dinsdag 18 maart 2008
lepel
Wat hebben lepel en rekker gemeen? 't Zijn palindromen! Ik vond er vandaag twee in mijn vakjargon: testset en meetsysteem. Jeeeeeeeij, zegt de nerd in mij dan. Geeeeeeeuw zegt u wellicht ;-)
maandag 17 maart 2008
keukenkasten part 2
zaterdag 15 maart 2008
opening van het seizoen
vrijdag 14 maart 2008
doopsuiker?
Hallo hallo,
nog niets gepost in maart... de radiostilte had alles te maken met mijn "bevalling": gisteren is er een paper geboren! Nu begint het boring part: maaaaaanden wachten op nieuws van het tijdschrift. Maar bon, ondertussen werk ik vlijtig verder aan paperbroertjes en zusjes - uiteraard volgens het onderstaande LPI principe ;-)
AN ANALYTIC STUDY OF THE LEAST PUBLISHABLE INCREMENT
Abstract
This paper presents an analytic study of the least publishable increment (LPI). The LPI is defined as the smallest acceptable difference between two publishable papers. Two metrics for the LPI are derived. The first metric is based on a generalized distance measure derived from the Hausdorff metric and is used to differentiate between papers on similar topics by different authors. The second metric describes a distance measure for papers from the same author.
Further studies using cross-journal and conference proceedings relations are also discussed. We outline a simple strategy for maximal publication based on these distance measures. An illustrative example of the maximal publication scheme is shown and its correlation to actual publications is also given.
We present a proof that maximal publication based on the LPI is an optimal approach for junior faculty members attempting to get tenure.
nog niets gepost in maart... de radiostilte had alles te maken met mijn "bevalling": gisteren is er een paper geboren! Nu begint het boring part: maaaaaanden wachten op nieuws van het tijdschrift. Maar bon, ondertussen werk ik vlijtig verder aan paperbroertjes en zusjes - uiteraard volgens het onderstaande LPI principe ;-)
AN ANALYTIC STUDY OF THE LEAST PUBLISHABLE INCREMENT
Abstract
This paper presents an analytic study of the least publishable increment (LPI). The LPI is defined as the smallest acceptable difference between two publishable papers. Two metrics for the LPI are derived. The first metric is based on a generalized distance measure derived from the Hausdorff metric and is used to differentiate between papers on similar topics by different authors. The second metric describes a distance measure for papers from the same author.
Further studies using cross-journal and conference proceedings relations are also discussed. We outline a simple strategy for maximal publication based on these distance measures. An illustrative example of the maximal publication scheme is shown and its correlation to actual publications is also given.
We present a proof that maximal publication based on the LPI is an optimal approach for junior faculty members attempting to get tenure.
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