The Krampus Whale appears to be a homophone chimera of the Grampus [1] in Melville's Moby Dick and the Krampus of Central European folklore [2]. Parent's final request is a clear reference to Coq [3]. I yield, mumbling…
I believe that the parent is referring to the translation of a term formerly used among the Maori and Polynesian peoples for human flesh as food [1]; their reasoning being that pigs resemble humans, since they taste…
Hopefully saving someone some time: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punnett_square
In the paper: "It is worth noting that the proposal of a "wake/sleep" specific algorithm for unsupervised learning of generative models based on feedback from stochastic stimulation goes back 25 years (Hinton et al.,…
Are you trying to point out the missing Oxford comma?
I'm not sure we can really guess what the student meant, but I do know for sure that she was wrong. If you add up a sixth of a six-pack and a sixth of another six-pack you get a sixth of two six-packs -- two twelveths.…
The Krampus Whale appears to be a homophone chimera of the Grampus [1] in Melville's Moby Dick and the Krampus of Central European folklore [2]. Parent's final request is a clear reference to Coq [3]. I yield, mumbling…
I believe that the parent is referring to the translation of a term formerly used among the Maori and Polynesian peoples for human flesh as food [1]; their reasoning being that pigs resemble humans, since they taste…
Hopefully saving someone some time: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punnett_square
In the paper: "It is worth noting that the proposal of a "wake/sleep" specific algorithm for unsupervised learning of generative models based on feedback from stochastic stimulation goes back 25 years (Hinton et al.,…
Are you trying to point out the missing Oxford comma?
I'm not sure we can really guess what the student meant, but I do know for sure that she was wrong. If you add up a sixth of a six-pack and a sixth of another six-pack you get a sixth of two six-packs -- two twelveths.…