysis
The advent of machine learning (ML) tools presents researchers with the possibility of using large and new datasets related to text and image repositories. In this paper, we make a methodological contribution to strategy research by documenting a novel synthesis of two machine learning methods—the unsupervised topic modeling of textual data and the supervised ML coding of facial images with a neural network algorithm. We employ these novel methods to study CEO oral communication, using videos and corresponding transcripts of emerging market CEO interviews to conduct our analysis. Building on Helfat and Peteraf (2015) who document the importance of “oral language” as an important managerial cognitive capability, we code the topics and sentiments expressed in the text of what the CEOs say (verbal language) and separately code the facial expressions of the CEOs (non-verbal communication). Using the interview text sentiment scores as well as our video-based facial expression sentiment variables, we conducted factor analysis to construct four distinct CEO oral communication “styles,” which we label Expressive, Stern, Dour, and Contented. We also reveal that CEOs who communicate with certain styles also tend to focus on specific topics, even controlling for their country of origin and gender. For example, CEOs who tend to be more expressive devote more attention to topics related to society at large and avoid topics related to the government. By contrast, dour CEOs are more likely to dwell on topics related to both the government and society. These results suggest that a CEO’s communication style reveals a substantial amount of information about their attention to certain aspects of their businesses.

Continuous Data Collection in Wireless Sensor Networks

release date: Jan 01, 2007
Continuous Data Collection in Wireless Sensor Networks
Recently, it has come to be generally believed by academia and industry alike that the sensor network will have a key role to extend the reachability of the next generation Internet. A key characteristic of this network is that there is no single node in the network that is powerful enough to perform the assigned tasks. An application should be served via the cooperation of several nodes or even the entire network. The network serves as an information base, and is data driven, as opposed to a provider for the point-to-point connection. The main challenge of this network is huge information organization, including information storage, searching and retrieval, especially in a continuous way. There are many specific and interrelated problems. We list a few examples. First, data accuracy: the correctness of the sensor network to represent the properties of the sensor field. Second, data search and retrieval delay; while low delay is always preferred, various applications have different delay constraints. Third, overhead; low transmission overhead is often the main consideration in system design, as it is directly related to the usage of energy, the most severely limited resource for sensors. In this thesis, we first discuss load balanced sensor coverage, which provides a lower layer support for long run sensor data collection. We then concentrate on how to balance the parameters in data collection of the sensor networks, so that the user queries and applications can be satisfied with reasonable delay and low overhead. Based on different application specifics, we try to use a smaller number of sensors, less number of transmissions by exploring historical and topological information, coding techniques and data distribution information. Our analysis and experimental results show that our architecture and algorithms provide both theoretical and practical insights for sensor network design and deployment.

Scenes of Feeling: Music and the Imagination of the Liberal Subject

release date: Jan 01, 2017
Scenes of Feeling: Music and the Imagination of the Liberal Subject
Chapter 1 considers how feeling and expression acquired the normative burden of representing the truth of the self; it does so by tracing developments in operatic form and culminates in a reading of The Marriage of Figaro 's closing scene. Then, each of the subsequent chapters extends the analysis toward the present while also revisiting different facets of the Figaro case: Chapter 2 considers the relation between political knowledge and epiphany in two operas by Richard Wagner; Chapter 3 explores the epistemology of the soundtrack in Hollywood romantic comedy; and Chapter 4 addresses, in three films in different genres that star Colin Firth, the generality of the liberal scene in which a lyrical voice establishes the sound of a repaired social collectivity.

Factors Affecting the Implementation Capability of Local Tourism Administrative Organizations (TAOs) in Policy/plan Implementation in China

Reversing the Brain Drain? Skilled Return Migration and the Global Movement of Expert Knowledge

release date: Jan 01, 2013
Reversing the Brain Drain? Skilled Return Migration and the Global Movement of Expert Knowledge
My dissertation explores how skilled return migrants adapt the expertise they gained working abroad to workplaces in their home countries. To study this, I conducted a survey of 4,183 skilled returnees from 81 countries, who had worked abroad in the U.S., as well as 161 interviews with skilled returnees from 25 countries. The respondent pool came from U.S.'s largest organizational sponsor of J1 Visas for professionals. As the largest survey of skilled return migrants ever compiled, the dataset includes information on the respondents' career histories, attitudes, and work activity. My data analysis generated three main findings. One, less than half of the respondents report implementing some aspect of their professional knowledge gained overseas in the workplaces of their home countries. Whether returnees are successful channels of cross-border knowledge depends less on their ability to demonstrate or articulate novel ideas and more on the normative conditions of the professional environments in their home countries. Two, returnees who are effective brokers of knowledge bring back ideas about organizational and management practices, such as new methods of training, more than they do technical knowledge. Three, returnees are more likely to venture into self-employment if they have strong local ties to their home countries; moreover, the effect of these local ties on entrepreneurial transitions is stronger for returnees in home countries with high rates of self-employment. Finally, I show that the very returnees who are most successful as knowledge brokers are also most likely to venture abroad again. Thus, the returnees who could benefit their home countries the most are also the least like to stay. These findings challenge the conventional notion of return migrants as agents of economic transformation, suggesting that many institutional and cultural challenges stand in the way of their ability to broker knowledge and resources across country borders. This work also ties contributes to theoretical perspectives on international migration, organizational learning, social networks, and the sociology of knowledge.

Family-school Relations as Social Capital

release date: Jan 01, 2003

Estimating and Forecasting Volatility Using Leverage Effect

release date: Jan 01, 2017
Estimating and Forecasting Volatility Using Leverage Effect
This research provides a theoretical foundation for our previous empirical finding that leverage effect has a role in estimating and forecasting volatility. This empirics is also related to earlier econometric studies of news impact curves (Engle and Ng, Chen and Ghysels). Our new theoretical development is based on the concept of projection on stable subspaces of semi-martingales. We show that this projection provides a framework for forecasting (across time periods) that is internally consistent with the semi-martingale model which is used for the intra-day high frequency asymptotics. The paper shows that the approach provides improved estimation and forecasting both theoretically, in simulation, and in data.

Measuring and Teaching Problem-solving Practices in Digital Learning Environments

release date: Jan 01, 2023
Measuring and Teaching Problem-solving Practices in Digital Learning Environments
Digital learning environments are becoming increasingly ubiquitous as a wide range of EdTech products and services enter classrooms and households across the globe. One salient attribute of these environments is their capacity to generate large amounts of data as students interact with the technology. These data logs can help construct a detailed picture of how students work on a task and provide valuable insights into their underlying competencies. At the same time, the sheer volume of interaction data poses challenges, such as how to extract meaningful behavioral patterns from the raw data and model them to assess specific constructs. This dissertation contributes to the efforts of educational researchers and practitioners in harnessing the data generated by digital technology to support teaching and learning, with an emphasis on using interactive tasks to assess and teach problem-solving practices.

Hemingway's Reputation in China

release date: Jan 01, 1992

A FRAMEWORK OF SMARTPHONE USE FOR TRAVEL

release date: Jan 01, 2013
A FRAMEWORK OF SMARTPHONE USE FOR TRAVEL
ABSTRACT Smartphones appear to perfectly match travelers' needs due to their portability and easy access to the Internet. The current literature in management information systems (MIS), communication, marketing, and tourism provides a basic foundation with which to understand the adoption and use of information communication technology (ICT) such as smartphones. However, a critical review of this literature indicates that there is a need to develop a much richer theoretical framework that describes the use of smartphones for travel. In particular, our understanding of the use of smartphones for travel is largely established from a quantitative perspective method, and as such, it is argued that this perspective cannot provide an in-depth understanding of the mechanisms that affect the use of smartphones in travel which, in turn, shapes the travel experience. That is, it appears that there is a lack of integration of the various models describing the nature of the use of ICT in travel. Additionally, it is argued that the processes shaping the use of technology which were developed in the organizational settings have been inappropriately applied at the individual level, and therefore should be critically examined within the travel context. The overall goal of this dissertation is to develop a theoretical framework describing the mechanisms shaping the use of smartphones for travel, and can be addressed by answering the following questions: (1) What are the uses of smartphones in the context of travel? (2) What are the factors influencing the use of smartphones in the context of travel? And, (3) What are the mechanisms shaping the use of smartphones for travel (i.e. How are the factors working to shape the use of smartphones in travel context?). A phenomenological approach was used to answer these questions as quantitative methods are believed to be inadequate in describing the processes underlying the use of smartphones for travel. Twenty-four Americans who own one kind of smartphones and traveled at least once for leisure purpose in the most recent three months were interviewed extensively to gain an in-depth understanding of their uses of smartphones and resulting travel experience. Qualitative content analysis was used to analyze the interview transcripts, and data triangulation based upon a series of follow-up interviews and member check was used to ensure the trustworthiness of the interpretation. This study identified four categories of uses of smartphones for travel (including 25 unique activities) including the uses of smartphones for communication, entertainment, facilitation, and information search. Five sets of factors that are associated with the use of smartphones for travel were identified from both contexts of travel and everyday experience. Three sets of factors that directly lead travelers to use smartphones for travel are travelers' motivations to use smartphones as a tool to achieve some purposes, their cognitive beliefs toward the use of smartphones, and other situational facilitators (e.g. no computer access) that lead the informants to use smartphones rather than any other alternative ways. Besides the three sets of direct factors, the informants indicated that their use of smartphones changed their travel experience. More important, the everyday use of smartphones and the changes brought to people's lives appear to be indirect factors influencing the use of smartphones for travel. These results describing smartphone's uses, outcomes and the mechanisms shaping this behavior were used as the primary basis in proposing a theoretical framework describing the use of smartphones for travel including its antecedents, process, and outcomes. The theoretical framework suggests four propositions. First, the underlying processes shaping the use of smartphones for travel is a process of appropriation in which a person "makes it his/her own" whereby the smartphone user learns, adjusts, and internalizes the `essence' of the smartphone based on their uses in everyday context as well as previous travel experiences (Proposition 1). Second, the use of smartphones in everyday context lead to the changes of communication, information consumption, and the uses of other digital devices, and these changes influenced the use of smartphones for travel through transformation effect and spillover effect (Proposition 2). Third, the changes in everyday experience influence the use of smartphones for travel by influencing traveler's motivations in the context of travel (Proposition 3). Finally, this study indicates that the appropriation process leads to changes in the travel experience. In particular, people change their travel activities including pre-trip planning, en-route arrangements, after-trips activities as well as their interpretations toward trips and sensations (Proposition 4). This study clearly delineates the relationships between use of smartphones and the impact of this use on travel behavior, and suggests several new perspectives with which to study the impact of technology on travel. First, this study indicates that a systems view should be adopted in tourism studies. Travelers are not isolated from their daily lifestyles, personalities, social connections, and other individual background (e.g. knowledge, preferences, etc.). As such, the behavior of travelers cannot be understood without consideration of the influence of other settings. Therefore in tourism studies, a systems perspective is important so as to reflect the intimate relationships (and influences) of the various `subsystems. Second, this study suggests a dynamic view for studies of technology and travel. The results of this study indicate that the uses of smartphones in travel are shaped by the interactions of a variety of factors. Therefore, in the studies of technology and travel it is important to understand the dynamic processes which shape the use of technology for travel. Third, this study suggests a development view for the study of technology and travel. This perspective includes not only the recognition that adoption of new technology may influence travelers and travel experience, but also the evolving use of the new ICT tools (e.g. smartphones) along with the development of these tools may substantially change travelers' behavior and travel experience. Additionally, this study suggests a new perspective is needed regarding the concept of travel experience in that the use of smartphones reconfigures the current relationships between travelers, space, and time and as such, implies that the conceptualization of travel experience should go beyond the argument of the dichotomy of everyday life and travel and evolve with the development of information technology. This study also offers several managerial implications in the areas of mobile marketing, destination marketing and management, and the design of travel information services on the smartphones platform.
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