I have read the book at a stretch. In my view, the thesis (human is social) is a very simple, wit, and sound one. Maybe it is a very profound concern to us, whose complete consequences have not yet been taken in a serious consideration. Foundations and arguments in favor, coming from social and comp
Swarm intelligence
โ Scribed by James F Kennedy; Russell C Eberhart; Yuhui Shi
- Publisher
- Morgan Kaufmann Publishers
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 541
- Series
- Morgan Kaufmann series in evolutionary computation
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This new edition of Database Modeling & Design continues to focus on the techniques for relational database design introduced in previous editions, starting with the entity-relationship (ER) approach for data requirements specification and conceptual modeling. Author Toby Teorey then looks ahead to the common properties in data modeling and operations shared among the relational model and advanced database technologies such as the object-oriented, temporal, and multimedia models. A full chapter is devoted to database design techniques for data warehousing and online analytical processing (OLAP).Teorey covers the database life cycle from requirements analysis and logical design to physical design for local, distributed, and multidatabases. The discussion of basic principles is supplemented with a common, running example: a company personnel and project database based on real-life experiences and classroom testing.Written for both the novice and the professional database designer, this book is the essential resource for database modeling, including the building of standard SQL data definitions. The design rules set forth in this book are applicable to any SQL-based system, including IBM DB2, Oracle V8.0, Informix IDS-UDO, Microsoft Access, Microsoft SQL Server, and Sybase Adaptive Server Enterprise. * Continued focus on relational model Integration of information about data warehouse and OLAP, plus other advanced database technologies, including object oriented, multimedia, and temporal database Discussion of basic principles is supplemented by examples based on real life cases Models and concepts of life and intelligence -- Symbols, connections, and optimization by trial and error -- On our nonexistence as entities : the social organism -- Evolutionary computation theory and paradigms -- Humans : actual, imagined, and implied -- Thinking is social -- The particle swarm -- Variations and comparisons -- Applications -- Implications and speculations -- And in conclusion
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
I have read the book at a stretch. In my view, the thesis (human is social) is a very simple, wit, and sound one. Maybe it is a very profound concern to us, whose complete consequences have not yet been taken in a serious consideration. Foundations and arguments in favor, coming from social and comp
<p>Traditional methods for creating intelligent computational systems have privileged private "internal" cognitive and computational processes. In contrast, Swarm Intelligence argues that human intelligence derives from the interactions of individuals in a social world and further, that this model
<p>Traditional methods for creating intelligent computational systems have privileged private "internal" cognitive and computational processes. In contrast, Swarm Intelligence argues that human intelligence derives from the interactions of individuals in a social world and further, that this model
<p>Traditional methods for creating intelligent computational systems have privileged private "internal" cognitive and computational processes. In contrast, Swarm Intelligence argues that human intelligence derives from the interactions of individuals in a social world and further, that this model