http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
A Consideration on Block LMS-Newton Algorithm and Its Performance
Kimoto, Masanori,Furukawa, Toshihiro 대한전자공학회 1994 ISPACS:Intelligent Signal Processing and Communica Vol.1 No.1
Adaptive algorithm especially play the important role in adaptive signal processing, and various techniques has been proposed until up to now. Among there, LMS-Newton algorithm as well known. LMS-Newton algorithm can have rapid convergence speed no matter how input signal are correlated But it has too many computational requirements to be implemented with hardware structure. This paper presents a Block LMS-Newton algorithm, it is derived by introducing the block adaptive signal processing to LMS-Newton algorithm. Compared with LMS-Newton algorithm, the proposed algorithm is expected to reduce the computational requirements and fast convergence speed.
Megumu Kimoto Brownstein 이화여자대학교 아시아여성학센터 2017 Asian Journal of Women's Studies(AJWS) Vol.23 No.3
This case study on the Association of Women for Action and Research (AWARE) in Singapore relates a simple and powerful tenet of social justice; all children deserve government and social support regardless of their parents’ marital status. Despite single parenthood becoming increasingly common, some single mothers and their children in Singapore face numerous challenges, such as finding suitable housing. Significant factors regarding this may be attributed to the housing policies and regulations that reward traditional families and underserve other forms of family structures. While more than 80 percent of Singapore’s population enjoy access to public housing, unwed mothers seem to be systematically excluded from this entitlement until they reach the age of 35, in addition to other welfare and tax benefits that are consistently awarded to traditional families. Divorced single mothers also often experience poor housing situations and sometimes homelessness, apparently due to excessively stringent eligibility criteria. To address these issues, AWARE conducted “evidence-based” advocacy using a multi-actor and multi-level approach. The method, commitment, and coordination that AWARE has demonstrated may indeed serve as a blueprint for other organizations seeking to assist deserving single parents and their dependents.
기모토다케시 ( Kimoto Takeshi ),이석원(번역) 역사문제연구소 2010 역사문제연구 Vol.14 No.1
At a critical time in the Asia-Pacific war, the second generation of the Kyoto School of philosophy engaged in a discourse of war represented as Sekaishi-teki tachiba to Nihon (The World Historical Standpointand Japan) (1943). This book consists of three roundtable discussions organized by Ksaka Masa`aki, Nishitani Keiji, Kyama Iwao, and the historian Suzuki Shigetaka. These discussions aimed to legitimate Japanese empire and its war efforts through a “philosophy of world history.” In particular, in the last session, “The Philosophy of Total War,” the participants provided a philosophical determination of the current warfare as “total war.” In this essay, I first critically examine the current debates on this topic, touching in particular on the newly discovered and published documents attesting to the wartime collaboration of the Kyoto School with the Japanese Navy. I then analyze how the Kyoto School conceived of the notion of total war and sought to philosophize the imperial war efforts as a world historical mission. I call attention to the novelty of total war, which the Kyoto School insists has no boundaries, spatial or temporal, nullifying the traditional distinctions between war and other areas of social life and even between wartime and peacetime in a postwar period. While explicating the particular issues involved in the problematic, such as overcoming modern capitalism, their criticism of Western imperialism, and the agenda of the Greater East Asian Co-prosperity Sphere, I show that each aspect of total war was haunted by a specific kind of self-contradiction that I call antinomy. Specifically, I focus on the temporal aspects of this sort of war and its ambiguous beginnings and ends, revealing how the Kyoto Schoolphilosophers tried in vain to mediate these aporetic dimensions of time of war.
Sexual Violence against Women in Japanese Society
Megumu Kimoto BROWNSTEIN 이화여자대학교 아시아여성학센터 2017 이화여자대학교 아시아여성학센터 학술대회자료집 Vol.2017 No.01
According to the national statistics published by the Gender Equality Bureau Cabinet Office in 2014, approximately one in 15 women in Japan reported being forced to have sex. Nearly 70% of these women responded not reporting the assaults to the police, other individuals or organizations. There is also currently no systematic data collection mechanism which accurately captures the extent of a wide range of sexual crimes committed against women. Japan’s damaging rape culture has long been reinforced and sustained by a persistent, archaic belief in “danson johi” (male domination of women or male chauvinism). This sadly results in the sexual objectification and commercialization of female bodies, and it continues to harm thousands of women each year. In this paper, an overview of various forms of sexual violence taking place in the Japanese societies including some culturally specific ones such as peep chikan (physical molestation on public transportation), and sexual assaults and human rights violation in pornography and entertainment industries, will be provided. In addition, possible causes and efforts put forth by prominent women activists in Japan thus far will be discussed. While much advancement has been made to address sexual violence against women, Japan has a long road ahead in order to bring about drastic changes required to create a society free of violence and gender inequality.