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Mongolian Trigram Part-of-Speech Tagger
Zoljargal Munkhjargal,Purev Jaimai 한국멀티미디어학회 2011 한국멀티미디어학회 국제학술대회 Vol.2011 No.-
This paper presents a trigram part-of-speech tagger for Mongolian which is important to a large corpus because hand annotating is complicated task and assigning POS tags to each word is very time consuming.
The avifaunal survey at Important Bird Areas in western Mongolia
Zoljargal Purevdorj,백운기,Munkhbaatar Munkhbayar,Onolragchaa Ganbold,빙기창,Ariunbold Jargalsaikhan,Erdenetushig Purevee,백인환,최원석,Namsrai Jargal,이준우 한국조류학회II 2019 한국조류학회지 Vol.26 No.1
In 2018, the avifaunal surveys at western Mongolian Important Bird Areas (IBAs) were conducted at 23 sites in three times surveys in May, July, and September. Western Mongolian landscape is characterized by diverse natural zones that dominated by a high mountain range and, wetlands or lakes. Therefore, fresh water high mountain lakes and mountain based IBA sites are common in this region. A total of 131,607 individuals of 201 species that belong to 41 families and 17 orders were recorded in this study. Among these order, Passeriformes was accounted for a higher number of species with 78 species, followed by Charadriiformes with 42 species and Falconiformes, Anseriformes with 26 species, respectively. In addition, the majority of counted birds were (42,121) belong to Anseriformes, while Falconiformes was accounted for the fewest number of counted birds (978). Furthermore, a total of 12 Globally Threatened Birds (GTBs) were recorded including, two Endangered and 10 Vulnerable. According to our findings from this investigation, the high abundance of livestock and tourism activities at wetlands that considered as the most valuable avifaunal hotspot in western Mongolia. In addition, findings also revealed that there is still a need monitoring on actual negative impact from these threats to the bird communities at these hotspots.
Discriminatory experiences of international students in South Korea
Dembereldorj Zoljargal,Suren Chimed 한국교육정치학회 2014 敎育政治學硏究 Vol.21 No.2
The study explains discriminatory experiences of international students in one of the campuses in South Korea through the lens of neo-racism. Neo-racism is a theory of segregation that postulates discrimination is based on individual’s national identity, culture, and country of origin. For deeper understanding discriminatory perceptions of international students, the study applied a qualitative study with semi-structured interviews with purposive sampling at one aggressively internationalizing university. The study found implicit and explicit forms of discriminatory experiences, discriminatory perceptions of exclusion, different treatments based on nationality, lack of cultural knowledge, stereotype, and English language ability. Drawing from the findings, the study concludes that discriminatory experiences of international students are more status-based rather than country of origin based in a context of South Korea. It suggests that discrimination as segregation exists, and therefore, it is desirable to consider this issue into relevant policies and practices.