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Viewing 1-10 of 32 total results
Human Identification at a Distance
the ability of time-normalized joint angle trajectories in the walking plane as a means of gait recognition. In addition, we are undertaking related work in locating and tracking faces (with expressions and speech), detecting occlusions and doing acti...
www.cc.gatech.edu/cpl/projects/hid/
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Babies Recognize Faces Better Than Adults, Study Says
Adults, Study Says Hillary Mayell for National Geographic News May 22, 2005 Human babies start out with the ability to recognize a wide range of faces, even among races or species different from their own, according to a new study. The re...
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: animal
to understand the origins of the idea that humans are qualitatively (and “qualia-tatively”) different from animals. Aristotle asserted that only humans had rational souls, while the locomotive souls shared by all animals, human and nonhuman, endowed an...
Franklin Institute's Energy Hotlist
Education Module - Renewable Energy Power and Energy Resources The Global Sun/Temperature Project search Search the entire Franklin Institute website: Around the Site The Franklin Institute See what's happening at Philadelphia's favorite science museum. The History of Science a...
sln.fi.edu/tfi/hotlists/energy.html
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Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: cognition, animal
from the human species to other species. Nevertheless, in another sense the analogical argument for animal minds is weaker, since the strength of the argument is a function of the degree of similarity between the reference class and the target...
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Chinese and Western
interconnection that leads us to the belief that there is some definite ‘I’ that underlies and is independent of the ever-shifting series. But there is only the interacting and interconnected series. This metaphysical concern, of course, had deep practical imp...
Unmasking the Face on Mars
Middle Butte in Idaho. An apron of boulders around the base would make the climb difficult [for a robot], but a human could do it well." The latest MGS images of the Face are so detailed that Garvin already knows what route he would take -...
 Visual and Performing Arts Framework (CA Dept. of Education)
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156 Chapter 4 Guidance for Visual and Performing Arts Programs Visual Arts The visual arts, part of the human experience since prehistoric times, began with images painted or scratched on cave walls, small sculpted objects, and huge stru...
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156 Chapter 4 Guidance for Visual and Performing Arts Programs Visual Arts The visual arts, part of the human experience since prehistoric times, began with images painted or scratched on cave walls, small sculpted objects, and huge structural forms. Those works illustrate that artists at the dawn of human history, like other artists throughout the ages, were creative, imaginative, and self-expressive. As stated by Jensen, the “visual arts are a universal language with a symbolic way of
168 0 http://www.cde.ca.gov/re/pn/fd/documents/vpa.pdf#page=168 www.cde.ca.gov/re/pn/fd/documents/vpa.pdf#page=168
156 Chapter 4 Guidance <span class="highlight">for</span> <span class="highlight">Visual</span> <span class="highlight">and</span> Performing Arts Programs <span class="highlight">Visual</span> Arts The <span class="highlight">visual</span> arts, part <span class="highlight">of</span> the <span class="highlight">human</span> experience since prehistoric times, began with <span class="highlight">images</span> painted or scratched on cave walls, small sculpted objects, <span class="highlight">and</span> huge structural forms. Those works illustrate that artists at the dawn <span class="highlight">of</span> <span class="highlight">human</span> history, like other artists throughout the ages, were creative, imaginative, <span class="highlight">and</span> self-expressive. As stated by Jensen, the &ldquo;<span class="highlight">visual</span> arts are <span class="highlight">a</span> universal language with <span class="highlight">a</span> symbolic way <span class="highlight">of</span>
265 0 http://www.cde.ca.gov/re/pn/fd/documents/vpa.pdf#page=265 www.cde.ca.gov/re/pn/fd/documents/vpa.pdf#page=265
253 Labanotation&mdash;d. <span class="highlight">A</span> system <span class="highlight">for</span> analyzing <span class="highlight">and</span> recording <span class="highlight">human</span> movement invented by Rudolf von Laban (1879&ndash;1958). level&mdash;t. The height <span class="highlight">of</span> an actor&rsquo;s head as determined by his or her body position (e.g., sitting, lying, standing, elevated by artificial means). levels <span class="highlight">of</span> difficulty&mdash;m. The levels <span class="highlight">of</span> difficulty <span class="highlight">for</span> the music content standards are as follows: Level 1: very easy; easy keys, meters, <span class="highlight">and</span> rhythms; limited ranges. Level 2: easy; may include changes <span class="highlight">of</span> tempo, key, or meter; modest ranges
Mathematical Variation in Art
Proportion" for its esthetically pleasing nature. As a student of anatomy, Leonardo was fascinated with the mathematical relationships found in the human structure. His drawing, Vitruvian Man, was a study of the proportions of the hum...
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Technology under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike). For further information see http://ocw.mit.edu/terms/index.htm 9.00SC Introduction to Psychology (MIT) This course is a survey of the scientific study of human nature...
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