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Institution

Hampshire College

EducationAmherst Center, Massachusetts, United States
About: Hampshire College is a education organization based out in Amherst Center, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Genetic programming & Population. The organization has 461 authors who have published 998 publications receiving 40827 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The use of the terms "vulnerable" and "vulnerability" have been turning up more and more frequently beginning in the 1980s in writing about disasters as discussed by the authors, and Overman (1989) identifies literally dozens of authors using the terms and related ones such as resilience, marginality, susceptibility, adaptability, fragility, and risk.
Abstract: The terms "vulnerable" and "vulnerability" have been turning up more and more frequently beginning in the 1980s in writing about disasters. Overman (1989) identifies literally dozens of authors using the term and related ones such as resilience, marginality, susceptibility, adaptability, fragility, and risk. This development is to be welcomed. It shows that an increasing number of people recognize the importance of distinguishing physical hazards from the disasters that sometimes follow. As Maskrey puts it (1989, P. 1):

399 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that two simple decentralized rules controlling the movement of each wolf are enough to reproduce the main features of the wolf-pack hunting behavior: tracking the prey, carrying out the pursuit, and encircling the prey until it stops moving.

362 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a search for extended ultraviolet disk (XUV-disk) galaxies in the local universe was initiated, where the authors compared GALEX UV and visible-NIR images of 189 nearby (D < 40 Mpc) S0-Sm galaxies.
Abstract: We have initiated a search for extended ultraviolet disk (XUV-disk) galaxies in the local universe. Here we compare GALEX UV and visible-NIR images of 189 nearby (D < 40 Mpc) S0-Sm galaxies included in the GALEX Atlas of Nearby Galaxies and present the first catalog of XUV-disk galaxies. We find that XUV-disk galaxies are surprisingly common but have varied relative (UV/optical) extent and morphology. Type 1 objects (≳20% incidence) have structured, UV-bright/optically faint emission features in the outer disk, beyond the traditional star formation threshold. Type 2 XUV-disk galaxies (~10% incidence) exhibit an exceptionally large, UV-bright/optically low surface brightness (LSB) zone having blue UV-K_s outside the effective extent of the inner, older stellar population, but not reaching extreme galactocentric distance. If the activity occurring in XUV-disks is episodic, a higher fraction of present-day spirals could be influenced by such outer disk star formation. Type 1 disks are associated with spirals of all types, whereas Type 2 XUV-disks are predominantly found in late-type spirals. Type 2 XUV-disks are forming stars quickly enough to double their (currently low) stellar mass in the next Gyr (assuming a constant star formation rate). XUV-disk galaxies of both types are systematically more gas-rich than the general galaxy population. Minor external perturbation may stimulate XUV-disk incidence, at least for Type 1 objects. XUV-disks are the most actively evolving galaxies growing via inside-out disk formation in the current epoch, and may constitute a segment of the galaxy population experiencing significant, continued gas accretion from the intergalactic medium or neighboring objects.

361 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Betsy Hartmann1
TL;DR: The authors examines the perceived threat of climate refugees and climate conflict and locates the ideological roots of these concepts in development theories and policy narratives about demographically induced migration, environmental refugees and environmental security.
Abstract: This paper critically examines the perceived threat of ‘climate refugees’ and ‘climate conflict’. It locates the ideological roots of these concepts in development theories and policy narratives about demographically induced migration, environmental refugees and environmental security. While alarmist rhetoric around climate refugees and conflict has been deployed by a variety of actors, including U.N. agencies, development NGOs, national governments, security pundits and popular media, the paper concentrates on its strategic use by U.S. defence interests. It raises the question of how the portrayal of climate change as a security threat could further militarise the provision of development assistance and distort climate policy. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

339 citations

Book
01 May 1987
TL;DR: Cognitive Science as discussed by the authors is a single-source undergraduate text that broadly surveys the theories and empirical results of cognitive science within a consistent computational perspective, covering individual contributions of psychology, philosophy, linguistics, and artificial intelligence to cognitive science, and adding a new chapter on cognitively related advances in neuroscience.
Abstract: Cognitive Science is a single-source undergraduate text that broadly surveys the theories and empirical results of cognitive science within a consistent computational perspective. In addition to covering the individual contributions of psychology, philosophy, linguistics, and artificial intelligence to cognitive science, the book has been revised to introduce the connectionist approach as well as the classical symbolic approach and adds a new chapter on cognitively related advances in neuroscience. Cognitive science is a rapidly evolving field that is characterized by considerable contention among different views and approaches. Cognitive Science presents these in a relatively neutral manner. It covers many new orientations theories and findings, embedding them in an integrated computational perspective and establishing a sense of continuity and contrast with more traditional work in cognitive science. The text assumes no prerequisite knowledge, introducing all topics in a uniform, accessible style. Many topics, such as natural language processing and vision, however, are developed in considerable depth, which allows the book to be used with more advanced undergraduates or even in beginning graduate settings. A Bradford Book

321 citations


Authors

Showing all 467 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Anton Zeilinger12563171013
Peter K. Hepler9020721245
William H. Warren7634922765
James Paul Gee7021040526
Eric J. Steig6922317999
Raymond W. Gibbs6218817136
David A. Rosenbaum5119810834
Lee Jussim441159101
Miriam E. Nelson4412216581
Stacia A. Sower431786555
Howard Barnum411096510
Lee Spector391654692
Eric C. Anderson381065627
Alan H. Goodman341045795
Babetta L. Marrone33953584
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
202221
202117
202034
201949
201833