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Latin America represents one of the most dynamic business regions
in the world. Innovation Support in Latin America and Europe
explores the need for training innovation professionals, identifies
appropriate strategies and best practice for ensuring its delivery,
and reflects the outcomes of a major innovation and knowledge
transfer project. Academics, business professionals, policy makers,
and trade representatives, all contribute to review the literature
and existing practices of innovation, and explore the often
misunderstood and contested terrain that surrounds innovation
theory, policy and practice. In this book you will find a
comparative insight into Latin American and European approaches to
innovation management and innovation in practice, and an
examination of how innovative ideas are exploited for a
specifically Latin American context. With chapters which offer
insights from both academics and practitioners, the text offers a
refreshing, contemporary and trans-national perspective and a
clear, concise and enriching discussion on the interplay between
research, policy and practice. Innovation Support in Latin America
and Europe will appeal to academics and researchers, higher level
students, policy makers and business leaders, particularly those
with any interest in Latin America.
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Computer Science Logic - 13th International Workshop, CSL'99, 8th Annual Conference of the EACSL, Madrid, Spain, September 20-25, 1999, Proceedings (Paperback, 1999 ed.)
Joerg Flum, Mario Rodriguez- Artalejo
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R1,740
Discovery Miles 17 400
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The 1999 Annual Conference of the European Association for Computer
Science Logic, CSL'99, was held in Madrid, Spain, on September
20-25, 1999. CSL'99 was the 13th in a series of annual meetings,
originally intended as Internat- nal Workshops on Computer Science
Logic, and the 8th to be held as the - nual Conference of the
EACSL. The conference was organized by the Computer Science
Departments (DSIP and DACYA) at Universidad Complutense in M- rid
(UCM). The CSL'99 program committee selected 34 of 91 submitted
papers for p- sentation at the conference and publication in this
proceedings volume. Each submitted paper was refereed by at least
two, and in almost all cases, three di erent referees. The second
refereeing round, previously required before a - per was accepted
for publication in the proceedings, was dropped following a
decision taken by the EACSL membership meeting held during CSL'98
(Brno, Czech Republic, August 25, 1998).
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Fifth
International Conference on Algebraic and Logic Programming, ALP
'96, held in Aachen, Germany, in September 1996 in conjunction with
PLILP and SAS.
The volume presents 21 revised full papers selected from 54
submissions; also included is an invited contribution by Claude
Kirchner and Ilies Alouini entitled "Toward the Concurrent
Implementation of Computational Systems." The volume is divided
into topical sections on logic programming, term rewriting,
integration of paradigms, abstract interpretation, Lambda-calculus
and rewriting, and types.
This volume constitutes the proceedings of the Fourth International
Conference on Algebraic and Logic Programming (ALP '94), held in
Madrid, Spain in September 1994.
Like the predecessor conferences in this series, ALP '94 succeeded
in strengthening the cross-fertilization between algebraic
techniques and logic programming. Besides abstracts of three
invited talks, the volume contains 17 full revised papers selected
from 41 submissions; the papers are organized into sections on
theorem proving, narrowing, logic programming, term rewriting, and
higher-order programming.
This volume contains the proceedings of ICALP '91, the 18th annual
summer conference sponsored by the European Association for
Theoretical Computer Science (EATCS). ICALP stands for
International Colloquium on Automata, Languages, and Programming,
and this conference series covers all important areas of
theoretical computer science, such as: computability, automata,
formal languages, data types and structures, theory of databases
and knowledge bases, semantics of programming languages, program
specification, transformation and verification, foundations of
logic and functional programming, theory of logical design and
layout, parallel and distributed computation, theory of
concurrency, symbolic and algebraic computation, term rewriting
systems, computational geometry, cryptography, and theory of
robotics.
Latin America represents one of the most dynamic business regions
in the world. Innovation Support in Latin America and Europe
explores the need for training innovation professionals, identifies
appropriate strategies and best practice for ensuring its delivery,
and reflects the outcomes of a major innovation and knowledge
transfer project. Academics, business professionals, policy makers,
and trade representatives, all contribute to review the literature
and existing practices of innovation, and explore the often
misunderstood and contested terrain that surrounds innovation
theory, policy and practice. In this book you will find a
comparative insight into Latin American and European approaches to
innovation management and innovation in practice, and an
examination of how innovative ideas are exploited for a
specifically Latin American context. With chapters which offer
insights from both academics and practitioners, the text offers a
refreshing, contemporary and trans-national perspective and a
clear, concise and enriching discussion on the interplay between
research, policy and practice. Innovation Support in Latin America
and Europe will appeal to academics and researchers, higher level
students, policy makers and business leaders, particularly those
with any interest in Latin America.
This book explains how can be created information extraction (IE)
applications that are able to tap the vast amount of relevant
information available in natural language sources: Internet pages,
official documents such as laws and regulations, books and
newspapers, and social web. Readers are introduced to the problem
of IE and its current challenges and limitations, supported with
examples. The book discusses the need to fill the gap between
documents, data, and people, and provides a broad overview of the
technology supporting IE. The authors present a generic
architecture for developing systems that are able to learn how to
extract relevant information from natural language documents, and
illustrate how to implement working systems using state-of-the-art
and freely available software tools. The book also discusses
concrete applications illustrating IE uses. * Provides an overview
of state-of-the-art technology in information extraction (IE),
discussing achievements and limitations for the software developer
and providing references for specialized literature in the area *
Presents a comprehensive list of freely available, high quality
software for several subtasks of IE and for several natural
languages * Describes a generic architecture that can learn how to
extract information for a given application domain
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