scholarly journals Science: Computers: The Use of Data Processing in Legal Research

1967 ◽  
Vol 65 (5) ◽  
pp. 987

Big data marks a major turning point in the use of data and is a powerful vehicle for growth and profitability. A comprehensive understanding of a company's data, its potential can be a new vector for performance. It must be recognized that without an adequate analysis, our data are just an unusable raw material. In this context, the traditional data processing tools cannot support such an explosion of volume. They cannot respond to new needs in a timely manner and at a reasonable cost. Big data is a broad term generally referring to very large data collections that impose complications on analytics tools for harnessing and managing such. This chapter details what big data analysis is. It presents the development of its applications. It is interested in the important changes that have touched the analytics context.


Author(s):  
K. V. Rochev ◽  
A. V. Modanov ◽  
G. V. Korshunov

The article describes the mechanism of formation of electronic portfolio and assessment of the student team, discusses the relevance of portfolio's database by employers and proposes the development of a personal account of the employer. It describes the components of the main business process for the collection and use of data and the implementation of the project, indicating the technologies and approaches used in the development of the software product. The inheritance of data processing mechanisms and the server part of the functional on the basis of service oriented architecture from the index-rating system of Ukhta State Technical University is noted, which allows using a significant part of the previously implemented opportunities for data processing and analysis. An example of the implementation of a comparative assessment of student activity based on the data accumulated in the previous version of the system in 7 areas of student activity based on the data of 8000 students for 5 years of the system in one of universities.


1977 ◽  
Vol 63 (2) ◽  
pp. 92-96
Author(s):  
A. S. Houston

AbstractMuch has been published recently on the use of data processing and display methods in radioisotope scintigraphy. The main theme has been a move towards proper evaluation of these techniques. Using a procedure which combines clinical significance with physical relevance, the author has recently compared many different methods used for static brain studies. This paper describes those which performed best.


2021 ◽  
pp. 3-13
Author(s):  
Marsel Vagizov ◽  
Evgeny Istomin ◽  
Olga Kolbina ◽  
Natalya Yagotinсeva ◽  
Anna Morshchihina ◽  
...  

The authors of the article offer a specialized geoinformation system for use in forestry. A distinctive feature of the proposed system is the use of data processing module included in the GIS. Forestry requires to improve the quality of management and monitoring of forest resources, to enhance the perception of geoinformation in a user friendly form. One of the perspective technologies of geospatial information display is infograms displaying the evaluation of the territory under analysis. Such way of display requires a specialized interface, technologies of processing and data interpretation included in structure of the program, and specific characteristics of the system offered by the authors of this work.


2003 ◽  
Vol 154 (7) ◽  
pp. 289-293
Author(s):  
Stefan Fassbind

The Forest Department of the canton of Argovia has been working with the Geographical Information System (GIS) since 1991. Apart from collecting the data, which uses the greater part of the resources, other areas have been developed (e.g.,mapping). A number of programmes have been developed that facilitates the user's access to the increasingly complex structure of the database. An efficient, canton-wide network with central data processing and decentralised responsibility for the up-dating of the data has fostered a lively use of data between specialist units. Using a number of case studies we show that the work of the Forest Department can no longer be imagined without GIS.


2021 ◽  
pp. 4-13
Author(s):  
Marsel Vagizov ◽  
Evgeny Istomin ◽  
Olga Kolbina ◽  
Natalya Yagotinсeva ◽  
Anna Morshchihina ◽  
...  

The authors of the article offer a specialized geoinformation system for use in forestry. A distinctive feature of the proposed system is the use of data processing module included in the GIS. Forestry requires to improve the quality of management and monitoring of forest resources, to enhance the perception of geoinformation in a user friendly form. One of the perspective technologies of geospatial information display is infograms displaying the evaluation of the territory under analysis. Such way of display requires a specialized interface, technologies of processing and data interpretation included in structure of the program, and specific characteristics of the system offered by the authors of this work.


2012 ◽  
Vol 170-173 ◽  
pp. 2831-2835
Author(s):  
Jin Ling Yang ◽  
Qiu Sheng Zhou ◽  
Xian Ge Cao ◽  
Hai Feng Song ◽  
Xiang Lai Meng

The set up of Web-based Surveying and Mapping data processing center, not only conducive to the standardization and modularity of Surveying and Mapping data processing, but also help the management and use of data, making the data providers and users no longer subject to geographic areas restrictions; at the same time as using the B/S (Browser/Server) architecture network platform, users avoid the installation process, saving the user's system resources.


1993 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 819-849
Author(s):  
Gordon A. Carmichael

Studies of international migration frequently make use of data collected as part of the administrative procedure through which persons entering or leaving a country by an approved route pass. Such databases often are used quite uncritically. This article reports on idiosyncrasies of two official national migration databases, most of which became apparent when trying to account for marked differences in their estimates of both migratory and more short-term population movement between the two countries, and for variation over time in the pattern of differences. It is shown that the use of apparently similar broad classification principles, by different countries and through time within a country, can create impressions of comparability and continuity that may be quite misleading. Before using data of this type one should examine carefully how subsidiary classification concepts have been defined and the manner in which both these and the broader principles have been translated into questions on travel documents and data processing conventions.


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