Search results for "schema."

showing 10 items of 178 documents

Handling Evolving Data Warehouse Requirements

2015

A data warehouse is a dynamic environment and its business requirements tend to evolve over time, therefore, it is necessary not only to handle changes in data warehouse data, but also to adjust a data warehouse schema in accordance with changes in requirements. In this paper, we propose an approach to propagate modified data warehouse requirements in data warehouse schemata. The approach supports versions of data warehouse schemata and employs the requirements formalization metamodel and multiversion data warehouse metamodel to identify necessary changes in a data warehouse.

Business requirementsDatabaseComputer scienceInformationSystems_INFORMATIONSYSTEMSAPPLICATIONSSchema (psychology)InformationSystems_DATABASEMANAGEMENTcomputer.software_genrecomputerData warehouseMetamodeling
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Self-modeling epistemic spaces and the contraction principle

2020

What Graziano and colleagues describe as the “attention schema” really is one special case of what I have called the “phenomenal model of the intentionality relation” (PMIR) since 1993 (Metzinger, ...

Cognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyEpistemologyNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Schema (psychology)IntentionalityDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyConsciousnessSpecial caseContraction principlePsychologyRelation (history of concept)media_commonCognitive Neuropsychology
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Artificial organisms as tools for the development of psychological theory: Tolman's lesson

2007

In the 1930s and 1940s, Edward Tolman developed a psychological theory of spatial orientation in rats and humans. He expressed his theory as an automaton (the ‘‘schematic sowbug’’) or what today we would call an ‘‘artificial organism.’’ With the technology of the day, he could not implement his model. Nonetheless, he used it to develop empirical predictions which tested with animals in the laboratory. This way of proceeding was in line with scientific practice dating back to Galileo. The way psychologists use artificial organisms in their work today breaks with this tradition. Modern ‘‘artificial organisms’’ are constructed a posteriori, working from experimental or ethological observations…

Cognitive modelSettore M-PSI/01 - Psicologia GeneraleComputer scienceCognitive NeuroscienceSpatial BehaviorExperimental and Cognitive Psychologysymbols.namesakeArtificial IntelligenceOrientationArtificial organisms Cognitive modeling Schematic sowbug Tolman's theoryPsychological TheoryGalileo (satellite navigation)AnimalsLearningSchematic sowbug Cognitive modeling Artificial organisms Tolman’s theoryComputer Simulationbusiness.industrySchematicGeneral MedicineRoboticsHistory 20th CenturyModels TheoreticalTrial and errorAutomatonRatsSpace PerceptionsymbolsA priori and a posterioriRobotArtificial intelligencebusinessPsychological Theory
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Investigating metaphors of musical involvement : Immersion, flow, interaction and incorporation

2018

The concept of immersion, despite being relatively unknown within music research, presents a potentially productive way for understanding the well acknowledged phenomenon of "being drawn into music". This paper 1) discusses immersion as a metaphor for conceptualizing musical involvement by drawing on the research into video games and virtual reality and 2) aims to clarify the metaphor of immersion by utilizing the concept of image schema to analyze it in relation to alternative metaphors of flow, interaction and incorporation. The theoretical stance of the paper is based on the paradigm of enactive cognitive sciences, which stresses the bodily, constructive and interactive nature of experie…

Cognitive scienceimmersionenactive perceptionMetaphorComputer scienceimage schemamedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesConceptual metaphorconceptual metaphor06 humanities and the artsMusicalVirtual realityConstructive050105 experimental psychology060404 musicexperienceImage schemaPhenomenonta6131Immersion (virtual reality)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesmusic0604 artsmedia_common
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Data-Centric and Multimedia Components

2011

The content of XML documents is often primarily plain text, interspersed with various headers and perhaps some lists and tables. However, there are many applications for which the content of documents is not primarily narrative in nature, but instead includes (portions of) data records that are subject to storage and computational manipulation. The latter documents are sometimes referred to as data-centric or record-like, and they rely extensively on precise descriptions of the forms of data that can appear. In this chapter we first introduce the data type definition capabilities in XML Schema. We then consider the types of data very common in traditional databases: numeric data, dates, and…

Complex data typeMultimediaComputer sciencePlain textcomputer.internet_protocolSubject (documents)computer.file_formatcomputer.software_genreData typeDatabase-centric architectureComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSINGXML schemaGraphicscomputerXMLcomputer.programming_language
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Grammars++ for modelling information in text

1999

Abstract Grammars provide a convenient means to describe the set of valid instances in a text database. Flexibility in choosing a grammar can be exploited to provide information modelling capability by designing productions in the grammar to represent entities and relationships of interest to database applications. Additional constraints can be specified by attaching predicates to selected nonterminals in the grammar. When used for database definition, grammars can provide the functionality that users have come to expect of database schemas. Extended grammars can also be used to specify database manipulation, including query, update, view definition, and index specification.

Computer scienceViewmedia_common.quotation_subjectComputerApplications_COMPUTERSINOTHERSYSTEMScomputer.software_genreQuery languageDatabase designAdaptive grammarRule-based machine translationmedia_commonGrammarProgramming languagebusiness.industryDatabase schemaPredicate (grammar)TheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGESExtended Affix GrammarHardware and ArchitectureAffix grammarStochastic context-free grammarSynchronous context-free grammarArtificial intelligenceL-attributed grammarbusinesscomputerSoftwareNatural language processingInformation SystemsInformation Systems
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Enforcing Conceptual Modeling to improve the understanding of human genome

2010

It is widely accepted that the use of Conceptual Modeling techniques in modern Software Engineering leads to a more accurate description of the problem domain. The application of these techniques in the context of challenging domains as the human genome is a fascinating task. The relevant biological concepts should be properly addressed through the creation of the corresponding conceptual schema. This schema will improve the description of the global process followed from a DNA sequence to a fully functional protein. Once the conceptual model is established, the corresponding database is created. The database is intended to act as a unified repository of integrated information that will all…

Computer sciencebusiness.industryFunctional proteinmedia_common.quotation_subjectGenomicsApplication softwarecomputer.software_genreConceptual schemaProblem domainSchema (psychology)Conceptual modelHuman genomeData miningSoftware engineeringbusinesscomputermedia_common2010 Fourth International Conference on Research Challenges in Information Science (RCIS)
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An algebra for the manipulation of conceptual spaces in cognitive agents

2013

According to Gärdenfors, the theory of conceptual spaces describes a level of representation present in some cognitive agents between a sub-conceptual and a symbolic level of representation. In contrast to a large part of contemporary philosophical speculation on these matters for which concepts and conceptual content are propositional, conceptual spaces provide a geometric framework for the representation of concepts. In this paper we introduce an algebra for the manipulation of different conceptual spaces in order to formalise the process whereby an artificial agent rearranges its internal conceptual representations as a consequence of its perceptions, which are here rendered in terms of …

Conceptual spaceSettore ING-INF/05 - Sistemi Di Elaborazione Delle InformazioniProcess (engineering)Computer scienceCognitive NeuroscienceConceptual model (computer science)Representation (systemics)Experimental and Cognitive PsychologyCognitionCognitive agentSettore M-FIL/02 - Logica E Filosofia Della ScienzaCognitive agentsConceptual schemaAlgebraConceptual frameworkArtificial IntelligenceConceptual graphConceptual systemConceptual spaces
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Redefining habits and linking habits with other implicit processes

2020

Abstract In their commentaries on Hagger (2019), Gardner, Rebar, and Lally (2019) and Phillips (2019) provide welcome debate on the conceptualization and operation of habits in physical activity. In this response, I extend their comments by (i) calling for a redefining of habits to encompass contemporary views of habit, and (ii) suggesting that descriptions of physical activity habits should make reference to their relations with other implicit constructs that reflect automatic processes. Specifically, I contend that extant definitions of habits for complex behaviors like physical activity should move away from definitions of unitary responses to specific cues or contexts, and focus on ‘mac…

Conceptualization05 social sciencesPhysical activity030229 sport sciences050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineExtant taxonSchema (psychology)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologyApplied PsychologyPhysical activity behaviorCognitive psychologyPsychology of Sport and Exercise
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Quasiparticle Mean Field: BCS and Beyond

2007

In the previous two chapters we have laid the foundation for the BCS theory to describe open-shell nuclei. The properties of BCS solutions were compared with exact results from schematic solvable models. In this chapter we go into the details of numerical solution of the BCS equations. The implications of these solutions are discussed through applications to ds- and pf-shell nuclei.

Condensed Matter::Quantum GasesPhysicsTheoretical physicsExact resultsMean field theoryCondensed Matter::SuperconductivityNuclear TheoryQuasiparticleSchematicBCS theory
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