1,316 results
Search Results
2. PAPER, PRINTING AND THE PRINTING PRESS.
- Author
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Gunaratne, Shelton A.
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of printing , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *EUROCENTRISM , *HISTORY - Abstract
Abstract / The Chinese used paper for two or three centuries before CE 105, when Cai Lun, director of imperial arsenals under Emperor He of the later Han dynasty (25-220), officially reported the 'invention' of paper. The Chinese began the first printed newspaper, Jing Bao (originally Di Bao), in 713 under the Tang dynasty (618-907); and it continued until the collapse of the Manchu dynasty in 1911. In 868, Wang Jie printed the famous Diamond Sutra (Kumarajiva's Vajracchedika Prajna Paramita), the earliest printed book in existence. Xylography (block printing) was known in China for at least four centuries before 932, when Prime Minister Feng Dao supposedly 'invented' it by directing the printing of the 11 Confucian classics filling 130 volumes - a task that took 20 years. Alchemist Bi Sheng experimented with movable type for eight years from1041, four cen-turies before Gutenberg. In 1313, Wang Zheng traced the development of movable type in his Nong shu, a treatise on agriculture. Chinese also made typography a fine art and produced numerous books. Printing from movable type reached its highest development in Korea from 1403 onwards. If the invention of printing ushered in the second communication revolution, then the celebration of Gutenberg as the inventor of printing represents a distortion of human history by those trying to document a so-called European 'exceptionalism' of the 15th century. The horizontally integra-tive macrohistory approach should set the record straight. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Research on differential and interactive impact of China-led and US-led open-access articles.
- Author
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Mingkun, Wei, Wei, Quan, Misra, Sadhana, and Savage, Russell
- Subjects
ALTMETRICS ,USER-generated content ,WEB development ,OPEN access publishing ,WEB 2.0 ,SOCIAL media ,CITATION networks - Abstract
With the development of Web 2.0, social media dialogue has been increasingly important within the world of open access (OA), striving for more user-generated content and ease of use. In this article, we analysed the impact of OA articles published by both Chinese and the American researchers using PLOS ONE. Papers published in the same year, using citation and social media metrics, were all used to analyse the correlation between the level of social media metrics and citation. Overall, the impact of OA articles published within the United States is higher than OA articles published in China. The results showed that citations and number of Mendeley readers have a significant correlation, which reflect the similar impact in evaluation of OA articles. However, most social media metrics did not have an obvious correlation with impact evaluation, which indicates the social media metrics are useful when paired with citations, but not irreplaceable to citations. Social media metrics appear to be a useful alternative metrics to accurately reflecting the impact of OA articles within the scientific community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Practice and performance of domestic waste source segregation in Chinese universities: A case study in Shanghai.
- Author
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Cui, Guangyu, Ren, Weiping, Lü, Fan, Zhang, Hua, Xue, Hui, and He, Pinjing
- Subjects
SOLID waste ,WASTE management ,FIRE prevention - Abstract
The importance and urgency of domestic solid waste (DSW) source segregation in universities is self-evident. Although many universities have carried out waste management, however, a comprehensive summary for successful implementation work of DSW segregation is lacking. This study summarizes the mechanism of DSW segregation in Chinese university based on questionnaire survey, on-site inquiry and sampling analysis in a comprehensive university in Shanghai. Questionnaire survey show that it is critical for encouraging students to participate in waste segregation to build convenient segregation facilities and humanized segregation reward and punishment method. The strengthened publicity and education due to the advantages in environmental discipline, easy-operating waste dumping site/facility as well as personalized solutions for different functional areas (teaching building) were considerably important strategies for implementing efficient waste segregation. The recyclables that were collected by intelligent recycling device and mobile recycling enterprise were dominated by paper, and the amounts increased dramatically during the graduation season. Therefore, the university correspondingly increased the collection frequencies of waste and the number of segregation guiders in the period to decrease the potential risk of fire safety. The study could provide a valuable reference for efficient implementation of waste segregation on university/college in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. National and international trends in library and information science research: A comparative review of the literature.
- Author
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Dora, Mallikarjun and Kumar, H. Anil
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE literature ,INFORMATION science ,LITERATURE reviews ,LIBRARY science - Abstract
The study is an attempt to understand the trends in LIS research by analyzing published literature on the topic. The study identifies and analyses 39 research papers on LIS research trends in various countries, three papers on LIS research trends in regional countries and 13 papers on LIS research trends with an international perspective. The findings of the study reveal that there is a similarity among various countries as far as the LIS research topics are concerned but with a different focus at different periods. While understanding international research trends in LIS, it was interesting to note that the research trend in China was similar to the worldwide research trend while the pattern in other countries differed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Towards a global security studies: what can looking at China tell us about the concept of security?
- Author
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Nyman, Dr Jonna
- Subjects
CONCEPTUAL history ,INTERNATIONAL security ,CHINESE history ,EUROCENTRISM - Abstract
Existing scholarship has demonstrated that theorising about security is Eurocentric. This leaves us with a partial account of the concept of security, which is presented as universal. This in turn generates explanatory problems because we are only seeing part of the picture. Yet there have been few attempts to move beyond critiques of Eurocentrism to examine the concept of security 'elsewhere'. This paper takes China as its starting point, asking: what can looking at China tell us about security? In answering this question, the paper makes two contributions. First, it presents new empirical findings, building a conceptual history of security in China. Drawing on 140 key texts dating 1926–2022, the paper traces the emergence of the concept of security in China and its evolution through three explicit security concepts. Drawing on postcolonial insights it demonstrates that these concepts are hybrid, evolving out of multiple domestic and international influences. They have similarities as well as differences with the Eurocentric concept that dominates International Security Studies (ISS) and produce a discrete approach towards security that has been overlooked in a discipline that uses 'Europe to explain Asia'. Second, considering these insights, the paper demonstrates that the universal concept of security that underpins theorising in ISS is partial and misleading. Differences in security concepts matter for theorising security and for understanding security policy. Consequently, I argue that we need to provincialize the concept of security: a truly global security studies is of necessity a provincial one attuned to difference and similarity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Closing medical encounters in China's Mainland: Doctors' fishing for patient-initiated terminal exchanges.
- Author
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Yang, Zi and Cheng, Fei
- Subjects
PHYSICIANS' attitudes ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,GRATITUDE ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Drawing on conversation analysis, this paper explores how medical encounters are closed in China's mainland. Based on a collection of 75 naturally occurring cases, we observe two dominant conversational practices oriented to closing Chinese medical encounters: a stand-alone 'okay?' as a generic preclosing initiation, and a gratitude-expressing action as the initiation of the closing sequence. Through a further examination of salient closing patterns in our data, we propose that Chinese doctors prefer fishing for patients' initiation of the terminal exchange to closing the medical interaction by themselves. The ways of and reasons for eliciting a patient-initiated closure are also discussed. This study may provide a frame of reference for studying medical closures in other cultures and have implications for cross-cultural comparison. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The manufacture of militarized masculinity in Chinese series You Are My Hero (2021).
- Author
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Yu Xian Tan, Roxanne
- Subjects
MASCULINITY ,INTERNET access ,HETEROSEXUAL women ,TELEVISION series ,POPULAR culture - Abstract
The entertainment industry is driven to sell certain commodities transnationally, particularly in a world where borders are becoming increasingly diffused through the access afforded by the Internet. Media content is easily consumed, making cultural exporting fast and easy. Similar tropes and plot have been replicated in the East Asian film and TV industry, perhaps in hopes of replicating the success. This paper looks at the manufacture of ideal masculinities within East Asia, particularly China. From ex-members of K-pop group EXO to the successful TV series, cross-influence of East Asian popular culture is prominent. Through this paper, I look at the influence of K-dramas on the Chinese TV industry and particularly the manufacturing of a militarized masculinity on Chinese TV. Far from portraying brute and fearsome soldiers, ideal masculinity on TV is portrayed as "steely exterior but gentle internally" and thus desirable romantic partners to heterosexual women. By exploring the basic conception of Chinese masculinity, I then discuss representations of militarized masculinity on the silver screen (Wolf Warrior II) and C-dramas, with particular focus on the series, You Are My Hero (2021). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. A comprehensive bibliometric analysis on opinion mining and sentiment analysis global research output.
- Author
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Musa, Ibrahim Hussein, Zamit, Ibrahim, Xu, Kang, Boutouhami, Khaoula, and Qi, Guilin
- Subjects
SENTIMENT analysis ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,INTERNET forums ,COMPUTER science ,SOCIAL media ,BLOGS - Abstract
The rise of the Internet and social media (i.e. reviews, forum discussions, blogs and social networks) constituted an interesting source to detect user opinion trends. This study examines the global publication output on opinion mining and sentiment analysis from documents published in 2000 to 2020. Bibliometric indicators on the trends, most cited papers, authors, institutions, countries, funding agencies and research subject areas were independently screened and analysed using bibliometrix package in R. A total of 7603 eligible documents were identified from 2000 to 2020. The total number of citations for all publications was 129,251, with an average of 17.0 citations per publication. About 14,629 authors wrote those documents with 1.93 authors per document and a collaboration index of 1.98. The most prolific author was Cambria Erik, with 47 publications and h-index of 42. The leading countries for research were China with n = 824, India with n = 576 and the United States with n = 244 publications. Lecture Notes in Computer Science proceedings was the top-ranked venue for publications with n = 434, h-index of 32 and 4598 total citation scores. National Natural Science Foundation of China was the top-ranked funding agency for research, and most of the publications were computer science (n = 6320) documents. The study provides an in-depth assessment of the landmark of the hot research topic and acknowledges the contribution of the most productive and active authors across different countries in the world. In addition, the findings could support the younger scholars in their future research direction and improve the efficiency in potential future research collaborations and projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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10. Networked frame contestation from authoritarian to Western democracy – A case of China's (failed) Twiplomacy in contesting coronavirus narrative in the UK.
- Author
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Zeng, Yuan
- Subjects
DEMOCRACY ,DIPLOMACY ,COVID-19 pandemic ,POLITICAL communication - Abstract
Transnational political communication today is being reconfigured by digital technologies and global power transition. Authoritarian state actors such as China are increasingly active on global social media platforms such as Twitter to directly advance their preferred frames with foreign publics in Western democracies, most notably in what could be called Chinese Twiplomacy contesting narrative globally over contentious issues. This paper problematises such Twiplomacy from authoritarians to Western democracies as 'networked transnational frame contestation', arguing that the political and cultural distance between the sending and target countries, the networked affordance of social media, and the national prism of the target countries, all contribute importantly to the complexity of such frame contestation. Through a case study on China's Twiplomacy in contesting coronavirus narrative in the UK, this paper further provides empirical evidence on how 'networked transnational frame contestation' works between politically and culturally distant countries. Using a mixed-method approach combining social network analysis and discourse analysis, this study finds that China's emotion-evoking discursive strategy draws traction but the authoritarian nature of the highly centralised networkedness and that of its discursive strategy, together with the strong cultural discordance with British publics, lead to networked recontextualisation of its intended frames in Britain. British publics, heavily relying on British political elites and press for foreign affairs, invoke shared cultural reference to recontextualise Chinese frames into culturally resonant counterframes. This study proposes a paradigm of 'networkedness within cascades' to understand frame contestation between politically and culturally distant countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Borderline practices on Douyin/TikTok: Content transfer and algorithmic manipulation.
- Author
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Su, Chunmeizi and Valdovinos Kaye, Bondy
- Subjects
DATA security ,POLICY analysis ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
TikTok continues to be the top downloaded app in many countries around the world as the short video consumption craze continues. But TikTok has also come under harsh scrutiny for its Chinese origins and data security. For TikTok, the journey of globalization has involved a painful contest with governments, geopolitical manoeuvrers, and, ultimately, finding platform regulation loopholes. TikTok's sister app, Douyin, shares identical digital architectures, but follows different trajectories of development in China. Through interviews with Chinese influencers and media practitioners, along with a content analysis of policy documents and industry reports, this paper identifies and analyzes the borderline practices that have occurred on Douyin – including content transfers, and algorithmic platformization – and evaluates the potential for these practices to be replicated on TikTok. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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12. Envisioning a credit society: social credit systems and the institutionalization of moral standards in China.
- Author
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Wang, Jing, Li, Hongmei, Xu, Weiai Wayne, and Xu, Wei
- Subjects
SOCIAL systems ,LOCAL culture ,CREDIT ratings ,SOCIAL justice ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
China's Social Credit System (SCS) has been widely considered a centralized surveillance project, whereas recent research found multiple scoring systems co-existing in various fields at multiple administrative levels and in diverse forms. Despite the broadened view toward the complexity of SCS, these research projects continue to focus on SCS mainly as political and digital control mechanisms. Instead, this paper is interested in the social and cultural meanings of SCS constructed in the media, both at the national and local levels. Based on the analyses of news reports since the year 2003, when the term SCS was officially coined, this paper examines the historical narratives about SCS, including its rationales, stakeholders, and intended goals/tasks. It argues that the SCS construction has been a societal project anchored in a distinct moral orientation of financial credit. While credit systems are often used to classify consumers and financial subjects in Western contexts, the case of Chinese SCS shows that the moral dimension of financial credit scoring has enabled its spread into other non-financial domains. Also, the institutionalization of such moral standards is considered an effective approach to addressing various socio-economic and ethical issues that have long baffled economic development and social justice in China's reform era. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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13. Consuming 'authenticity'? Reinterpreting the 'new middle class' in China through the lens of retailing changes.
- Author
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Cao, Liu
- Subjects
GENTRIFICATION ,MIDDLE class ,SOCIAL status ,DEVELOPING countries ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Copyright of Urban Studies (Sage Publications, Ltd.) is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The co-production of normal science: A social history of high-temperature superconductivity research in China (1987–2008).
- Author
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Gu, Chao
- Subjects
PHILOSOPHY of science ,SUPERCONDUCTIVITY ,SOCIAL history ,CHINESE people ,NOBEL Prizes - Abstract
The discovery of high-temperature superconductivity (HTS) was a momentous event. This article explores the social and institutional history of HTS research in China between 1987 and 2008. Desire for a Nobel Prize shaped the Chinese state's initial push to establish the National Superconductivity Research Program. Yet, after the enthusiasm for HTS research cooled, and even after a Nobel Prize for HTS was awarded to non-Chinese scientists, financial and institutional support for the research continued. This process fostered the 'to live' ethos of science, which has replaced the Nobel Prize dream as a central mechanism of interaction between the state and science in China. Indeed, Chinese HTS research not only survived, but also produced an abundance of 'normal science' discoveries. This pattern continued after 2008, when Japanese scientists made the groundbreaking innovation of iron-based superconductivity and Chinese scientists quickly turned their attention to this sub-field. They published many papers pushing the field forward slightly, rather than making the largest scientific advances. The mutual interaction between the state and scientists underpinned this phenomenon: On the one hand, the productivity of normal science has helped to maintain state legitimacy. On the other hand, the evaluation and incentive systems, as well as deep-rooted cultural features such as officialism, utilitarianism, and the foregrounding of politics lead scientists to opportunistically pursue normal science. The state and scientists have co-produced a regime of normal science. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. On factors affecting users' willingness to participate in the smart services of academic library.
- Author
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Yuan, Jing and Yang, Na
- Subjects
ACADEMIC libraries ,SOCIAL cognitive theory ,COLLEGE teacher-student relationships ,DIFFUSION of innovations theory ,WILLINGNESS to pay ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,DELAY of gratification - Abstract
The purpose of this study is to explore the factors affecting college users' willingness to participate in smart services of academic library. The paper analyzes the factors affecting college users' willingness to participate in library smart services, and constructs a conceptual model with 17 hypotheses proposed, based on the theory of Uses and Gratifications, Social Cognition Theory, Innovation Diffusion Theory, and Information Systems Success Model. The conceptual model was empirically tested using structural equation modeling technique through questionnaire survey data. The questionnaire was distributed online to college students and teachers in different provinces of China by using random sampling technique. College users' willingness to participate in smart services of academic library is directly and positively affected by information need of users, innovative consciousness of users, service platform performance, user satisfaction, library publicity and guidance, and extrinsic incentives. Information quality, service platform performance, service quality, and service value have significant and positive impact on user satisfaction, and they all indirectly affect users' willingness to participate in smart services of academic library through user satisfaction. The survey results also show that the purpose of college students and teachers' participation in smart services is mainly to meet their information needs. And users' participation willingness is not affected by self-efficacy of users and others' influence, which is different from the participation motivation of users on social Q & A and short video platforms. Understanding of factors affecting users' willingness to participate in smart services of academic library will likely demand rethink into a number of issues ignored by studies on smart library and smart services. Few studies focus on users' participation behavior in smart services of library. This study focused on the factors affecting users' willingness to participate in smart services of academic library, which would expand the understanding of users' participation behavior in smart services and enrich the scope of studies on smart library and smart services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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16. Transfer or retain land development right: The role of China's IDB programme in supporting inclusive urbanisation.
- Author
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Chen, Maolong, Yao, Shurong, Hu, Chaoran, and Jin, Songqing
- Subjects
URBANIZATION ,REAL estate development ,PROPERTY rights ,LAND title registration & transfer ,INCOME ,LAND use - Abstract
Copyright of Urban Studies (Sage Publications, Ltd.) is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Global perspective on digital preservation policy: A systematic review.
- Author
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Ahmad, Rafiq and Rafiq, Muhammad
- Subjects
DIGITAL preservation ,LIBRARY administration ,DATA mapping - Abstract
Policy provides a roadmap for actions to be taken in any task. It plays an important role in successful implementation of any program. Similarly, the presence of policy also plays a key role in implementation of digital preservation program. The organizations having such policy hold an edge for carrying out their digital preservation activities in an organized manner. This paper provides an explicit overview regarding preparedness of libraries and other organizations across the world in terms of availability of policies for digital preservation. The paper also attempts to map the data geographically. The empirical studies were reviewed systematically, and the extracted data was synthesized for producing meaningful insight about this phenomenon. The meta-analysis affirms that libraries and other organizations seem to have realization about importance of policies for implementation of digital preservation program. Although some studies highlight the availability of digital preservation policies in a good number of organizations yet, as a whole, most of the studies point out passive organizational attitude toward the development of such policies. The data mapping affirms that the studies conducted worldwide and North American region show a satisfactory situation in terms of availability of digital preservation policies. However, the studies conducted in European countries, African region, China, and New Zealand identify a gap regarding presence of such policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Determinant of the tourism economy in Chinese cities: from an urban centrality perspective.
- Author
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Chen, Jieping, Ma, Chao, and Chen, Shijun
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,URBAN tourism ,ECONOMIC conditions in China ,INDUSTRIAL clusters ,TOURISM ,PANEL analysis ,ECONOMIES of agglomeration - Abstract
This paper aims to analyze and explain how urban centrality influences tourism development in a city. Based on the panel data of 295 prefecture-level cities in China from 2005 to 2018, the paper develops explanatory mechanisms and discusses the influence theoretically and empirically. To advance the analysis, this paper constructs a new index for urban centrality. Our empirical findings are as follows: (1) urban centrality promotes tourism income significantly. (2) Mechanism analysis illustrates that urban centrality fosters tourism through the agglomeration and industrial structure effects. (3) Heterogenous analysis suggests that the influence of urban centrality on tourism varies with city sizes and locations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The 'medical city' and China's entrepreneurial state: Spatial production under rising consumerism in healthcare.
- Author
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Nie, Xuanyi
- Subjects
URBANIZATION ,CITIES & towns ,HEALTH care reform ,ORGANIZATIONAL legitimacy ,ECONOMIC opportunities ,PUBLIC-private sector cooperation ,CONSUMERISM - Abstract
Copyright of Urban Studies (Sage Publications, Ltd.) is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Selection of breast features for young women in northwestern China based on the random forest algorithm.
- Author
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Zhou, Jie, Mao, Qian, Zhang, Jun, Lau, Newman ML, and Chen, Jianming
- Subjects
RANDOM forest algorithms ,BREAST ,FEATURE selection ,YOUNG women ,PRINCIPAL components analysis ,HIERARCHICAL clustering (Cluster analysis) - Abstract
In the research of breast morphology, numerous breast features are measured, whereas only a few parameters are adopted for classification. Therefore, how to extract the key variables from the multi-dimensional features in a rational way is an issue that is focused upon. This study aimed to reduce the complexity of the dimensionality reduction for further improving the objectivity and interpretability of the selected breast features. Since the random forest (RF) algorithm can quantify the feature importance during training, the method was adopted to determine the optimal breast features for classification and recognition in this paper. Firstly, the anthropometric data of 360 females from northwestern China aged from 19 to 27 years were measured by non-contact three-dimensional body scanning technology and the contact manual measurement method. Then, the k -means clustering was applied to categorize breast shapes, and the RF algorithm was utilized to quantify and rank the importance of 25 breast features. Finally, to verify the availability of the RF algorithm on breast feature selection, the t-distributed stochastic neighbor embedding method was adopted to visualize the distribution of breast shape clusters into two dimensions. Meanwhile, four neural networks were determined to recognize the breast morphology. The results demonstrate that fewer breast features can effectively increase the accuracy of breast shape classification and recognition. The best performance of breast shape classification and recognition is obtained when the number of breast features is 13. In this case, the average Hamming loss of four neural networks is the smallest (0.1136). Interestingly, the bust circumference and the horizontal curve of breasts across the bust points are found to be the most important of the 25 breast features in this paper. The importance of the breast curve features is higher than that of the breast cross-sectional features, while the breast positioning features have the lowest importance. Meanwhile, the RF algorithm is verified to be more effective than traditional dimensionality reduction methods, such as principal component analysis, hierarchical clustering, and recursive feature elimination. The approach developed in this paper can be generalized to the dimensionality reduction of other body morphology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Experimental and theoretical investigation of water-jet triboelectric charging of meltblown nonwoven fabrics.
- Author
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Wang, Hong, Wu, Yanjin, and He, Yulong
- Subjects
TRIBOELECTRICITY ,NONWOVEN textiles ,WATER jets ,ATOMIC force microscopes ,SURFACE charges ,SURFACE potential ,WATER filtration - Abstract
The water-jet triboelectric charging technique has been widely used in China to improve the filtration efficiency of meltblown nonwoven fabric. However, there are few reports on research about water-jet triboelectric charging in the literature. In this paper, influences of the conductivity and pH of water on the filtration efficiency of meltblown nonwoven fabrics were investigated. The surface charge potential and its distribution of water-jet triboelectric charged meltblown nonwoven fabrics were characterized from microscopic and macroscopic aspects by using a bio atomic force microscope and electrostatic voltmeter. The charge stability was analyzed by using the thermally stimulated discharge technique. Meltblown nonwoven fabrics were water-jet triboelectric charged repeatedly in order to explore the charging mechanism. It is found that meltblown nonwoven fabrics with high filtration efficiency were developed by water-jet triboelectric charging treatment and the electrical conductivity of water had more influence than the pH on the filtration efficiency of triboelectric charged meltblown nonwoven fabrics. In addition, a possible mechanism of water-jet triboelectric charging is proposed based on experiments and characterizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. CHINA'S STATE-RUN TABLOIDS.
- Author
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Huang, Chengju
- Subjects
PRESS & politics ,NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
Since the mid-1990s, the Chinese Communist Party's major provincial organs have established a large number of highly commercialized and urban-reader oriented daily newspapers, which are widely regarded as an 'individual' press category called 'city newspapers'. As an import-ant press phenomenon that significantly reflects some recent changes in Chinese print media, the rise of city newspapers has attracted little attention in western communication scholarship so far. After a general description of the historical development of city newspapers, this article further examines their characteristics and impact on the Chinese press. The article argues that though market-oriented city newspapers are not independent operations but additional offerings of Party organs and therefore have little to do with the concept of press freedom, their emergence and rapid development significantly illustrate that the heyday of propaganda-oriented Party and government organs in China is apparently over, even though they still formally remain the authoritative voice of the ruling power. It is also argued that the growing success of city newspapers, while financially contributing to their parent Party organs, has brought challenges to them as well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Happy city for everyone: Generational differences in rural migrant workers' leisure in urban China.
- Author
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Mao, Zidan, Liu, Fangyu, and Zhao, Ying
- Subjects
MIGRANT labor ,GENERATION gap ,CITIES & towns ,HOMESITES ,LEISURE ,URBAN life ,URBANIZATION ,INTERGENERATIONAL mobility - Abstract
Copyright of Urban Studies (Sage Publications, Ltd.) is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Delivering common property in Chinese contractual communities: Law, power and practice.
- Author
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Jia, Yiru, Morrison, Nicky, and Sielker, Franziska
- Subjects
COMMONS ,REAL estate developers ,CITIES & towns ,HOUSE construction ,HOUSING market - Abstract
Copyright of Urban Studies (Sage Publications, Ltd.) is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Nature-based interventions in social work practice and education: Insights from six nations.
- Author
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Slattery, Maddy, Ramsay, Sylvia, Pryor, Anita, Gallagher, Hilary, Norton, Christine Lynn, Nikkel, Lynette, Smith, Amanda, Knowles, Ben, and McAuliffe, Donna
- Subjects
PROFESSIONAL practice ,WELL-being ,FOCUS groups ,NATUROPATHY ,POPULATION geography ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes ,CULTURAL pluralism ,MENTAL health ,SOCIAL justice ,VIDEOCONFERENCING ,EXPERIENCE ,MENTAL healing ,PHILOSOPHY of education ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL work education ,SOCIAL services ,NATURE ,INTERDISCIPLINARY education ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
This paper presents findings from an investigation of nature-based practices, from the perspectives of 10 academics/educators from six nations. Participants engaged in a focus group exploring the prevalence and inclusion of nature in social work practice and education. While the study focused on individual members' experiences and perspectives, the findings highlight important context-specific factors for including nature within social work to reconnect humans with nature for health, well-being, healing, and justice. An Integrative Environmental Model for social work is proposed to assist future practice and education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The Dilemma of Foxconn Moms: Social Reproduction and the Rise of 'Gig Manufacturing' in China.
- Author
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Dong, Yige
- Subjects
SOCIAL reproduction ,GIG economy ,WOMEN'S employment ,LABOR turnover - Abstract
As the first ethnographic account of Foxconn in Zhengzhou—the world's largest iPhone manufacturing base—this paper argues that a new labor regime features 'hegemonic precarity' has arisen since capital's move to inland China. Despite being offered formal contracts with long-term benefits, inland Foxconn workers choose a more precarious employment status. I argue that this surprising pattern is a result of the interaction between dynamics at the point of production and that of social reproduction. Through the mechanism of 'hoarding of time', Foxconn's management pays relatively high wages to a minority of workers while keeping the majority's wages minimal. Meanwhile, changing dynamics in the realm of social reproduction makes Foxconn workers, especially women with children, constantly struggle between work and the family. Working together, these factors have led to extremely high turnover rates, bleak prospects for labor solidarity, and the rise of 'gig manufacturing' in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Infrastructure finance, late development, and China's reshaping of international credit governance.
- Author
-
Chen, Muyang
- Subjects
EXPORT credit ,CREDIT control ,EMERGING markets ,BANKING policy ,INCUMBENCY (Public officers) ,CAMPAIGN funds ,INTERNATIONAL business enterprises - Abstract
How is the rise of China affecting international governance? This paper examines the domain of infrastructure finance by focusing on China's two policy banks, which are the main creditors of China's overseas infrastructure projects. While the incumbent international credit regimes led by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) distinguish development-oriented aid from commercially oriented export credits, emerging late-developed economies blur this dichotomy by largely funding development projects with state-backed export credits. The way China alters the OECD's credit governance, this paper argues, demonstrates both the generality of late development and the peculiarity of "Chinese" development. Rather than directly subsidizing firms' international business with the state's fiscal revenue, policy banks financialized host country's state-owned and state-coordinated assets using various market instruments. By doing so, they gave Chinese firms a comparative advantage in the markets of less developed regions, allowing them to undertake projects that firms from advanced industrial countries cannot. This financing mechanism has reshaped the international development regime by transforming the dominant means of credit allocation from state-led aid-giving to market-based exchange, and rewritten the liberal rules of the international export credit regime by financing the developing world in a both statist and liberalist manner. As a result, China has built a paralleled regime in regions insufficiently covered by the existing financial schemes of incumbent credit regimes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Remapping spatiality in contemporary East Asian media engagement: reevaluating China’s Got Talent.
- Author
-
Eason Lu
- Subjects
REALITY television programs ,TELEVISION programs ,INTERACTIVE multimedia ,MEDIA consumption ,BUSINESS literature - Abstract
Over the past decade, production in China’s television sector have reshaped media cultures across the country as well as the geocultural region of East Asia. Through analysis of licensed reality television programs such as China’s Got Talent, this paper examines transnational television formats and their circulation and replication in contemporary China, challenging the traditional concept that television format trade falls within a West-Rest narrative. While highlighting the cultural and media phenomena of interactive ‘glocalization’ of cultural products, this paper calls for de-westernization in approaching Chinese and East Asian media studies. It does so by pointing out unique imitating and adaptive practices of Chinese unscripted television programs, which serve as case studies to the existing literature of television business and cultures. The practice of licensing formats provides a unique perspective into analyzing China’s media strategies in a globalized industry and reviewing the current scholarship on media globalization. With a comparative analysis, the paper attempts to reconceptualize the spatiality of East Asian media production and consumption. I also include my observations while working on the production teams for these programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Patterns of onwards migration within the urban hierarchy of China: Who moves up and who moves down?
- Author
-
Wang, Jiejing, Mai, Xin, and Zhang, Lizheng
- Subjects
RURAL-urban migration ,CITIES & towns ,DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,COHORT analysis - Abstract
Copyright of Urban Studies (Sage Publications, Ltd.) is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Neither remnants nor commodities: Spirit objects in early twentieth century Chinese regional fiction.
- Author
-
McConaghy, Mark
- Subjects
TWENTIETH century ,MATERIAL culture ,FICTION ,MODERN languages ,COUNTRY life ,TEMPLES ,LITERARY criticism - Abstract
This paper examines the regional fiction of early twentieth century China in order to understand how such texts presented the object world of rural life. In doing so it addresses a gap in the historiography of material culture in modern China, which has emphasized urban commodity regimes and has paid far less attention to the ways in which pre-existing object practices endured into the time of the modern Republic. Building off of the methodological insights of scholars such as Bill Brownand Janet Poole regarding the contribution that literary study can make to historical understandings of material cultures, this paper argues that the regional texts of Lu Xun, Xu Qinwen, Ye Shengtao, and Yu Dafu were bewitched by overlapping life worlds: one represented by the secular rationalism of the text's narrators, and the other represented by the animistic practices of the rural others they encounter, which was expressed through objects such as joss sticks, temple doorsills, and ancestral alters. These literary works reflected upon how objects were used to make meaning in ways that were not reducible to urban commodity fetishism or remnant "superstition." As presented in these works, spiritual objects remain powerfully active parts of the affective worlds of rural people, collapsing binary distinctions between living language and inanimate matter, the human and the ghostly, the past and the present. For the narrators of these texts, these object practices invoke a complicated mixture of modernizing critique and empathetic recognition. As such, these texts allow readers to witness the early expressions of a complex dialectic of rejection and recognition/accommodation that has marked the attitude modernizing states in China have taken in relation to animistic material cultures over the past century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The location optimization of electric vehicle charging stations considering charging behavior.
- Author
-
Tian, Zhihui, Hou, Wenbin, Gu, Xiaoning, Gu, Feng, and Yao, Baozhen
- Subjects
ELECTRIC vehicle industry ,ELECTRIC vehicle charging stations ,MATHEMATICAL optimization ,ELECTRIC vehicle design & construction ,PREDICTION models - Abstract
The electric vehicle is seen as an effective way to alleviate the current energy crisis and environmental problems. However, the lack of supporting charging facilities is still a bottleneck in the development of electric vehicles in the Chinese market. In this paper, the cloud model is used to first predict drivers' charging behavior. An optimization model of charging stations is proposed, which is based on waiting time. The target of this optimization model is to minimize the time cost to electric vehicle drivers. We use the SCE-UA algorithm to solve the optimization model. We apply our method to Dalian, China to optimize charging station locations. We also analyze the optimized result with or without behavior prediction, the optimized result of different numbers of electric vehicles, and the optimized result of different cost constraints. The analysis shows the feasibility and advantages of the charging station location optimization method proposed in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Supervision behaviours of customs supervisors on solid waste import in Shanghai, People's Republic of China.
- Author
-
Wang, Keqiang, Lu, Jianglin, and Lu, Yiyou
- Subjects
SOLID waste ,PLANNED behavior theory ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,SUPERVISORS ,FREIGHT forwarders - Abstract
Waste management is a key challenge the world currently faces. Solid waste imports (SWIs) are counteractive to the construction of ecological civilization. The comprehensive prohibition of "foreign waste" (FW) imports (FWIs) is an iconic measure to promote ecological civilization and ecological environment safety. Strengthening the People's Republic of China (PRC)'s supervision of SWI (SSWIs) is an important means of implementing the comprehensive prohibition of FWIs, while existing research has paid little attention to the behaviour of SSWIs. This paper firstly analyses the influential factors of the behaviour of SSWIs based on the theory of planned behaviour (TPB), and five corresponding research hypotheses are put forward accordingly. Then, it uses 262 micro questionnaires regarding the behaviour of SSWIs in the Port of Waigaoqiao in Shanghai, PRC, and constructs a structural equation model based on the TPB to identify the influential factors and effects of the behaviour of SSWIs. Some interesting findings are observed in this research. Firstly, it indicates that attitude, subjective norms (SNs) and perceived behavioural control (PBC), all indirectly act upon supervision behaviour by influencing supervision intention. Secondly, PBC acts directly on the behaviour of SSWIs, which is consistent with the TPB. Thirdly, the direct effects on supervision intention from strongest to weakest are SNs, attitude, and PBC, respectively. The conclusion provides important policy enlightenment for the supervision optimization of the behaviour of SSWIs. The supervision intention can be motivated from various angles by strengthening the attitude, SNs and PBC of customs supervisors, subsequently strengthening their supervision intention and behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Profit or ideology? The Chinese press between party and market.
- Author
-
Hong, Liu
- Subjects
REVOLUTIONS - Abstract
Offers information on the Cultural Revolution (1966-76) in China, under the leadership of Mao Zedong which gave way to the China reform under Deng Xiaoping. Suggestion that China has the reputation of being the most revolutionary country in this century; Details on the violence and social changes that China has undergone; Events that took place during the revolution; Indepth look at China in 1998.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Spatial spillover and determinants of tourism efficiency: A low carbon emission perspective.
- Author
-
Liu, Hongwei, Gao, Chenchen, and Tsai, Henry
- Subjects
CARBON emissions ,GREEN infrastructure ,TOURISM ,GOVERNMENT aid ,CARBON dioxide - Abstract
This paper measures tourism carbon efficiency (TCE) in China by incorporating energy consumption and carbon dioxide (CO
2 ) emissions into an efficiency assessment framework, and to further investigate the determinants of TCE by considering the spatial spillover effects. To do this, a bootstrap slacks-based measure (SBM) model was applied to assess the TCE in 30 provincial-level administrative regions of China from 2008 to 2019. Next, the Moran's index and spatial Durbin model (SDM) were adopted to explore the spatial distribution and determinants of TCE. The results indicate that regional differences affect the level of China's TCE, as do spatial spillover effects. In addition, technology innovation, urbanization rate, and government support positively affect TCE. In contrast, economic growth negatively affects TCE. Educational attainment, green infrastructure, and government support have a negative spatial spillover effect on TCE. Transportation infrastructure has a negative total effect on TCE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Commentary: Post-socialist Property Rights: Whose Rights, to What and How?
- Author
-
Marcuse, Peter
- Subjects
PROPERTY rights ,LAW & economic development ,ECONOMIC development ,URBAN planning & redevelopment law ,URBANIZATION ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
In this article the author reviews the papers published in the journal which explore the themes of property rights and land development in developing countries. The author reviews Susan Whiting's paper on land conflicts in the Shandong and Hunan provinces in China on property rights, one by Daniel Abramson on land redevelopment projects in Quanzhou City, China, and one by Lanchih Po on rural property rights and urbanization in the Changping district of Beijing, China.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Representing the victorious past: Chinese revolutionary TV drama between propaganda and marketization.
- Author
-
Wang, Yingzi and Klein, Thoralf
- Subjects
TELEVISION dramas ,PROPAGANDA ,ECONOMIC development ,SOCIAL evolution ,FICTIONAL characters ,REVOLUTIONARIES - Abstract
This paper examines the changes and continuities in TV representations of Chinese Communist Party's revolutionary history and interprets them within the broader context of China's political, economic and cultural transformations since the 1990s. Drawing on a comparative analysis of three state-sponsored TV dramas produced between the late 1990s and mid-2010s, it traces how the state-sanctioned revolutionary narratives have changed over time in response to the Party's propaganda imperatives on the one hand, and to the market-oriented production environment on the other. The paper argues that while recent TV productions in the new century have made increasing concessions to audience taste by adopting visually stimulating depictions and introducing fictional characters as points of identification for the audience, the revolutionary narratives were still aligned with the Party's propaganda agenda at different times. This shows the ongoing competition between ideological and commercial interests in Chinese TV production during the era of market reforms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Dispute inflation.
- Author
-
Hall, Todd H
- Subjects
PRICE inflation ,ISLANDS ,CONCRETE ,CONTESTS ,ATTENTION - Abstract
Much work has examined the phenomenon of dispute escalation, whereby the concrete measures state actors take edge them closer to war. Less attention has been devoted to the ways in which state actors' perceptions of what is at stake in a dispute can also change, with important consequences for the likelihood of conflict. This paper examines the phenomenon of dispute inflation – wherein a contest over an object or issue assumes ever greater stakes and significance for its protagonists – and identifies three different mechanisms that can generate increasing non-material stakes. The upshot is that theoretically even a minor dispute can grow into a major conflict due to swelling stakes, especially when dispute inflation spirals. To illustrate these dynamics at work, this paper looks to recent developments in the dispute between the People's Republic of China and Japan over the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Operational impact estimation of container inspections at Dalian Port: the application of simulation.
- Author
-
Wang, Wenyuan, Zhou, Yong, Song, Xiangqun, Tang, Guolei, and Fang, Zexing
- Subjects
ECONOMIC impact analysis ,CONTAINERS ,SIMULATION methods & models ,HARBORS ,MATHEMATICAL optimization - Abstract
For the security of ports and the container shipping industry, a key problem for a container terminal is the planning and design of the inspection area. The main goal of this paper is to address an inspection investment planning problem for the international container terminal at Dalian Port using the simulation method. Considering various types of container ships and flexible container truck scheduling and routing, we propose a framework combining an Arena-based simulation model with a developed optimization procedure. Two components of this integrated framework realize information communication via the interface of Visual Basic for Applications. Under the potential inspection protocol, simulation experiments are designed and carried out for investigating the operational impact of container inspections for different allocations of inspection resources at the terminal, including the turnaround time of external trucks, the number of trucks waiting in the inspection area, etc. This paper includes the description of the conceptual framework, the detailed simulation model, the experimental design, and the simulation results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. An overview: multiscale simulation in understanding the radiation damage accumulation of reactor materials.
- Author
-
Chen, Dandan, He, Xinfu, Chu, Genshen, He, Xiao, Jia, Lixia, Wang, Zhaoshun, Yang, Wen, and Hu, Changjun
- Subjects
NUCLEAR reactor materials ,RADIATION damage ,MOLECULAR dynamics ,MULTISCALE modeling ,SIMULATION methods & models ,CONSTRUCTION materials - Abstract
The reactor is an extreme environment of high temperature, high pressure, and high radiation dose. Damage accumulates in structural materials over service time. It will eventually lead to material failure, such as hardening, embrittlement, and swelling. The radiation damage accumulation is an inherent, complex, and multiscale process, which has been studied extensively with multiscale modeling and simulation methods. The rapid development of high-performance computing makes it possible to accurately operate multiscale simulation for the microstructure evolution of irradiated reactor materials. The European Union, the USA, and China have put great effort into this, and many related works have been carried out. This paper first outlines the basic application of multiscale modeling and simulation technology in understanding the effects of radiation on reactor structural materials. Then, some relevant projects carried out by the USA, the European Union, and China in recent years are summarized. Next, the paper focuses on three widely used simulation techniques at different scales: molecular dynamics, kinetic Monte Carlo, and cluster dynamics. For each method, some key developments in algorithms and computer implementations are reviewed. Finally, the comparison between them is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Experimental study of the source and transmission characteristics of train-induced vibration in the over-track building in a metro depot.
- Author
-
Ruihua Liang, Deyun Ding, Weifeng Liu, Fangqiu Sun, and Yilong Cheng
- Subjects
BUILDING design & construction ,VIBRATION tests ,LAND use ,FREQUENCIES of oscillating systems ,LAND resource - Abstract
To improve the utilization of land resources, in recent years, there has been an increase in the design and construction of over-track buildings in metro depots in China. However, there are daily tasks such as testing, parking, and maintenance of metro trains in the depot, vibration induced by trains in those tasks may exert impact upon the residents living in the buildings over the metro depots. In this paper, detailed on-site measurements were carried out to investigate the source and transmission characteristics of train-induced vibrations in the metro depot. The main results indicated that (i) the magnitudes of train-induced vibration on the testing lines and throat areas are greater than other areas, and the issue of environmental vibrations induced by trains in the building near these areas need to be given more attention. (ii) Traininduced vibrations are more attenuated from the ground to the platform and less attenuated from the platform to the building floor, and most vibration acceleration levels below 30 Hz are even amplified during the transmission from the platform to the floors in the building, which could be because of the matching of the frequencies of train-induced vibrations and the natural frequencies of the superstructure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Building a whole process policy framework promoting construction and demolition waste utilization in China.
- Author
-
Wang, Qiaozhi, Jiang, Tiancheng, Liu, Lu, Zhang, Shoucheng, Kildunne, Anne, and Miao, Zuohua
- Subjects
CONSTRUCTION & demolition debris - Abstract
The generation of construction and demolition waste
1 (CDW) in China has increased dramatically in recent decades due to the rapid urbanization. Yet there is a very limited utilization of this waste, meaning that there is an urgent need to address this issue in order to reduce the reliance on virgin materials and improve the lived environment in China. This problem contrasts with the EU experience where many member states already exceed an 80% utilization rate of CDW due to extensive policy measures. We argue that the supervision of CDW is an important and underestimated element in addressing this waste stream, and that China and other rapidly developing states can build on the EU experience to address this issue rapidly and efficiently. This paper took a comparative policy analytical approach to summarize advanced experiences promoting CDW utilization, highlighting 14 advanced policy measures. We then conducted a case study approach applied to a Chinese metropolitan city, Wuhan, to identify the key measures to promote CDW utilization in the local area by questionnaire. On this basis, we then proposed a whole process supervision framework for the six most important policy measures, to cover the whole process of the generation, transport and recycling of this waste. This approach provides a mode for policymakers to prioritize the most important policy measures to address CDW problem in China through a timely and data-driven process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Making "Senses": The qualia of Pu'er tea and sensorial encounters between tea producers and traders in southwest China.
- Author
-
Ma, Zhen
- Subjects
TEA ,CUSTOMER experience ,SENSES ,CONSUMERS - Abstract
This article analyses how Han buyers' perception of and desire for the qualia—sensuous qualities—of Pu'er tea affects how ethnic minority producers perceive and make the tea. As a defining aspect of the consumers' experiences with ancient Pu'er tea, these qualia were invented and emphasised as part of the elite Chinese tea culture by Han traders and consumers. While the Bulang people's traditional way of making and using Pu'er tea related more to its economic and symbolic values than to its perceived effects on the body, in response to China's rapid marketisation they had to learn to sense the qualia rooted in a Han lexicon and philosophy and then acquire new skills to produce them. The paper argues that sensorial experience as a cultural dimension of tea has created new layers within Bulang people's encounters with the modern market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Double-faced shading effect digital jacquard fabric with a weft-backed and warp-wadded structure.
- Author
-
Peng, Xi and Zhou, Jiu
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL discoveries ,TEXTILE technology ,STRUCTURAL models ,TEXTILES - Abstract
Jacquard fabric produced by a weft-backed and warp-wadded structure is a traditional figured fabric in ancient China. However, it cannot express multi-color on the face of fabric due to the restriction of the woven structure produced in the traditional manner. At present, researchers focus more on archaeological discoveries and cultural relic replication of jacquard fabrics with a weft-backed and warp-wadded structure, but neglect research on expanding the color gamut through structural innovation. To achieve rich colors and a double-faced shading effect on jacquard fabric, this paper proposes a design principle and method for the weft-backed and warp-wadded structure under the layered-combination design mode. Four structural models of the weft-backed and warp-wadded structure are combined with full-color shaded weaves, and the effectiveness of the color shading effect is verified through a fabric specimen experiment. The results show that the average lightness difference ranges from 0.80 to 1.48, the color difference ranges from 1.67 to 3.03, and the variance ranges from 0.21 to 1.27 on both sides of the fabric specimens. The resulting fabric achieves a full-color shading effect of four mixed colors and high color purity on both sides. In addition, the color shading effect is stable and ideal. The results of this study are expected to have tremendous benefits for the creation of new jacquard fabrics that will be applied to apparel and home textiles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Dynamic control strategy based on passenger choice behavior with real-time information.
- Author
-
Wang, Wensi, Tian, Zhihui, Jiang, Yonglei, Wu, Lan, and Gao, Jianqiao
- Subjects
ELECTRIC motor buses ,INFORMATION-seeking behavior ,BUSES ,HEURISTIC algorithms ,PASSENGERS ,BUS occupants - Abstract
Real-time control strategies are important methods for high-frequency transit to counteract the effects of bus bunching in passenger waiting time. This paper extends previous literature with the development of an optimization model for multiple lines in a corridor capable of executing a dynamic control strategy based on passenger choice behavior with real-time information. The bi-level model integrates "passenger perceptions,""service selection," and "control strategy" effectively. The upper level model is a control model with the objective of minimizing the total waiting time of passengers in the system composed of common lines to decide whether a bus arriving at the hub should be held and its holding time. The lower level model is an allocation model with the utilization of a Nested Logit model to study passenger choice behavior. In addition, a heuristic algorithm is introduced to solve the problem. The effectiveness of the model is evaluated with the data of two lines in Dalian city of China. The results show that the control strategy proposed in this paper outperforms the simple control strategy without passenger choice behavior, where the waiting time of passengers, the number of buses that need to hold, and bus holding time are all reduced. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Source analysis of municipal solid waste in a mega-city (Guangzhou): Challenges or opportunities?
- Author
-
Tang, Jinfeng, Wei, Lezhang, Su, Minhua, Zhang, Hongguo, Chang, Xiangyang, Liu, Yu, Wang, Nana, Xiao, Enzong, Ekberg, Christian, Steenari, Britt-Marie, and Xiao, Tangfu
- Subjects
STAKEHOLDERS ,INTEGRATED waste management ,PLASTIC recycling ,RECYCLABLE material ,WASTE management ,STATISTICAL sampling ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Rapid economic development accelerates the generation of municipal solid waste (MSW), and thereby calls for an effective and reliable waste management strategy. In the present work, we systematically investigated the status of MSW management in a mega-city of China (Guangzhou). The data were collected from literatures, government statistics and field sampling work. It can be found that a combination of waste sorting by individual residents and a necessary quantity of sanitation workers is one of the most feasible strategies to achieve a sustainable waste management. With implementation of that integrated strategy, approximately 0.03 million tons of metal, 0.24 million tons of paper, as well as 0.46 million tons of plastics can be recycled/recovered for further processing. A cost reduction of 70 million US$ is achieved in comparison with the un-optimized system due to the sale revenue of recyclable materials and the saving from waste disposal fees. The values of environmental assessment were expressed as environmental load units. The developed scenarios could decrease the environmental cost, namely, 0.66 million US$. Based on the studies, waste sorting is urgently needed in Guangzhou. However, to make the proposed strategy to be more economically feasible, the sorting should be performed individually as well as with public participation. The establishment of a win–win situation for all stakeholders is an effective path for the improvement of the integrated waste management system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Cities and the geographical deconcentration of scientific activity: A multilevel analysis of publications (1987–2007).
- Author
-
Grossetti, Michel, Eckert, Denis, Gingras, Yves, Jégou, Laurent, Larivière, Vincent, and Milard, Béatrice
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,SCIENCE publishing ,URBANIZATION ,PUBLISHING ,HEGEMONY ,SCIENCE ,GEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Most current scientific policies incorporate debates on cities and the geographic organisation of scientific activity. Research on ‘world cities’ develops the idea that interconnected agglomerations can better take advantage of international competition. Thus, the increasing concentration of activities in these cities at the expense of others could be observed by certain scholars using measures based on scientific publications. Others, however, show that an opposite trend is emerging: the largest cities are undergoing a relative decline in a country’s scientific activities. To go beyond this seeming contradiction, this paper provides a global analysis of all countries with papers in the Web of Science over the period 1987–2007. The author’s addresses were geocoded and grouped into agglomerations. Registering of papers was based on the fractional counting of multi-authored publications, and the results are unambiguous: deconcentration is the dominant trend both globally and within countries, with some exceptions for which explanations are suggested. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Culturally sensitive conceptualization of resilience: A multidimensional model of Chinese resilience.
- Author
-
Xie, Qiuyuan and Wong, Daniel Fu Keung
- Subjects
BUDDHISM ,PHILOSOPHY ,PSYCHOLOGY & religion ,CULTURAL awareness ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,RELIGION - Abstract
Cultural sensitivity is missing in the widely researched construct of resilience. The assumption that resilience takes the same form in all cultures fails to acknowledge that culture shapes the interpretation and instantiation of resilience. Examining how suffering and adversity are perceived and dealt with in Chinese contexts, can identify cultural concepts related to resilience. In this paper, we examine the ways in which Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism, the three main belief systems that have influenced Chinese people's perception of the nature of life, can serve as sources of strength to individuals facing adversity. We summarise three culturally inflected elements of dealing with adversities and compare them with existing, widely researched notions of resilience. Taking a socio-ecological perspective to explore resilience, this paper proposes a multidimensional model that can improve understanding of culturally embedded resilience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The revolution in journalism and communication education in the People's Republic of China.
- Author
-
GREENBERG, BRADLEY S. and TUEN-YU LAU
- Subjects
JOURNALISM & education ,COMMUNICATION education ,POLITICAL reform ,ECONOMIC reform ,LIBRARY resources ,SCHOOL journalism - Abstract
China's media development and journalism education have changed to meet new demands brought by the political and economic reforms. Predicting a need for 5,000 trained journalists per year in the 21st century, dramatic developments in journalism education are occuring. This paper describes and evaluates China's journalism education based on a field visit of seven key journalism departments that represent different directions of journalism and communication training. The number of journalism schools have increased from 14 in 1982 to 33 in 1986. This increase has given rise to the obvious demand for journalism teachers and teaching materials. Also, student enrollment in journalism schools increased almost five-fold. Before more journalism graduates can be trained, the following areas have to be strengthened. (1) The library resources are few and largely outdated. (2) Qualified faculty are too few. (3) Research activity is not yet highly valued among communication faculty. (4) There is a shortage of necessary equipment. (5) The growing emphasis on the integration of social science-based communication theory and accompanying rigorous research methodologies is more a wish than a reality. (6) There are organizational inhibitions to change. In short, the hardware and software of journalism education have to be improved to provide the desired results. This paper describes and evaluates the changes in China's journalism education after the ten-year tumultuous cultural revolution (1966-1976). Based on data gathered during a visit to seven key Chinese journalism schools in summer 1987, the paper will focus on (1) the Chinese journalism educator's perspectives on training a new corps of journalists to meet the demands of a new media environment brought by political and economic reforms, and (2) the problems to be solved. This discussion will illustrate the role of journalists and journalism educators in China's current modernization efforts. The paper updates Chu and Fang's 1972 paper on the training of journalists in China and goes beyond the statistical accounts of journalism education in China carried in Journalism Educator (Chu, 1980, Reynolds, 1980; Zhang and Peng, 1986; Keever, 1988). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The impact of national tourism day festivals on inbound tourism: A spatial difference-in-differences approach.
- Author
-
Gu, Jiafeng
- Subjects
INBOUND tourism ,DOMESTIC tourism ,TOURISM impact ,URBAN tourism ,CITIES & towns ,PANEL analysis - Abstract
A comprehensive and accurate assessment of the policy effect of national tourism days is of great significance to further promote urban inbound tourism. Based on the panel data of 59 cities in China from 2000 to 2017, this paper evaluates the local and spatial spillover effects of the China Tourism Day policy on urban inbound tourism using a spatial difference-in-differences model based on the establishment of the China Tourism Day as a quasi-natural experiment. The study found that the China Tourism Day policy significantly increased the number of foreign tourists in cities but significantly reduced their average length of stay, with a positive spatial spillover effect on inbound tourism in surrounding cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Board interlocks and corporate risk-taking: An empirical analysis of listed companies from tourism and related industries in China.
- Author
-
Hao, Chen, Feng, Xuegang, Wu, Dandan, and Guo, Xiaodong
- Subjects
BOARDS of directors ,TOURISM ,INFORMATION asymmetry ,BUSINESS enterprises - Abstract
Taking the tourism and related industry companies listed in Shanghai and Shenzhen of China from 2006 to 2019 as samples, this paper examines the impact of board interlock on corporate risk-taking and its micro-mechanism. Empirical evidence shows that board interlock can significantly improve corporate risk-taking, but the degree of influence varies from industry to industry. For the external risk sensitivity of industry, in the industry with high external risk sensitivity, the "quantity embedding" of interlocking directors has a stronger promoting effect on enterprise risk-taking. However, in industries with low external risk sensitivity, the "quality embedding" of interlocking directors has a stronger promoting effect on enterprise risk-taking. For the degree of industry competition, the more intense the industry competition, the stronger the role of board interlocks in promoting enterprise risk-taking. Further analysis shows that the intensity of information effect and the intensity of resource effect vary with the degree of information asymmetry and the type of directors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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