scholarly journals Culturomics meets random fractal theory: insights into long-range correlations of social and natural phenomena over the past two centuries

2012 ◽  
Vol 9 (73) ◽  
pp. 1956-1964 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianbo Gao ◽  
Jing Hu ◽  
Xiang Mao ◽  
Matjaž Perc

Culturomics was recently introduced as the application of high-throughput data collection and analysis to the study of human culture. Here, we make use of these data by investigating fluctuations in yearly usage frequencies of specific words that describe social and natural phenomena, as derived from books that were published over the course of the past two centuries. We show that the determination of the Hurst parameter by means of fractal analysis provides fundamental insights into the nature of long-range correlations contained in the culturomic trajectories, and by doing so offers new interpretations as to what might be the main driving forces behind the examined phenomena. Quite remarkably, we find that social and natural phenomena are governed by fundamentally different processes. While natural phenomena have properties that are typical for processes with persistent long-range correlations, social phenomena are better described as non-stationary, on–off intermittent or Lévy walk processes.

2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 405-413
Author(s):  
Clive Roland Boddy

Purpose Academic qualitative researchers have been criticized for rejecting the idea that their research can establish causality while market and social researchers, with their realist and pragmatic approach to research, take for granted that it can. This paper aims to explore the ability of qualitative research to determine cause and effect in terms of market and social phenomena. Design/methodology/approach The literature on causality in qualitative research is reviewed and discussed. The discussion is further informed by the author’s own experience of undertaking commercial and academic market and social qualitative research over the past 33 years. Findings In qualitative market and social research, the determination of causality is often needed but rarely discussed. This paper explores this occurrence and brings to the fore, via discussion and the use of example, the ways in which causality can be determined by qualitative research. Practical implications A determination of what events bring about predictable changes in social and market environments can be established via qualitative research particularly at a probabilistic level of causality. This implies that policymakers should give a greater emphasis to qualitative findings than then sometimes do at the moment. Originality/value Causality in market and social research is rarely discussed by practitioners but is nevertheless a premise of much of the qualitative research that is undertaken. This paper is therefore distinctive in that it examines whether this premise is justifiable.


Reliable information about the γ-rays emitted by radium C' is particularly valuable since the main features of the nuclear level system are shown by the groups of long range α-particles and are hence accessible to direct investigation. These long range groups of α-particles have been measured recently by Rutherford, Lewis and Bowden by a greatly improved method which has not only brought to light several new groups, but in addition has given considerably greater accuracy in the determination of the energies of the groups than had been possible in the past. The energy of these groups in excess of that of the normal group is a measure of the excitation energy of the nucleus and the older measurements had indicated, as was to be expected, a close correspondence between these energies and the quantum energies of the γ-rays. The recent more accurate measurements of Rutherford, Lewis and Bowden provided the opportunity of a more rigorous test of this connection and showed the possibility, by the combination of the information from these two sources, of a direct experimental determination of the level system. However, the accuracy of the published data on the Ra C γ-rays deduced from the natural β-ray spectrum was subject to some doubts for the following reasons. The measurements dated from 1924 when the absolute energies of certain strong groups in the β-ray spectrum were measured and the energies of the remaining lines determined by relative measurements. The strong groups in question lay between 0.4 X 10 5 and 3.0 X 10 5 volts and the procedure of step-wise comparision up to energies of over 2 X 10 6 volts may have led to cumulative errors. More serious was that recent measurements on the Th (B + C) β-ray spectrum had thrown doubt on the correctness of the absolute values. Lastly, experiment gives values for H ρ , that is the momenta of the electrons in the groups, and the calculation of the energies involves e / m . The older data had been based on e / m = 1.769 X 10 7 , and while the change to the value 1.760 X 10 7 alters the energies proportionally far less, there was involved here an avoidable error which had to be removed.


2005 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 052304 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. E. Lynch ◽  
B. A. Carreras ◽  
R. Sanchez ◽  
B. LaBombard ◽  
B. Ph. van Milligen ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Henry S. Slayter

Electron microscopic methods have been applied increasingly during the past fifteen years, to problems in structural molecular biology. Used in conjunction with physical chemical methods and/or Fourier methods of analysis, they constitute powerful tools for determining sizes, shapes and modes of aggregation of biopolymers with molecular weights greater than 50, 000. However, the application of the e.m. to the determination of very fine structure approaching the limit of instrumental resolving power in biological systems has not been productive, due to various difficulties such as the destructive effects of dehydration, damage to the specimen by the electron beam, and lack of adequate and specific contrast. One of the most satisfactory methods for contrasting individual macromolecules involves the deposition of heavy metal vapor upon the specimen. We have investigated this process, and present here what we believe to be the more important considerations for optimizing it. Results of the application of these methods to several biological systems including muscle proteins, fibrinogen, ribosomes and chromatin will be discussed.


Author(s):  
Richard Adelstein

This chapter elaborates the operation of criminal liability by closely considering efficient crimes and the law’s stance toward them, shows how its commitment to proportional punishment prevents the probability scaling that systemically efficient allocation requires, and discusses the procedures that determine the actual liability prices imposed on offenders. Efficient crimes are effectively encouraged by proportional punishment, and their nature and implications are examined. But proportional punishment precludes probability scaling, and induces far more than the systemically efficient number of crimes. Liability prices that match the specific costs imposed by the offender at bar are sought through a two-stage procedure of legislative determination of punishment ranges ex ante and judicial determination of exact prices ex post, which creates a dilemma: whether to price crimes accurately in the past or deter them accurately in the future. An illustrative Supreme Court case bringing all these themes together is discussed in conclusion.


Author(s):  
Peter H. Wiebe ◽  
Ann Bucklin ◽  
Mark Benfield

This chapter reviews traditional and new zooplankton sampling techniques, sample preservation, and sample analysis, and provides the sources where in-depth discussion of these topics is addressed. The net systems that have been developed over the past 100+ years, many of which are still in use today, can be categorized into eight groups: non-opening/closing nets, simple opening/closing nets, high-speed samplers, neuston samplers, planktobenthos plankton nets, closing cod-end samplers, multiple net systems, and moored plankton collection systems. Methods of sample preservation include preservation for sample enumeration and taxonomic morphological analysis, and preservation of samples for genetic analysis. Methods of analysis of zooplankton samples include determination of biomass, taxonomic composition, and size by traditional methods; and genetic analysis of zooplankton samples.


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