http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
Marketing an International Auxiliary Language : Challenges to a New Artificial Language
Olsen, Neil Institute for University Language Sejong Instituti 2003 Journal of Universal Language Vol.4 No.1
This paper examines international auxiliary languages from the point of view that they are products competing in the world linguistic market place. Several factors have contributed to the proliferation of artificial or constructed languages in recent decades. The globalization of social, economic, and intellectual information through the World Wide Web (internet) has made access to the tremendous theoretical and practical progress and educational advances in the field of linguistics, language learning, and language planning. In a world where designer and hobby languages abound, how can an international auxiliary language attract a clientele and achieve the goal of facilitating international communication? The “experiences” of Volapu¨k, Esperanto, Loglan/Lojban, and Klingon are examined as case studies.
Olsen, J.S.,Van der Eijk, C.,Zhang, Z.L. Techno-Press 2008 Smart Structures and Systems, An International Jou Vol.4 No.2
The work presented in this paper includes material characterisation and an investigation of suitability in seismic dampers for two commercially available NiTi-alloys, along with a numerical analysis of a new damper system employing composite NiTi-wires. Numerical simulations of the new damper system are conducted, using Brinson's one-dimensional constitutive model for shape memory alloys, with emphasis on the system's energy dissipation capabilities. The two alloys tested showed some unwanted residual strain at temperatures higher than $A_f$, possibly due to stress concentrations near inclusions in the material. These findings show that the alloys are not ideal, but may be employed in a seismic damper if precautions are made. The numerical investigations indicate that using composite NiTi-wires in a seismic damper enhances the energy dissipation capabilities for a wider working temperature range.
ON SIMULTANEOUS LOCAL DIMENSION FUNCTIONS OF SUBSETS OF ℝ<sup>d</sup>
OLSEN, LARS Korean Mathematical Society 2015 대한수학회보 Vol.52 No.5
For a subset $E{\subseteq}\mathbb{R}^d$ and $x{\in}\mathbb{R}^d$, the local Hausdorff dimension function of E at x and the local packing dimension function of E at x are defined by $$dim_{H,loc}(x,E)=\lim_{r{\searrow}0}dim_H(E{\cap}B(x,r))$$, $$dim_{P,loc}(x,E)=\lim_{r{\searrow}0}dim_P(E{\cap}B(x,r))$$, where $dim_H$ and $dim_P$ denote the Hausdorff dimension and the packing dimension, respectively. In this note we give a short and simple proof showing that for any pair of continuous functions $f,g:\mathbb{R}^d{\rightarrow}[0,d]$ with $f{\leq}g$, it is possible to choose a set E that simultaneously has f as its local Hausdorff dimension function and g as its local packing dimension function.
South Korea`s Pivot toward Iran: Resource Diplomacy and ROK-Iran Sanctions
( Harald Olsen ) 한국국방연구원 2013 The Korean Journal of Defense Analysis Vol.25 No.1
As United States-led sanctions on Iran tightened in 2012, South Korea stood out among U.S. allies for its reluctance to cut financial ties and reduce imports of Iranian oil. With import numbers dropping, South Korea struggled to find ways to overcome European Union shipping insurance restrictions and maintain a significant trade relationship with Iran. Given the close relations between the United States and South Korea, there were rising concerns over the possibility that the initiator of the sanctions might have to block South Korea from its domestic financial market in retaliation for continued trade with Iran. This paper explores the reasons behind South Korea`s reluctance to join sanctions on Iran; namely long-held realist assessments of Middle Eastern threats, inflated perceptions of the effect of oil price hikes on the domestic economy, and an established practice of circumventing U.S. sanctions in order to maximize economic security. Muchof the evidence concerning Korea`s motivations in Iran unveiled in this paper has been overlooked or inaccessible to Western analysts. Using recently declassified cables from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade and other Korean sources never before translated, this paper explains why South Korea seeks to maintain links to Iran, even at the risk of disrupting its alliance with America.
HYBRID NARRATIVES: CONTEMPORARY PARODIES OF HONG KILTONG
LEIF OLSEN 계명대학교 한국학연구원 2005 Acta Koreana Vol.8 No.2
Fictional narratives flourished during the Chosŏn period (1392–1910), and a large number of recent short stories or novels in South Korea directly allude to or play upon themes in Chosŏn works. Bakhtin calls parodies “hybrid narratives”; this paper looks at both the intertextual hybridization of an “original” text with a “new” one. In Korea, the term parody is used broadly to refer to any text that reworks a previous text, and the parodies examined in this paper, Sŏ Hajin’s “Hong Kiltong” and Yi Munyŏl’s “Hong Kiltong ŭl ch’ajasŏ,” vary in their levels of parodicity. Sŏ’s and Yi’s borrowing from the Tale of Hong Kiltong, the piece of fiction attributed to Hŏ Kyun (1569–1618), serves a function different from the original text and yet pays tribute to it. Taking into consideration M. M. Bakhtin’s view that every parody forms a mutual illumination between a text and an earlier source, the article examines how Sŏ’s and Yi’s texts each associate and situate itself to the Tale of Hong Kiltong and covers a theoretical framework of parodic studies. The article also looks at the character Hong Kiltong and the ways he is reworked in parodic fiction.