The Presence and Absence of the Past: Sites of Memory and Forgetting in F. C. Delius's "Die Flatterzunge" (open access)

The Presence and Absence of the Past: Sites of Memory and Forgetting in F. C. Delius's "Die Flatterzunge"

Article on the presence and absence of the past and the sites of memory and forgetting in F. C. Delius' "Die Flatterzunge."
Date: January 1, 2004
Creator: Costabile-Heming, Carol Anne
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the workshop on world oil supply-demand analysis (open access)

Proceedings of the workshop on world oil supply-demand analysis

Twelve papers and four panel discussions are included. A separate abstract was prepared for each paper. The panel discussions were on: technical and physical policy elements affecting world oil supply and demand; financial, tax, and tariff issues in world oil supply and demand; the world economy as influenced by world oil prices and availability; the use of models and analysis in the policy process. (DLC)
Date: January 1, 1977
Creator: Hoffman, K.C. (ed.)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Agent 2003 Conference on Challenges in Social Simulation (open access)

Agent 2003 Conference on Challenges in Social Simulation

Welcome to the Proceedings of the fourth in a series of agent simulation conferences cosponsored by Argonne National Laboratory and The University of Chicago. Agent 2003 is the second conference in which three Special Interest Groups from the North American Association for Computational Social and Organizational Science (NAACSOS) have been involved in planning the program--Computational Social Theory; Simulation Applications; and Methods, Toolkits and Techniques. The theme of Agent 2003, Challenges in Social Simulation, is especially relevant, as there seems to be no shortage of such challenges. Agent simulation has been applied with increasing frequency to social domains for several decades, and its promise is clear and increasingly visible. Like any nascent scientific methodology, however, it faces a number of problems or issues that must be addressed in order to progress. These challenges include: (1) Validating models relative to the social settings they are designed to represent; (2) Developing agents and interactions simple enough to understand but sufficiently complex to do justice to the social processes of interest; (3) Bridging the gap between empirically spare artificial societies and naturally occurring social phenomena; (4) Building multi-level models that span processes across domains; (5) Promoting a dialog among theoretical, qualitative, and empirical social …
Date: January 1, 2003
Creator: Clemmons, Margaret
System: The UNT Digital Library