5,648 results
Search Results
2. Student performance on mathematics CBMs across paper and tablet modalities.
- Author
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Reynolds, Jennifer L., Aspiranti, Kathleen B., and Henze, Erin E. C.
- Subjects
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MATHEMATICS students , *MODAL logic , *DIGITAL literacy , *EDUCATORS - Abstract
Tablet‐based technology has become a conduit for the administration of curriculum‐based measurement (CBM) tools. Using tablets to administer CBM probes has many advantages; however, little is known about how students perform on CBMs when administered via a tablet. The current investigation compared digits correct per minute obtained from 44 third‐grade students on CBM addition fluency probes administered via three different modalities. Students completed the probes using traditional paper and pencil, a tablet using their fingers to write the answer, or a tablet application using a keyboard to type the answer. A within‐subjects group design showed students performed significantly better on the tablet when using their finger to write the answer, even though most students (58%) indicated this was their least preferred modality. The discussion focuses on the implications for educators and the use of different CBM modalities for interindividual and intraindividual comparisons. Practitioner points: Third‐grade students responded to math facts faster when writing with their fingers on an iPad, even compared to paper and pencil.The results are inconsistent with other studies that found students were faster when using paper and pencil.Finally, most third‐grade students preferred answering addition facts with a pencil on paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Reliability of Computer-Based CBMs Versus Paper/Pencil Administration for Fact and Complex Operations in Mathematics.
- Author
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VanDerHeyden, Amanda M., Codding, Robin, and Solomon, Benjamin G.
- Subjects
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RELIABILITY (Personality trait) , *COMPUTER assisted testing (Education) , *CURRICULUM , *EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements , *MATHEMATICS , *T-test (Statistics) , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SCHOOL children , *ELEMENTARY schools - Abstract
Computer-based curriculum-based measurement (CBM) is a relatively common practice, but surprisingly few studies have examined the reliability of computer-based CBM. This study sought to examine the reliability of CBM administered via paper/pencil versus the computer. Twenty-one of 25 students in two third-grade classes (N = 21) participated in two generalizability studies. The primary facet of interest, format of assessment, was examined for two measures, a fact operation (fact family measure) and a more complex operation (multidigit addition). Researchers administered four alternate forms of each measure under both computer and paper/pencil conditions. Results indicated ideal reliability of measurement within all conditions and results were consistent across assessment formats for the fact operation. However, assessment format explained a large proportion of variance for the more complex skill (multidigit addition). Results indicate a need to consider the reliability of transitioning assessment from paper/pencil to computer-based response on a measure-by-measure basis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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4. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON EDUCATION Call for Papers—Special Issue on Conceptual Learning of Mathematics Intensive Concepts in Engineering.
- Subjects
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CONCEPT learning , *ENGINEERING , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Prospective authors are requested to submit new, unpublished manuscripts for inclusion in the upcoming event described in this call for papers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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5. SAARMSTE's role in building and connecting Early Grade Mathematics research: A review of SAARMSTE Proceedings 2003–2022.
- Author
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Graven, Mellony and Venkat, Hamsa
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SCIENCE education , *MATHEMATICS , *CONFERENCE papers , *RESEARCH personnel , *TECHNOLOGY education - Abstract
This paper focuses on the Southern African Association for Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education's (SAARMSTE's) role as a platform supporting research dissemination and connecting researchers in early grades mathematics (EGM) in the Southern African region. A review of the Long Papers in SAARMSTE over the last 20 years supports the finding of the other review papers in this Special Issue: that there has been substantial growth of attention to EGM since 2013. However, two distinctions are marked when looking at conference papers rather than journal papers. Firstly, there is a particularly large expansion of work in the last 5 years, with a broadening base of participation in this work. Second, looking across all the formats of conference presentations indicates SAARMSTE's role in supporting and building EGM as a key focus of research attention, and bringing together regional and international groups with interests in this area. Given that conference proceedings usually offer a broader picture of emerging interests than journal papers, we reflect on the range of foci of attention within EGM in the SAARMSTE Proceedings, and trends within this. These trends also help us to point to areas that are likely to be of key interest in the next decade. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. On the paper “Regular equivalence relations on ordered ∗-semihypergroups”.
- Author
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KEHAYOPULU, Niovi
- Subjects
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TURKS , *CONGRUENCE lattices , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
If (S, ◦,≤) is an ordered hypersemigroup, an equivalence relation ρ on S is called congruence if (a, b) ∈ ρ implies (a ◦ x, b ◦ x) ∈ ρ and (x ◦ a, x ◦ b) ∈ ρ for every x ∈ S ; in the sense that for every u ∈ a ◦ x there exists v ∈ b ◦ x such that (u, v) ∈ ρ and for every u ∈ x◦a there exists v ∈ x◦b such that (u, v) ∈ ρ. It has been proved in Turk J Math 2021(5) [On the paper “A study on (strong) order-congruences in ordered semihypergroups”] that if S is an ordered hypersemigroup, then there exists a congruence ρ on S such that S/ρ is an ordered hypersemigroup. This result, is the main result for an involution ordered hypersemigroup by Xinyang Feng, Jian Tang and Yanfeng Luo in U.P.B. Sci. Bull, Series A, 2018, but its proof is wrong; the correct proof is given in the present paper. Examples illustrate the results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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7. Problem solving through paper folding.
- Author
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Wares, Arsalan
- Subjects
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PYTHAGOREAN theorem , *MATHEMATICS , *PROBLEM solving , *EQUATIONS , *ORIGAMI - Published
- 2021
8. Comparing Paper and Tablet Modalities of Math Assessment for Multiplication and Addition.
- Author
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Aspiranti, Kathleen B., Henze, Erin E. C., and Reynolds, Jennifer L.
- Subjects
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MODAL logic , *TIME series analysis , *MULTIPLICATION , *MATHEMATICS , *TABLET computers - Abstract
Curriculum-based measurement (CBM) tools are increasingly administered through technology-based modalities such as computers and tablets. Two studies were conducted to examine whether students perform similarly on paper-based and tablet-based math fact probes. Ten students completed 1-min addition or multiplication math probes using a single-case multielement design. Students completed the probes using traditional paper and pencil, a tablet using a stylus to write the answer, or a tablet application using a keyboard to type the answer. Visual analysis of time series graphs showed that the majority of students performed better on the paper-based probes than on either the keyboard or stylus probes. Nonoverlap of all pairs (NAP) effect size measures indicated medium to large differences between paper and stylus probes and paper and keyboard probes but weak effects between stylus and keyboard probes. Discussion focuses on the implications for educators and the use of different CBM modalities for interindividual and intraindividual comparisons. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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9. On the paper "On hyperideals of ordered semihypergroups" by Ze Gu in Ital. J. Pure Appl. Math.
- Author
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Kehayopulu, Niovi
- Subjects
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MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Giving the proper citations, it is shown that, except of Lemma 2.4 and Theorem 2.6, almost all the results of the paper in the title have been previously published for ordered hypersemigroups in Eur. J. Pure Appl. Math. and they are not new. There are also two results obtained from ordered semigroups just putting a "o" instead of "o" (that isn't a correct way to work), without reference to ordered semigroups on which the results on ordered hypersemigroups are based. One of them can be obtained as corollary to a theorem in Eur. J. Pure Appl. Math. as well, and it is not new. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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10. Erratum to the paper "Fifty Years of Kurepa's !n Hypothesis" by Žarko Mijajlović.
- Author
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Smarandache, Florentin
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HYPOTHESIS , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In this short note we prove that the Kurepa (K) function is different from the Smarandache-Kurepa (SK) function, therefore, these functions are not the same, as Mijajlović has unfoundedly accused the prestigious Encyclopedia of Mathematics and this author. This note is an answer to Mijajlović's paper (Žarko Mijajlović, Fifty years of Kurepa's !n hypothesis, Bulletin T.CLIV de l'Académie serbe des sciences et des arts - 2021 Classe des Sciences mathématiques et naturelles Sciences mathématiques, No. 46, 169-181 (2021). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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11. Partner choice correlates with fine scale kin structuring in the paper wasp Polistes dominula.
- Author
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Parsons, Paul John, Grinsted, Lena, and Field, Jeremy
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PHILOPATRY , *WASPS , *ANIMAL societies , *PHYSIOLOGY , *NESTS , *BIRD breeding - Abstract
Cooperation among kin is common in animal societies. Kin groups may form by individuals directly discriminating relatives based on kin recognition cues, or form passively through natal philopatry and limited dispersal. We describe the genetic landscape for a primitively eusocial wasp, Polistes dominula, and ask whether individuals choose cooperative partners that are nearby and/or that are genetic relatives. Firstly, we genotyped an entire sub-population of 1361 wasps and found genetic structuring on an extremely fine scale: the probability of finding genetic relatives decreases exponentially within just a few meters of an individual’s nest. At the same time, however, we found a lack of genetic structuring between natural nest aggregations within the population. Secondly, in a separate dataset where ~2000 wasps were genotyped, we show that wasps forced experimentally to make a new nest choice tended to choose new nests near to their original nests, and that these nests tended to contain some full sisters. However, a significant fraction of wasps chose nests that did not contain sisters, despite sisters being present in nearby nests. Although we cannot rule out a role for direct kin recognition or natal nest-mate recognition, our data suggest that kin groups may form via a philopatric rule-of-thumb, whereby wasps simply select groups and nesting sites that are nearby. The result is that most subordinate helpers obtain indirect fitness benefits by breeding cooperatively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Physics driven behavioural clustering of free-falling paper shapes.
- Author
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Howison, Toby, Hughes, Josie, Giardina, Fabio, and Iida, Fumiya
- Subjects
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PHYSICS , *SET functions , *MACHINE learning , *PHENOMENOLOGICAL theory (Physics) , *CONTINUUM mechanics - Abstract
Many complex physical systems exhibit a rich variety of discrete behavioural modes. Often, the system complexity limits the applicability of standard modelling tools. Hence, understanding the underlying physics of different behaviours and distinguishing between them is challenging. Although traditional machine learning techniques could predict and classify behaviour well, typically they do not provide any meaningful insight into the underlying physics of the system. In this paper we present a novel method for extracting physically meaningful clusters of discrete behaviour from limited experimental observations. This method obtains a set of physically plausible functions that both facilitate behavioural clustering and aid in system understanding. We demonstrate the approach on the V-shaped falling paper system, a new falling paper type system that exhibits four distinct behavioural modes depending on a few morphological parameters. Using just 49 experimental observations, the method discovered a set of candidate functions that distinguish behaviours with an error of 2.04%, while also aiding insight into the physical phenomena driving each behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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13. Kindergarten children's symbolic number comparison skills relates to 1st grade mathematics achievement: Evidence from a two-minute paper-and-pencil test.
- Author
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Hawes, Zachary, Archibald, Lisa, Ansari, Daniel, and Nosworthy, Nadia
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MATHEMATICS , *MATHEMATICAL ability in children , *MATHEMATICAL ability testing , *LONGITUDINAL method , *SYMBOLISM of numbers , *ARITHMETIC , *KINDERGARTEN , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Abstract Basic numerical skills provide an important foundation for the learning of mathematics. Thus, it is critical that researchers and educators have access to valid and reliable ways of assessing young children's numerical skills. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the concurrent, predictive, and incremental validity of a two-minute paper-and-pencil measure of children's symbolic (Arabic numerals) and non-symbolic (dot arrays) comparison skills. A sample of kindergarten children (M age = 5.86, N = 439) were assessed on the measure along with a number line estimation task, a measure of arithmetic, and several control measures. Results indicated that performance on the symbolic comparison task explained unique variance in children's arithmetic performance in kindergarten. Longitudinal analyses demonstrated that both symbolic comparison and number line estimation in kindergarten were independent predictors of 1st grade mathematics achievement. However, only symbolic comparison remained a unique predictor once language skills and processing speed were taken into account. These results suggest that a two-minute paper-and-pencil measure of children's symbolic number comparison is a reliable predictor of children's early mathematics performance. Highlights • We tested the validity and reliability of a recently developed Numeracy Screener. • Performance on the symbolic comparison task predicted kindergarten children's arithmetic performance. • Performance on the symbolic comparison task in kindergarten predicted school mathematics achievement one year later. • The Numeracy Screener may be a useful tool for early mathematics researchers and educators alike. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Effective mathematics learning through APOS theory by dint of cognitive abilities.
- Author
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Tsafe, A. K.
- Subjects
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MATHEMATICS , *CONSTRUCTIVISM (Education) , *INTERNALIZING behavior , *MENTAL imagery - Abstract
The paper dwells on the contributions of APOS theory to the development of teaching and learning of mathematics in school. APOS is an acronym for action, process, object, and schema. The theory emerges as an extension to constructivism but with a more focused and robust learner-centered approach to the teaching and learning of mathematics. Proponents of the theory believed that learning occurs initially as an action or activity in learners' cognitive settings, independent of learners' environment, triggered by cognitive coherence, then it is transformed to process, where learner now waits for internalization of the earlier activity, preparatory to the occurrence of learning. At object level, learner now considers what has been learnt earlier to have been fully internalized into mathematical object(s). Lastly, at schema level, the object learnt is assumed to have been embedded in the learners' schema-a cognitive structure formed as a result of accumulated learning experience, and a complete mental image of what has been learnt is said to have been formed. Against the backdrop of this, the paper looks at how this theory had changed the narrative about teaching and learning of mathematics vis-à-vis the bearing of the theory to other cognitive abilities of the learner such as intelligence and creativity. In the end, the paper suggests the application of APOS theory in teaching and learning mathematics at all levels of learning in Nigeria and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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15. When bias becomes part of imprecision: how to use analytical performance specifications to determine acceptability of lot-lot variation and other sources of possibly unacceptable bias.
- Author
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Thelen, Marc H.M. and van Schrojenstein Lantman, Marith
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MEDICAL personnel , *CALIBRATION , *MATHEMATICS , *LABORATORIES , *RESPONSIBILITY - Abstract
ISO 15189 requires laboratories to estimate the uncertainty of their quantitative measurements and to maintain them within relevant performance specifications. Furthermore, it refers to ISO TS 20914 for instructions on how to estimate the uncertainty and what to take into consideration when communicating uncertainty of measurement with requesting clinicians. These instructions include the responsibility of laboratories to verify that bias is not larger than medically significant. If estimated to be larger than acceptable, such bias first needs to be eliminated or (temporarily) corrected for. In the latter case, the uncertainty of such correction becomes part of the estimation of the total measurement uncertainty. If small enough to be acceptable, bias becomes part of the long term within laboratory random variation. Sources of possible bias are (not limited to) changes in reagent or calibrator lot variation or calibration itself. In this paper we clarify how the rationale and mathematics from an EFLM WG ISO/A position paper on allowable between reagent lot variation can be applied to calculate whether bias can be accepted to become part of long-term imprecision. The central point of this rationale is to prevent the risk that requesting clinicians confuse changes in bias with changes in the steady state of their patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. Integrating educational robot and low-cost self-made toys to enhance STEM learning performance for primary school students.
- Author
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Hu, Chih-Chien, Yang, Yu-Fen, Cheng, Ya-Wen, and Chen, Nian-Shing
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INTERDISCIPLINARY education , *PLAY , *LECTURE method in teaching , *DIGITAL technology , *MATHEMATICS , *COST effectiveness , *HUMAN services programs , *STRUCTURAL models , *ELEMENTARY schools , *RESEARCH funding , *SCIENCE , *ENGINEERING , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *CLINICAL trials , *PROBLEM solving , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CAMPS , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *SURVEYS , *ROBOTICS , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SCHOOL children , *TECHNOLOGY , *RURAL conditions , *STORYTELLING , *ABILITY , *LEARNING strategies , *STUDENT attitudes , *DATA analysis software , *INTERNET of things , *TRAINING , *CLOUD computing - Abstract
The application of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) education in solving real-world problems is challenging. To tackle this challenge, a project-based learning approach that integrates robots with cost-effective self-made toys to problem-solving was adopted to assist rural primary school students to apply STEM skills. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of the project-based learning approach which includes lecturing and hands-on activities on primary school students' STEM learning outcomes and attitudes. An experiment was conducted with 25 primary school students who voluntarily participated in a STEM summer-camp programme. Students were asked to assemble a paper house equipped with an IoT control module and LED light switches, and write and edit robot scripts to produce a robot-based storytelling narrative using the paper house they made as a context. The results show that the project-based learning approach was an effective approach for cultivating primary school students' STEM knowledge and skills as evidenced from the post-written test. The relationships between the students' STEM learning outcomes and attitudes were also confirmed by a clustering analysis. Students who had higher learning attitudes also achieved higher STEM learning outcomes; the findings are also supported by the feedback from the open-ended questionnaire items. This study suggests that integrating low-cost self-made toys and robots in project-based learning activities is an effective and practical approach to enhance primary school students' learning outcomes and learning attitudes in STEM education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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17. All meromorphic solutions of the autonomous Schwarzian differential equations.
- Author
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Zhang, Jie, Liao, Liangwen, Wu, Chengfa, and Zhao, Donghai
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AUTONOMOUS differential equations , *MATHEMATICS , *LOGICAL prediction - Abstract
This paper considers a specific autonomous Schwarzian differential equation given by Sf=c(f−σ1)(f−σ2)/[(f−τ1)(f−τ2)]$$\begin{equation*} \hspace*{35pt} S_f=c(f-\sigma _1)(f-\sigma _2)/[(f-\tau _1)(f-\tau _2)] \end{equation*}$$and presents a complete characterization of its transcendental meromorphic solutions, thus confirming a conjecture posed by Liao and Wu recently. By combining our results with those obtained in a previous paper (Math. Z. 2 (2022), 1657–1672), we are able to explicitly construct all transcendental meromorphic solutions of the autonomous Schwarzian differential equations. Additionally, we identify all nonconstant rational solutions of the autonomous Schwarzian differential equations, with the exception of one special case. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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18. The chord log-Minkowski problem for 0.
- Author
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Qin, Lei
- Subjects
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MATHEMATICS - Abstract
The chord log-Minkowski problem asks for necessary and sufficient conditions for a finite Borel measure on the unit sphere so that it is the cone-chord measure of a convex body. The chord log-Minkowski problem has been extensively studied by Guo, Xi, and Zhao [Math. Ann. (2023), DOI 10.1007/s00208-023-02721-8]; Lutwak, Xi, Yang, and Zhang [Commun. Pure Appl. Math. (2023), DOI 10.1002/cpa.22190]; Qin [Adv. Math. 427 (2023), Paper No. 109132]. In this paper, we solve the chord log-Minkowski problem when q\in (0,1), without symmetry assumptions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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19. Novel Feature-Based Difficulty Prediction Method for Mathematics Items Using XGBoost-Based SHAP Model.
- Author
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Yi, Xifan, Sun, Jianing, and Wu, Xiaopeng
- Subjects
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MACHINE learning , *UNIQUENESS (Mathematics) , *COLLEGE entrance examinations , *EDUCATIONAL standards , *MATHEMATICS examinations, questions, etc. , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
The level of difficulty of mathematical test items is a critical aspect for evaluating test quality and educational outcomes. Accurately predicting item difficulty during test creation is thus significantly important for producing effective test papers. This study used more than ten years of content and score data from China's Henan Provincial College Entrance Examination in Mathematics as an evaluation criterion for test difficulty, and all data were obtained from the Henan Provincial Department of Education. Based on the framework established by the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) for test item assessment methodology, this paper proposes a new framework containing eight features considering the uniqueness of mathematics. Next, this paper proposes an XGBoost-based SHAP model for analyzing the difficulty of mathematics tests. By coupling the XGBoost method with the SHAP method, the model not only evaluates the difficulty of mathematics tests but also analyzes the contribution of specific features to item difficulty, thereby increasing transparency and mitigating the "black box" nature of machine learning models. The model has a high prediction accuracy of 0.99 for the training set and 0.806 for the test set. With the model, we found that parameter-level features and reasoning-level features are significant factors influencing the difficulty of subjective items in the exam. In addition, we divided senior secondary mathematics knowledge into nine units based on Chinese curriculum standards and found significant differences in the distribution of the eight features across these different knowledge units, which can help teachers place different emphasis on different units during the teaching process. In summary, our proposed approach significantly improves the accuracy of item difficulty prediction, which is crucial for intelligent educational applications such as knowledge tracking, automatic test item generation, and intelligent paper generation. These results provide tools that are better aligned with and responsive to students' learning needs, thus effectively informing educational practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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20. Composition operators over weighted Bergman spaces of Dirichlet series.
- Author
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Wang, Maofa and He, Min
- Subjects
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DIRICHLET series , *COMPOSITION operators , *BERGMAN spaces , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In the paper 'Composition operators on weighted Bergman spaces of Dirichlet series. J Math Anal Appl. 2015;426:340–363', Bailleul completely characterized the boundedness of composition operators on weighted Bergman spaces of Dirichlet series for the case of symbols with $ c_0\ge 1 $ c 0 ≥ 1. But the sufficient conditions for the other case $ c_0=0 $ c 0 = 0 were unsolved. In this paper, we follow this line and study the boundedness of composition operators on weighted Bergman spaces of Dirichlet series for the case $ c_0=0 $ c 0 = 0. Moreover, we also obtain the compact characterizations of composition operators with $ c_0\geq 1 $ c 0 ≥ 1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Airy Ideals, Transvections, and W(sp2N)-Algebras.
- Author
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Bouchard, Vincent, Creutzig, Thomas, and Joshi, Aniket
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IDEALS (Algebra) , *ALGEBRA , *STRUCTURAL analysis (Engineering) , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In the first part of the paper, we propose a different viewpoint on the theory of higher Airy structures (or Airy ideals), which may shed light on its origin. We define Airy ideals in the ħ -adic completion of the Rees Weyl algebra and show that Airy ideals are defined exactly such that they are always related to the canonical left ideal generated by derivatives by automorphisms of the Rees Weyl algebra of a simple type, which we call transvections. The standard existence and uniqueness result in the theory of Airy structures then follow immediately. In the second part of the paper, we construct Airy ideals generated by the nonnegative modes of the strong generators of the principal W -algebra of sp 2 N at level - N - 1 / 2 , following the approach developed in Borot et al. (Mem Am Math Soc, 2021). This provides an example of an Airy ideal in the Heisenberg algebra that requires realizing the zero modes as derivatives instead of variables, which leads to an interesting interpretation for the resulting partition function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Nonlinear dynamics with Hopf bifurcations by targeted mutation in the system of rock-paper-scissors metaphor.
- Author
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Park, Junpyo
- Subjects
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OSCILLATIONS , *MATHEMATICS , *LEAST squares , *BIFURCATION theory , *SCISSORS & shears - Abstract
The role of mutation, which is an error process in gene evolution, in systems of cyclically competing species has been studied from various perspectives, and it is regarded as one of the key factors for promoting coexistence of all species. In addition to naturally occurring mutations, many experiments in genetic engineering have involved targeted mutation techniques such as recombination between DNA and somatic cell sequences and have studied genetic modifications through loss or augmentation of cell functions. In this paper, we investigate nonlinear dynamics with targeted mutation in cyclically competing species. In different ways to classic approaches of mutation in cyclic games, we assume that mutation may occur in targeted individuals who have been removed from intraspecific competition. By investigating each scenario depending on the number of objects for targeted mutation analytically and numerically, we found that targeted mutation can lead to persistent coexistence of all species. In addition, under the specific condition of targeted mutation, we found that targeted mutation can lead to emergences of bistable states for species survival. Through the linear stability analysis of rate equations, we found that those phenomena are accompanied by Hopf bifurcation which is supercritical. Our findings may provide more global perspectives on understanding underlying mechanisms to control biodiversity in ecological/biological sciences, and evidences with mathematical foundations to resolve social dilemmas such as a turnover of group members by resigning with intragroup conflicts in social sciences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. P. C. Vaidya's contributions to mathematics and physics.
- Author
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Shashikumara, A. A. and Kumbar, Rashmi
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SCIENTIFIC community , *CONFERENCE papers , *MATHEMATICIANS , *SCIENTISTS , *MATHEMATICAL physics , *PHYSICISTS - Abstract
Prahalad Chunnilal Vaidya was an eminent general relativist, gravitation theorist, physicist, mathematician, educationist and a follower of Gandhian philosophy in post-independence India. Apart from his scientific career, Vaidya is renowned for his Vaidya metric. Though he has contributed significantly to the scientific community, very few people are aware about him or his contributions. As 23 May 2019 was the 101st birth anniversary of Vaidya, here we present his contributions and their impact through a bibliometric study. This study presents an analysis of published research works of Vaidya. During his active career, he had contributed 102 publications, including 90 journal articles, 5 conference papers, 4 book chapters, 2 review articles and 1 report. His publications have received 2004 citations, h-index of 18 and i10-index of 29 from 1979 to 2018. We analysed Vaidya's publications by type, country, journals, publishers, citations, year-wise growth, collaborated authors, top cited papers, etc. This bibliometric study is an effort to draw the attention of the younger generation of scientists to Vaidya and his contributions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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24. The contribution of cause-effect link to representing the core of scientific paper—The role of Semantic Link Network.
- Author
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Cao, Mengyun, Sun, Xiaoping, and Zhuge, Hai
- Subjects
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COMPLEXITY (Philosophy) , *CAUSATION (Philosophy) , *SEMANTICS , *RESEARCH , *PHILOSOPHY - Abstract
The Semantic Link Network is a general semantic model for modeling the structure and the evolution of complex systems. Various semantic links play different roles in rendering the semantics of complex system. One of the basic semantic links represents cause-effect relation, which plays an important role in representation and understanding. This paper verifies the role of the Semantic Link Network in representing the core of text by investigating the contribution of cause-effect link to representing the core of scientific papers. Research carries out with the following steps: (1) Two propositions on the contribution of cause-effect link in rendering the core of paper are proposed and verified through a statistical survey, which shows that the sentences on cause-effect links cover about 65% of key words within each paper on average. (2) An algorithm based on syntactic patterns is designed for automatically extracting cause-effect link from scientific papers, which recalls about 70% of manually annotated cause-effect links on average, indicating that the result adapts to the scale of data sets. (3) The effects of cause-effect link on four schemes of incorporating cause-effect link into the existing instances of the Semantic Link Network for enhancing the summarization of scientific papers are investigated. The experiments show that the quality of the summaries is significantly improved, which verifies the role of semantic links. The significance of this research lies in two aspects: (1) it verifies that the Semantic Link Network connects the important concepts to render the core of text; and, (2) it provides an evidence for realizing content services such as summarization, recommendation and question answering based on the Semantic Link Network, and it can inspire relevant research on content computing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Do altmetrics correlate with the quality of papers? A large-scale empirical study based on F1000Prime data.
- Author
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Bornmann, Lutz and Haunschild, Robin
- Subjects
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MULTIPLE correspondence analysis (Statistics) , *ALTMETRICS , *CITATION analysis , *BIBLIOMETRICS , *EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
In this study, we address the question whether (and to what extent, respectively) altmetrics are related to the scientific quality of papers (as measured by peer assessments). Only a few studies have previously investigated the relationship between altmetrics and assessments by peers. In the first step, we analyse the underlying dimensions of measurement for traditional metrics (citation counts) and altmetrics–by using principal component analysis (PCA) and factor analysis (FA). In the second step, we test the relationship between the dimensions and quality of papers (as measured by the post-publication peer-review system of F1000Prime assessments)–using regression analysis. The results of the PCA and FA show that altmetrics operate along different dimensions, whereas Mendeley counts are related to citation counts, and tweets form a separate dimension. The results of the regression analysis indicate that citation-based metrics and readership counts are significantly more related to quality, than tweets. This result on the one hand questions the use of Twitter counts for research evaluation purposes and on the other hand indicates potential use of Mendeley reader counts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Information presentation through a head-worn display (“smart glasses”) has a smaller influence on the temporal structure of gait variability during dual-task gait compared to handheld displays (paper-based system and smartphone).
- Author
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Sedighi, Alireza, Ulman, Sophia M., and Nussbaum, Maury A.
- Subjects
- *
GAIT in humans , *MOTOR ability , *PHYSICAL activity , *STANDARD deviations , *ENTROPY - Abstract
The need to complete multiple tasks concurrently is a common occurrence both daily life and in occupational activities, which can often include simultaneous cognitive and physical demands. As one example, there is increasing availability of head-worn display technologies that can be employed when a user is mobile (e.g., while walking). This new method of information presentation may, however, introduce risks of adverse outcomes such as a decrement to gait performance. The goal of this study was thus to quantify the effects of a head-worn display (i.e., smart glasses) on motor variability during gait and to compare these effects with those of other common information displays (i.e., smartphone and paper-based system). Twenty participants completed four walking conditions, as a single task and in three dual-task conditions (three information displays). In the dual-task conditions, the information display was used to present several cognitive tasks. Three different measures were used to quantify variability in gait parameters for each walking condition (using the cycle-to-cycle standard deviation, sample entropy, and the “goal-equivalent manifold” approach). Our results indicated that participants used less adaptable gait strategies in dual-task walking using the paper-based system and smartphone conditions compared with single-task walking. Gait performance, however, was less affected during dual-task walking with the smart glasses. We conclude that the risk of an adverse gait event (e.g., a fall) in head-down walking conditions (i.e., the paper-based system and smartphone conditions) were higher than in single-task walking, and that head-worn displays might help reduce the risk of such events during dual-task gait conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Quantifying the impact of scholarly papers based on higher-order weighted citations.
- Author
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Bai, Xiaomei, Zhang, Fuli, Hou, Jie, Lee, Ivan, Kong, Xiangjie, Tolba, Amr, and Xia, Feng
- Subjects
- *
CITATION analysis , *SCHOLARLY publishing , *BIBLIOMETRICS , *SIMULATION methods & models , *ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Quantifying the impact of a scholarly paper is of great significance, yet the effect of geographical distance of cited papers has not been explored. In this paper, we examine 30,596 papers published in Physical Review C, and identify the relationship between citations and geographical distances between author affiliations. Subsequently, a relative citation weight is applied to assess the impact of a scholarly paper. A higher-order weighted quantum PageRank algorithm is also developed to address the behavior of multiple step citation flow. Capturing the citation dynamics with higher-order dependencies reveals the actual impact of papers, including necessary self-citations that are sometimes excluded in prior studies. Quantum PageRank is utilized in this paper to help differentiating nodes whose PageRank values are identical. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. An instrument to assess the statistical intensity of medical research papers.
- Author
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Nieminen, Pentti, Virtanen, Jorma I., and Vähänikkilä, Hannu
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL research , *MEDICAL statistics , *MEDICAL personnel , *MEDICAL periodicals , *MANUSCRIPTS - Abstract
Background: There is widespread evidence that statistical methods play an important role in original research articles, especially in medical research. The evaluation of statistical methods and reporting in journals suffers from a lack of standardized methods for assessing the use of statistics. The objective of this study was to develop and evaluate an instrument to assess the statistical intensity in research articles in a standardized way. Methods: A checklist-type measure scale was developed by selecting and refining items from previous reports about the statistical contents of medical journal articles and from published guidelines for statistical reporting. A total of 840 original medical research articles that were published between 2007–2015 in 16 journals were evaluated to test the scoring instrument. The total sum of all items was used to assess the intensity between sub-fields and journals. Inter-rater agreement was examined using a random sample of 40 articles. Four raters read and evaluated the selected articles using the developed instrument. Results: The scale consisted of 66 items. The total summary score adequately discriminated between research articles according to their study design characteristics. The new instrument could also discriminate between journals according to their statistical intensity. The inter-observer agreement measured by the ICC was 0.88 between all four raters. Individual item analysis showed very high agreement between the rater pairs, the percentage agreement ranged from 91.7% to 95.2%. Conclusions: A reliable and applicable instrument for evaluating the statistical intensity in research papers was developed. It is a helpful tool for comparing the statistical intensity between sub-fields and journals. The novel instrument may be applied in manuscript peer review to identify papers in need of additional statistical review. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. A collaborative approach for research paper recommender system.
- Author
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Haruna, Khalid, Akmar Ismail, Maizatul, Damiasih, Damiasih, Sutopo, Joko, and Herawan, Tutut
- Subjects
- *
CITATION analysis , *SCIENCE & state , *SOCIAL network analysis , *SOCIAL networks , *COMPUTER networks - Abstract
Research paper recommenders emerged over the last decade to ease finding publications relating to researchers’ area of interest. The challenge was not just to provide researchers with very rich publications at any time, any place and in any form but to also offer the right publication to the right researcher in the right way. Several approaches exist in handling paper recommender systems. However, these approaches assumed the availability of the whole contents of the recommending papers to be freely accessible, which is not always true due to factors such as copyright restrictions. This paper presents a collaborative approach for research paper recommender system. By leveraging the advantages of collaborative filtering approach, we utilize the publicly available contextual metadata to infer the hidden associations that exist between research papers in order to personalize recommendations. The novelty of our proposed approach is that it provides personalized recommendations regardless of the research field and regardless of the user’s expertise. Using a publicly available dataset, our proposed approach has recorded a significant improvement over other baseline methods in measuring both the overall performance and the ability to return relevant and useful publications at the top of the recommendation list. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Social and content aware One-Class recommendation of papers in scientific social networks.
- Author
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Wang, Gang, He, XiRan, and Ishuga, Carolyne Isigi
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION technology , *SOCIAL networks , *SPARSE graphs , *HYBRID computers (Computer architecture) , *HYBRID power systems - Abstract
With the rapid development of information technology, scientific social networks (SSNs) have become the fastest and most convenient way for researchers to communicate with each other. Many published papers are shared via SSNs every day, resulting in the problem of information overload. How to appropriately recommend personalized and highly valuable papers for researchers is becoming more urgent. However, when recommending papers in SSNs, only a small amount of positive instances are available, leaving a vast amount of unlabelled data, in which negative instances and potential unseen positive instances are mixed together, which naturally belongs to One-Class Collaborative Filtering (OCCF) problem. Therefore, considering the extreme data imbalance and data sparsity of this OCCF problem, a hybrid approach of Social and Content aware One-class Recommendation of Papers in SSNs, termed SCORP, is proposed in this study. Unlike previous approaches recommended to address the OCCF problem, social information, which has been proved playing a significant role in performing recommendations in many domains, is applied in both the profiling of content-based filtering and the collaborative filtering to achieve superior recommendations. To verify the effectiveness of the proposed SCORP approach, a real-life dataset from CiteULike was employed. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed approach is superior to all of the compared approaches, thus providing a more effective method for recommending papers in SSNs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Comment on the paper of Mostafa M. A. Khater et al. [Superlattices and Microstructures, 113 (2018) 346–358].
- Author
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Zayed, Elsayed M.E. and Al-Nowehy, Abdul-Ghani
- Subjects
- *
SUPERLATTICES , *NONLINEAR equations , *BAND gaps , *MATHEMATICS , *MICROSTRUCTURE - Abstract
Abstract This comment concerns the doubtful new auxiliary equation method (Khater method) included in the above paper. We prove by simple calculation that this method is wrong. The exact solutions of the proposed nonlinear equation obtained in the above paper are all wrong. Highlights • The new auxiliary equation method is called Khater method. • We prove by simple calculation that Khater method is wrong. • We show that the exact solutions obtained in the above paper are all wrong. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Erratum to the paper "Convexity in x of the level sets of the first Dirichlet eigenfunction": (Published in Math. Nachr. 280 (2007), no. 13–14, 1467–1474).
- Author
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Chu, Chie‐Ping
- Subjects
- *
MATHEMATICS , *CONVEX domains - Abstract
Convex in x domain, eigenfunction, level sets, local rearrangement Erratum to the paper "Convexity in x of the level sets of the first Dirichlet eigenfunction": (Published in Math. Nachr. Keywords: convex in x domain; eigenfunction; level sets; local rearrangement EN convex in x domain eigenfunction level sets local rearrangement 1025 1025 1 03/21/23 20230301 NES 230301 Lemma 3.2 is incorrect. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
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33. Correction: Almalaq et al. Deep Machine Learning Model-Based Cyber-Attacks Detection in Smart Power Systems. Mathematics 2022, 10 , 2574.
- Author
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Almalaq, Abdulaziz, Albadran, Saleh, and Mohamed, Mohamed A.
- Subjects
- *
DEEP learning , *MACHINE learning , *DECISION trees , *ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *MATHEMATICS , *INFORMATION technology , *SMART power grids - Abstract
This correction notice provides updates and corrections to a research paper on deep machine learning model-based cyber-attacks detection in smart power systems. The paper proposes a deep learning-based attack detection model that addresses system disturbances caused by natural events and cyber-attacks. It discusses the use of principal component analysis (PCA) for feature selection and the potential of deep learning-based and decision tree classifiers for detecting cyber-attacks in intelligent energy grids. The notice also includes updates to references, clarifications on the experimental data set, and feature selection based on PCA. The study evaluates the effectiveness of the proposed model using various assessment indexes and compares it to conventional methods, concluding that the proposed model is effective in detecting cyber-attacks and demonstrates good performance in detecting destructive attacks. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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34. Checking correctness in mathematical peer review.
- Author
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Greiffenhagen, Christian
- Subjects
- *
MATHEMATICIANS , *EVIDENCE , *MATHEMATICS , *TIME management - Abstract
Mathematics is often treated as different from other disciplines, since arguments in the field rely on deductive proof rather than empirical evidence as in the natural sciences. A mathematical paper can therefore, at least in principle, be replicated simply by reading it. While this distinction is sometimes taken as the basis to claim that the results in mathematics are therefore certain, mathematicians themselves know that the published literature contains many mistakes. Reading a proof is not easy, and checking whether an argument constitutes a proof is surprisingly difficult. This article uses peer review of submissions to mathematics journals as a site where referees are explicitly concerned with checking whether a paper is correct and therefore could be published. Drawing on 95 qualitative interviews with mathematics journal editors, as well as a collection of more than 100 referee reports and other correspondence from peer review processes, this article establishes that while mathematicians acknowledge that peer review does not guarantee correctness, they still value it. For mathematicians, peer review 'adds a bit of certainty', especially in contrast to papers only submitted to preprint servers such as arXiv. Furthermore, during peer review there can be disagreements not just regarding the importance of a result, but also whether a particular argument constitutes a proof or not (in particular, whether there are substantial gaps in the proof). Finally, the mathematical community is seen as important when it comes to accepting arguments as proofs and assigning certainty to results. Publishing an argument in a peer-reviewed journal is often only the first step in having a result accepted. Results get accepted if they stand the test of time and are used by other mathematicians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Weak friezes and frieze pattern determinants.
- Author
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Holm, Thorsten and Jørgensen, Peter
- Subjects
- *
CLUSTER algebras , *SYMMETRIC matrices , *GLUE , *POLYGONS , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Frieze patterns have been introduced by Coxeter [Acta Arith. 18 (1971), pp. 297–310] in the 1970's and have recently attracted renewed interest due to their close connection with Fomin-Zelevinsky's cluster algebras. Frieze patterns can be interpreted as assignments of values to the diagonals of a triangulated polygon satisfying certain conditions for crossing diagonals (Ptolemy relations). Weak friezes, as introduced by Çanakçı and Jørgensen [Adv. in Appl. Math. 131 (2021), Paper No. 102253], are generalizing this concept by allowing to glue dissected polygons so that the Ptolemy relations only have to be satisfied for crossings involving one of the gluing diagonals. To any frieze pattern one can associate a symmetric matrix using a triangular fundamental domain of the frieze pattern in the upper and lower half of the matrix and putting zeroes on the diagonal. Broline, Crowe and Isaacs [Geometriae Dedicata 3 (1974), pp. 171–176] have found a formula for the determinants of these matrices and their work has later been generalized in various directions by other authors. These frieze pattern determinants are the main focus of our paper. As our main result we show that this determinant behaves well with respect to gluing weak friezes: the determinant is the product of the determinants for the pieces glued, up to a scalar factor coming from the gluing diagonal. Then we give several applications of this result, showing that formulas from the literature, obtained by Broline-Crowe-Isaacs, Baur-Marsh [J. Combin. Theory Ser. A 119 (2012), pp. 1110–1122], Bessenrodt-Holm-Jørgensen [J. Combin. Theory Ser. A 123 (2014), pp. 30–42] and Maldonado [ Frieze matrices and infinite frieze patterns with coefficients , Preprint, arXiv: 2207.04120 , 2022] can all be obtained as consequences of our result. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. On stable solutions of a weighted elliptic equation involving the fractional Laplacian.
- Author
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Quynh Nguyen, Thi and Tuan Duong, Anh
- Subjects
- *
ELLIPTIC equations , *LAPLACIAN operator , *LIOUVILLE'S theorem , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In this paper, we study the following fractional Choquard equation with weight (−Δ)su=1|x|N−α∗h(x)|u|ph(x)|u|p−2uinℝN,$$ {\left(-\Delta \right)}^su=\left(\frac{1}{{\left|x\right|}^{N-\alpha }}\ast h(x){\left|u\right|}^p\right)h(x){\left|u\right|}^{p-2}u\kern0.5em \mathrm{in}\kern0.5em {\mathrm{\mathbb{R}}}^N, $$where 0
2s,p>2,α>0$$ 02s,p>2,\alpha >0 $$ and h$$ h $$ is a positive weight function satisfying h(x)≥C|x|a$$ h(x)\ge C{\left|x\right|}^a $$ at infinity, for some a≥0$$ a\ge 0 $$. We establish, in this paper, a Liouville type theorem saying that if maxN−4s−2a,0<α- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Theory and every thing: acquiring the office of Professor Stephen Hawking as a resource for history and museology.
- Author
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Blyth, Tilly and Boyle, Alison
- Subjects
- *
SCIENCE museums , *MUSEUM studies , *MUSEUM acquisitions , *SCIENTIFIC knowledge , *COMPLEXITY (Philosophy) , *COMMERCIAL art galleries - Abstract
How do the curators of science and technology collections represent the daily realities of doing science? Through the acquisition of Professor Stephen Hawking's office by the Science Museum, this paper will explore what is involved in making major acquisitions for national collections. How do curators consider what to preserve from the eclectic range of items found in the working spaces of scientists? What do the personal artefacts of a scientist's life represent, and what do acts of curatorial choices say about the narratives that are foregrounded -- and those that are not -- in positioning that life historically? And how do those choices illuminate the considerations involved in the way science and technology is represented in our national collections? By going beyond the glass case, we consider what it takes to bring an object into a collection: the intellectual considerations of how its stories are preserved for a nation and the practical considerations required so that items can even be considered for future display. The paper illuminates the formal and informal networks around scientists' collections, and the processes and judgements that science and technology curators make every day when choosing what could be important for defining our history. Using the Stephen Hawking office as a case study the article explores the representation of scientific practice in museum collections, the relationship of some collections with celebrity and disability, and some of the challenges posed by science and technology acquisitions compared to other types of museum object. The paper explores how knowledge is generated in museum collections, through the act of acquiring a new collection. It asks fundamental questions, which are essential to the fields of museology and science and technology studies, about the contribution to knowledge made by personal scientific objects. It goes beyond the study of collections as artefacts of display in exhibitions and galleries, providing a detailed analysis of a routine but oftenneglected aspect of behind-the-scenes museum work: the acquisition of a collection. Arguing that a large and complex collection is a vital tool for understanding the complexity of science, the paper uses the 'museum as method' (Thomas, 2016) which prioritises simple curatorial questions and the use of the objects in exploration; this enables scholars and curators to respond to material evidence of scientific knowledge, and identify narratives that are prioritised, and others that are obscured, in the historic record. In doing so, it suggests that curators are uniquely placed to provide insights into the roles of human and non-human actors in the construction of scientific knowledge, demonstrating how the Hawking collection allows us to explore the nature of scientific practice, the creation of scientific celebrity, and the potential to give visibility to disability within the history of science whilst de-centring the myth of the scientific genius in museum narratives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A game-theoretic implication of the Riemann hypothesis.
- Author
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Ewerhart, Christian
- Subjects
- *
RIEMANN hypothesis , *NASH equilibrium , *PLEONASM , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
The Riemann hypothesis (RH) is one of the major unsolved problems in pure mathematics. In the present paper, a parameterized family of non-cooperative games is constructed with the property that, if RH is true, then any game in the family admits a unique Nash equilibrium. We argue that this result is not degenerate. Indeed, neither is the conclusion a tautology, nor is RH used to define the family of games. • The Riemann Hypothesis (RH) is a famous open problem in mathematics. • This paper constructs generalized difference-form contests related to RH. • These contests admit a unique Nash equilibrium if RH holds true. • We argue that the result is not degenerate in any obvious way. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. On input and Langlands parameters for epipelagic representations.
- Author
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Romano, Beth
- Subjects
- *
L-functions , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
A paper of Reeder–Yu [J. Amer. Math. Soc. 27 (2014), pp. 437–477] gives a construction of epipelagic supercuspidal representations of p-adic groups. The input for this construction is a pair (\lambda, \chi) where \lambda is a stable vector in a certain representation coming from a Moy–Prasad filtration, and \chi is a character of the additive group of the residue field. We say two such pairs are equivalent if the resulting supercuspidal representations are isomorphic. In this paper we describe the equivalence classes of such pairs. As an application, we give a classification of the simple supercuspidal representations for split adjoint groups. Finally, under an assumption about unramified base change, we describe properties of the Langlands parameters associated to these simple supercuspidals, showing that they have trivial L-functions and minimal Swan conductors, and showing that each of these simple supercuspidals lies in a singleton L-packet. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Galois actions of finitely generated groups rarely have model companions.
- Author
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Beyarslan, Özlem and Kowalski, Piotr
- Subjects
- *
PROFINITE groups , *FREE groups , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
We show that if G$G$ is a finitely generated group such that its profinite completion Ĝ$\widehat{G}$ is "far from being projective" (i.e., the kernel of the universal Frattini cover of Ĝ$\widehat{G}$ is not a small profinite group), then the class of existentially closed G$G$‐actions on fields is not elementary. Since any infinite, finitely generated, virtually free, and not free group is "far from being projective," the main result of this paper corrects an error in our paper, Beyarslan and Kowalski (Proc. London Math. Soc., (2) 118 (2019), 221–256), by showing the negation of Theorem 3.26 in that paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Students transitioning from primary to secondary mathematics learning: a study combining critical pedagogy, living theory and participatory action research.
- Author
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Matiti, Jo
- Subjects
- *
MATHEMATICS education , *SOCIAL change , *COMMUNITY-based participatory research , *CRITICAL pedagogy - Abstract
The connections between critical pedagogy, living theory and participatory action research (PAR) are discussed to explore their combined strength for empowering students, positively impacting on their attitudes towards their mathematics learning and creating social change in their primary-secondary mathematics transitions. This transition is recognised as creating social inequalities which existing transition research has failed to resolve. The interpretation of critical pedagogy, living theory and PAR are described before a summary of their application in a small scale, two-year study in a British curriculum school in Muscat, Oman. Critical pedagogy combined with living theory and PAR provides the theoretical and methodological framework to empower the students epistemologically. This paper gives an example of how PAR with students was conducted within the framework of critical pedagogy theory and living theory methodology. This account provides a valuable reference for participatory action researchers. The paper concludes that the combination of critical pedagogy, living theory and PAR can empower students to create social change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Efficiency of blended learning of calculus content during the Covid19 crisis.
- Author
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Mitrović, Slađana, Božić, Radoslav, and Takači, Đurđica
- Subjects
- *
BLENDED learning , *CALCULUS , *COVID-19 pandemic , *CONSTRUCTIVISM (Philosophy) , *DEFINITE integrals - Abstract
In this paper, we present the analysis of the students' achievements in learning calculus in a dynamic software environment during the Covid19 crisis. Two groups of students, the experimental and the control one, were monitored. Blended learning was applied to the students in the experimental group, with the help of Microsoft Teams and dynamic software GeoGebra, in autumn 2020. All students in the control group learned in the classroom without using GeoGebra in 2019. The comparison between these two groups of first-year students, regarding their calculus test results, is described in this paper. It is interesting that the results of the experimental group were significantly better than the results of students in the control group, despite the fact that the students from the experimental group learned during the Covid19 crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Using design based research to shift perspectives: a model for sustainable professional development for the innovative use of digital tools.
- Author
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Fowler, Samuel and Leonard, Simon N.
- Subjects
- *
DESIGN research , *EDUCATIONAL innovations , *TRANSFORMATIVE learning , *EDUCATION research , *EDUCATIONAL technology - Abstract
Emerging digital technologies offer a transformative potential to redefine learning tasks and many examples of this potential are now available. The scaling of the innovative pedagogies emerging from the research into widespread and sustainable practice, however, remains problematic. This paper addresses the issue of scaling by using Design Based Research (DBR), also known as Educational Design Research, within teacher professional development to reposition teachers' thinking about the place of digital tools in their teaching. Using a project seeking to support the use of new digital technologies to develop children's spatial reasoning as a 'worked example', this paper highlights how the bringing together of the knowledge of educational research and knowledge of teaching practice in DBR can provide a catalyst for epistemic change. The paper will argue that DBR positions the knowledge and practice objects of both research and teaching as 'epistemic' or 'not yet known' objects and, therefore, the legitimate focus of experimentation and reflection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Some remarks on pragmatics in the language of mathematics: Comments to the paper "At Least One Black Sheep: Pragmatics and Mathematical Language" by Luca San Mauro, Marco Ruffino and Giorgio Venturi.
- Author
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Ranta, Aarne
- Subjects
- *
PRAGMATICS , *MATHEMATICS , *LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
I agree wholeheartedly with the authors of "At Least One Black Sheep: Pragmatics and Mathematical Language" on their main thesis that the language of mathematics is permeated by phenomena that belong to pragmatics. I also agree with what they take to be the opposite view, which is presented in Mohan Ganesalingam's monograph The Language of Mathematics (2013). I think that the conflict is to a large extent terminological and has to do with what is meant by pragmatics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Author-paper affiliation network architecture influences the methodological quality of systematic reviews and meta-analyses of psoriasis.
- Author
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Sanz-Cabanillas, Juan Luis, Ruano, Juan, Gomez-Garcia, Francisco, Alcalde-Mellado, Patricia, Gay-Mimbrera, Jesus, Aguilar-Luque, Macarena, Maestre-Lopez, Beatriz, Gonzalez-Padilla, Marcelino, Carmona-Fernandez, Pedro J., Velez Garcia-Nieto, Antonio, and Isla-Tejera, Beatriz
- Subjects
- *
PSORIASIS , *COMORBIDITY , *MEDICAL care costs , *DECISION making in clinical medicine , *QUALITY of life - Abstract
Moderate-to-severe psoriasis is associated with significant comorbidity, an impaired quality of life, and increased medical costs, including those associated with treatments. Systematic reviews (SRs) and meta-analyses (MAs) of randomized clinical trials are considered two of the best approaches to the summarization of high-quality evidence. However, methodological bias can reduce the validity of conclusions from these types of studies and subsequently impair the quality of decision making. As co-authorship is among the most well-documented forms of research collaboration, the present study aimed to explore whether authors’ collaboration methods might influence the methodological quality of SRs and MAs of psoriasis. Methodological quality was assessed by two raters who extracted information from full articles. After calculating total and per-item Assessment of Multiple Systematic Reviews (AMSTAR) scores, reviews were classified as low (0-4), medium (5-8), or high (9-11) quality. Article metadata and journal-related bibliometric indices were also obtained. A total of 741 authors from 520 different institutions and 32 countries published 220 reviews that were classified as high (17.2%), moderate (55%), or low (27.7%) methodological quality. The high methodological quality subnetwork was larger but had a lower connection density than the low and moderate methodological quality subnetworks; specifically, the former contained relatively fewer nodes (authors and reviews), reviews by authors, and collaborators per author. Furthermore, the high methodological quality subnetwork was highly compartmentalized, with several modules representing few poorly interconnected communities. In conclusion, structural differences in author-paper affiliation network may influence the methodological quality of SRs and MAs on psoriasis. As the author-paper affiliation network structure affects study quality in this research field, authors who maintain an appropriate balance between scientific quality and productivity are more likely to develop higher quality reviews. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Evaluation of university scientific research ability based on the output of sci-tech papers: A D-AHP approach.
- Author
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Zong, Fan and Wang, Lifang
- Subjects
- *
SCIENTIFIC ability , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY , *UNIVERSITY research - Abstract
University scientific research ability is an important indicator to express the strength of universities. In this paper, the evaluation of university scientific research ability is investigated based on the output of sci-tech papers. Four university alliances from North America, UK, Australia, and China, are selected as the case study of the university scientific research evaluation. Data coming from Thomson Reuters InCites are collected to support the evaluation. The work has contributed new framework to the issue of university scientific research ability evaluation. At first, we have established a hierarchical structure to show the factors that impact the evaluation of university scientific research ability. Then, a new MCDM method called D-AHP model is used to implement the evaluation and ranking of different university alliances, in which a data-driven approach is proposed to automatically generate the D numbers preference relations. Next, a sensitivity analysis has been given to show the impact of weights of factors and sub-factors on the evaluation result. At last, the results obtained by using different methods are compared and discussed to verify the effectiveness and reasonability of this study, and some suggestions are given to promote China’s scientific research ability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. On A.Ya. Khinchin's paper ‘Ideas of intuitionism and the struggle for a subject matter in contemporary mathematics’ (1926): A translation with introduction and commentary.
- Author
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Verburgt, Lukas M. and Hoppe-Kondrikova, Olga
- Subjects
- *
MATHEMATICS , *MARXIST philosophy , *PHILOSOPHY of mathematics , *HISTORY of mathematics , *TWENTIETH century - Abstract
The translation into English of Aleksandr Yakovlevich Khinchin's (1894–1959) 1926 paper entitled ‘Ideas of intuitionism and the struggle for a subject matter in contemporary mathematics’ is made available for the first time. Here, Khinchin presented the famous foundational debate between L.E.J. Brouwer and David Hilbert of the 1920s in terms of a search for a mathematics with content. His main aim seems to have been to make intuitionism ideologically acceptable to his audience at the Communist Academy by means of the claim that insofar as Brouwer's intuitionism had a clear ‘subject matter’ and Hilbert's new program was a concession to intuitionism, the alleged victory of intuitionism not only implied the defeat of ‘empty’ formalism, but also showed the compatibility and affinity of Marxism with the newest developments in modern mathematics. This introduction provides a tentative exploration of the issue of what was tactical (or due to ideological pressure) and what was real scientific interest (or due to ignorance) (or what was both) in Khinchin's 1926 paper in the form of a detailed commentary, especially, on the tactical side of his presentation of the positions of Brouwer and Hilbert. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. How to Write a Clear Math Paper: Some 21st Century Tips.
- Author
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Pak, Igor
- Subjects
- *
MATHEMATICS education , *SCIENTIFIC communication , *MATHEMATICS ,WRITING - Abstract
In this note we explain the importance of clarity and give other tips for mathematical writing. Some of it is mildly opinionated, but most is just common sense and experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Genealogical Trees of Scientific Papers.
- Author
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Waumans, Michaël Charles and Bersini, Hugues
- Subjects
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GENEALOGY , *SCIENCE databases , *CITATION analysis , *EVOLUTIONARY algorithms , *SOCIAL networks - Abstract
Many results have been obtained when studying scientific papers citations databases in a network perspective. Articles can be ranked according to their current in-degree and their future popularity or citation counts can even be predicted. The dynamical properties of such networks and the observation of the time evolution of their nodes started more recently. This work adopts an evolutionary perspective and proposes an original algorithm for the construction of genealogical trees of scientific papers on the basis of their citation count evolution in time. The fitness of a paper now amounts to its in-degree growing trend and a “dying” paper will suddenly see this trend declining in time. It will give birth and be taken over by some of its most prevalent citing “offspring”. Practically, this might be used to trace the successive published milestones of a research field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A Reply to a Note on the Paper 'A Simplified Novel Technique for Solving Fully Fuzzy Linear Programming Problems'.
- Author
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Khan, Izaz, Ahmad, Tahir, and Maan, Normah
- Subjects
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LINEAR programming , *FUZZY algorithms , *ALGORITHMS , *MATHEMATICS , *MATHEMATICAL programming - Abstract
This note tries to answer issues raised in Bhardwaj and Kumar (J Optim Theory Appl 163(2): 685-696, 2014). The research summarizes that the results obtained in Khan et al. (J Optim Theory Appl 159: 536-546, 2013) are sound and correct and it fulfills all the necessary requirements of its scope and objectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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