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Documents tagged "Computer Science"

Found 5 documents with this tag

DOJ-OGR-00022017.jpg

The image displays a document with the header "COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT" followed by a subheading that is partly obscured but includes the word "PAGE" and a page number "2". The text on the document appears to be a list, with line items such as "1. COURSE NUMBER: CS 504", indicating course information or departmental guidelines for Computer Science courses. The font is typical of formal documents, and the layout suggests it could be an academic syllabus or curriculum guide. The image quality and angle make some parts of the text difficult to read clearly.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026521.txt

The paper discusses a game theory model of cooperation in which players choose whether or not to cooperate without assessing the costs beforehand. The authors propose that this behavior can be explained by a trust-based mechanism, where individuals are more likely to cooperate with others who have demonstrated trustworthy behaviors. The authors also show through simulations and analytical methods that this cooperative equilibrium is stable under various conditions and can increase cooperation frequency compared to equilibria in which players always assess the costs before cooperating.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022445.txt

The document includes comments and feedback from professors in various fields such as linguistics, history of religions, anthropology, philosophy, physics, computational linguistics, computer science, engineering, and philosophy. The comments express appreciation for the quality of the journal's content and editing process. Some of the professors also expressed interest in contributing to the journal in the future or sharing their work on similar topics.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016996.txt

The document discusses a study conducted by Jean-Baptiste Michel and colleagues at Harvard University that analyzed a massive corpus of digitized books to investigate cultural trends quantitatively. The team analyzed linguistic and cultural phenomena in the English language between 1800 and 2000, focusing on topics such as word usage, genre distribution, and gender representation in literature. They found patterns of cultural change over time and identified correlations between certain events and changes in literary expression. The study highlights the potential of "culturomics" to provide new insights into human culture and behavior.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015675.txt

Alan Turing invented the computer and helped win World War II by breaking the Enigma code. He left us with one of the greatest puzzles of our time: are humans simply computers or more than that? Many scientists think we have a tenuous hold on being the most intelligent beings on the planet and that it's just a matter of time before computers become smarter than us. This book charts a journey through the science of information, from the origins of language and logic to the frontiers of modern physics. The author, James Tagg, is an inventor and entrepreneur who has founded several companies and holds numerous patents.