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인터뷰 : Purdue University의 Eric Matson교수
( Eric Matson ),조영임 한국공학교육학회(구 한국공학교육기술학회) 2013 공학교육동향 Vol.20 No.2
Eric Matson, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer and information Technology at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA. Prof. Matson is also an International Faculty Scholar in theDepartment of Radio and Electronics Engineering at Kyung Hee University, Yongin City, Korea, Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering At Dongguk University in Seoul, Korea and a Visiting Professor in the Laboratoire Images, Signaux & Systemes Intelligents in LISSI at the University of Paris et Creteil (UPEC), Paris 12 University, Paris, France. He is also a co-founder of the M2M Lab at Purdue University, which performs research in the areas of intelligent systems, robotics, wireless communication and Founder and Director of the Robotic Innovation, Commercialization and Education (RICE) Research Center at Purdue University inWest Lafayette, Indiana, USA. Prior to his position at PurdueUniversity, Prof. Matsonwas in industrial and commercial software development as a consultant, software engineer, manager and director for 14 years. In his software development experience, he developed and lead numerous large software engineering projects dealing with intelligent systems, applied artificial intelligence, distributed object technologies, enterprise resource planning and product data management implementations. Prof. Matson has a Ph.D. in Computer Science and Engineering fromtheUniversity of Cincinnati, M.B.A inOperations Management fromOhio StateUniversity and B.S. and M.S.E. degrees in Computer Science fromKansas StateUniversity.
Purdue University의 Eric Matson교수
Eric Matson,조영임 한국공학교육학회 2013 Ingenium(人材니움) Vol.20 No.2
Eric Matson, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer and information Technology at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA. Prof. Matson is also an International Faculty Scholar in theDepartment of Radio and Electronics Engineering at Kyung Hee University, Yongin City, Korea, Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering At Dongguk University in Seoul, Korea and a Visiting Professor in the Laboratoire Images, Signaux & Systemes Intelligents in LISSI at the University of Paris et Creteil (UPEC), Paris 12 University, Paris, France. He is also a co-founder of the M2M Lab at Purdue University, which performs research in the areas of intelligent systems, robotics, wireless communication and Founder and Director of the Robotic Innovation, Commercialization and Education (RICE) Research Center at Purdue University inWest Lafayette, Indiana, USA. Prior to his position at PurdueUniversity, Prof. Matsonwas in industrial and commercial software development as a consultant, software engineer, manager and director for 14 years. In his software development experience, he developed and lead numerous large software engineering projects dealing with intelligent systems, applied artificial intelligence, distributed object technologies, enterprise resource planning and product data management implementations. Prof. Matson has a Ph.D. in Computer Science and Engineering fromtheUniversity of Cincinnati, M.B.A inOperations Management fromOhio StateUniversity and B.S. and M.S.E. degrees in Computer Science fromKansas StateUniversity.
Counts and sequences, observations that continue to change ourunderstanding of viruses in nature
K. Eric Wommack,Daniel J. Nasko,Jessica Chopyk,Eric G. Sakowski 한국미생물학회 2015 The journal of microbiology Vol.53 No.3
The discovery of abundant viruses in the oceans and on landhas ushered in a quarter century of groundbreaking advancementsin our understanding of viruses within ecosystems. Two types of observations from environmental samples –direct counts of viral particles and viral metagenomic sequences– have been critical to these discoveries. Accuratedirect counts have established ecosystem-scale trends in theimpacts of viral infection on microbial host populations andhave shown that viral communities within aquatic and soilenvironments respond to both short term and seasonal environmentalchange. Direct counts have been critical for estimatingviral production rate, a measurement essential toquantifying the implications of viral infection for the biogeochemicalcycling of nutrients within ecosystems. Whiledirect counts have defined the magnitude of viral processes;shotgun sequences of environmental viral DNA – viromesequences – have enabled researchers to estimate the diversityand composition of natural viral communities. Virome-enabledstudies have found the virioplankton to contain thousandsof viral genotypes in communities where the mostdominant viral population accounts for a small fraction oftotal abundance followed by a long tail of diverse populations. Detailed examination of long virome sequences hasled to new understanding of genotype-to-phenotype connectionswithin marine viruses and revealed that viruses carrymetabolic genes that are important to maintaining cellularenergy during viral replication. Increased access to long viromesequences will undoubtedly reveal more genetic secretsof viruses and enable us to build a genomics rulebook forpredicting key biological and ecological features of unknownviruses.
Eric M,P,Chiu 한국무역학회 2019 Journal of Korea trade Vol.23 No.5
Purpose - Recent empirical studies have reached mixed results on the effects of financial liberalization and currency crises. We argue that this relationship is likely to depend both on whether controls are primarily on the degrees of financial liberalization and on the stability of the government. Using the disaggregated data on financial liberalization recently developed by Abiad et al (2010) for a sample of 30 emerging countries over the period 1995-2015, we attempt to investigate the political economy determinants of currency crises. Design/methodology - Our empirical model considers the relationship between financial liberalization and currency crises for emerging market economies. This study employs the existing theoretical framework to identify the disaggregate level for financial liberalization across countries. Using a multivariate logit model, this study attempts to estimate the interrelationship among financial liberalization, government stability and currency crises complemented by a case study of South Korea. Findings - Our main findings can be summarized as follows: we find strong support for the proposition that more liberalized financial institutions are positively associated with the probability of currency crises especially under less stable governments, but reduce the risks of currency crises especially for more stable governments. We also examine the role of financial systems with the case of South Korea after Asian financial crises and the results are further supported and consistent with the empirical findings. Originality/value - Existing studies focus on the economic factors across countries. This paper instead attempts to evaluate the effects of financial liberalization and currency crises by incorporating political considerations with newly developed dataset on financial liberalization, which are essential to the understanding of the causes of currency crises.
Holomorphic derivatives of Siegel modular forms
Eric Hofmann,Winfried Kohnen 대한수학회 2018 대한수학회보 Vol.55 No.5
In this paper, following a criterion of E.\ Yang and L.\ Yin \cite{Yang2015} we discuss whether on the Siegel half-space of genus $g\geq 2$ a holomorphic derivative exists.
Outcomes of Shoulder Arthroplasty Performed for Postinfectious Arthritis
Eric Michael Padegimas,Thema A Nicholson,Stephen Silva,Matthew L Ramsey,Gerald R Williams,Mark D Lazarus,Surena Namdari 대한정형외과학회 2018 Clinics in Orthopedic Surgery Vol.10 No.3
Background: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the functional outcomes, infection rate, and complications associated with shoulder arthroplasty for sequelae of prior septic arthritis. Methods: This is a retrospective cohort study of 17 patients who underwent shoulder arthroplasty for sequelae of septic arthritis. Patients were analyzed for patient-reported outcomes, complications, and reoperations. Results: The 17 patients in this cohort were an average age of 65.4 ± 12.2 years old, were 58.8% male, and had an average body mass index of 27.9 ± 4.1 kg/m2. These patients underwent 14 reverse shoulder arthroplasties (RSAs; 11 after antibiotic spacer placement), one anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty after antibiotic spacer placement, and two hemiarthroplasties (both after antibiotic spacer placement). Two patients underwent reoperation (dislocated RSAs). There were four complications (23.5%): two RSA dislocations, one acromial stress fracture, and one atraumatic rotator cuff tear after hemiarthroplasty. There were no cases of postoperative wound complications or infection. At an average of 4.1 ± 1.8 years of follow-up for all 17 of 17 cases, the average visual analogue scale pain score was 4.6 ± 2.3, average Single Assessment Numeric Evaluation Score was 59.3 ± 23.7, average American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons Score was 57.6 ± 15.5, and average Simple Shoulder Test was 6.9 ± 2.6 based on “yes” responses. Conclusions: Shoulder arthroplasty after septic arthritis had inconsistent functional outcomes and high complication rates but no reinfection.