Gábor Hárs
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Gábor Hárs
Gábor (sometimes written Gabor) may refer to: * Gábor (given name) * Gabor (surname) * Gabor sisters, the three famous actresses, Eva Gabor, Eva, Magda Gabor, Magda and Zsa Zsa Gabor, Zsa Zsa * Several scientific terms named after Dennis Gabor ** Gabor atom ** Gabor filter, a linear filter used in image processing ** Gabor transform ** Gabor Medal, a medal of Royal Society awarded to biologists {{DEFAULTSORT:Gabor ...
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Gábor (given Name)
Gábor (sometimes written Gabor; ) is a common male Hungarian given name. Its equivalent in English is Gabriel. List of people with the given name Gábor * Gábor Andreánszky, Hungarian politician * Gábor Andreánszky, Hungarian botanist, paleobotanist and explorer * Gábor Baross, Hungarian politician * Gábor Báthory, Prince of Transylvania * Gábor Bethlen, Prince of Transylvania * Gábor Bódy, Hungarian director * Gábor Csupó, Hungarian animator * Gábor Darvas, Hungarian composer and musicologist * Gábor Döbrentei, Hungarian philologist and antiquary * Gábor Domokos, Hungarian engineer, developer of the Gömböc * Gábor Gyepes, Hungarian footballer * Gábor Harangozó, Hungarian politician * Gabor Herman, researcher in the field of computed tomography * Gábor Horváth (canoeist), Hungarian flatwater canoeist * Gábor Király, Hungarian football goalkeeper * Gábor Kuncze, Hungarian politician * Gábor Maté, Hungarian-born Canadian physician * Gabor Sa ...
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Gabor (surname)
Gabor or Gábor is a Hungarian surname. People so named include: * B. B. Gabor, stage name of Gabor Hegedus (1948–1990), Hungary-born Canadian pop singer * Bethlen Gábor, Hungarian spelling of Gabriel Bethlen (1580–1629), King of Hungary, Prince of Transylvania and a leader of an anti-Habsburg insurrection in Royal Hungary * Bill Gabor (1922–2019), American basketball player * Dennis Gabor (1900–1979), Hungarian-born British physicist and electrical engineer, Nobel Prize winner for inventing holography * Eva Gabor (1919–1995), Hungarian-born American actress, sister of Magda and Zsa Zsa * Jolie Gabor (1896–1997), Hungarian-American entrepreneur, jeweler and memoirist, mother of Eva, Magda and Zsa Zsa Gabor * Magda Gabor (1915–1997), Hungarian entertainer, sister of Eva and Zsa Zsa * Sasha Gabor (or Sárközy Gábor) (1945–2008), Hungarian-Norwegian (porn) actor and director * Tamás Gábor (1932–2007), Hungarian Olympic champion épée fencer * Viki Gab ...
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Gabor Sisters
The Gabor sisters were three Hungarian-American actresses/socialites: Magda (June 11, 1915 – June 6, 1997), Zsa Zsa (February 6, 1917 – December 18, 2016), and Eva (February 11, 1919 – July 4, 1995). Born in Budapest, Hungary, the trio relocated to the United States in hopes of starting film careers. Outside of their careers, they were each well known for their serial matrimony: Magda was married six times; Zsa Zsa nine times; and Eva five times. British actor George Sanders was first married to Zsa Zsa and later to Magda, though the latter marriage only lasted one month. History The Gabor sisters were born into a family of Hungarian-Jewish background, in Budapest, Hungary to parents Vilmos and Jolie Gabor. The family moved to New York in the wake of World War II. Magda had played a small role in a Hungarian film before the war, so Jolie and her three daughters moved to Hollywood to break into the film business. Eva was the first of the sisters to immigrate to the US, sho ...
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Eva Gabor
Eva Gabor ( ; February 11, 1919 – July 4, 1995) was a Hungarian-American actress, businesswoman, singer, and socialite. She voiced Duchess and Miss Bianca in the animated Disney Classics, ''The Aristocats'' (1970), ''The Rescuers'' (1977), and ''The Rescuers Down Under'' (1990). She was popular in her role on the 1965–71 television sitcom '' Green Acres'' as Lisa Douglas, the wife of Eddie Albert's character Oliver Wendell Douglas. Gabor was successful as an actress in film, on Broadway, and on television. She was also a successful businesswoman, marketing wigs, clothing, and beauty products. Her elder sisters, Zsa Zsa and Magda Gabor, were also actresses and socialites. Early life and career Gabor was born in Budapest, Hungary, the youngest of three daughters of Vilmos Gábor, a soldier, and his wife, trained jeweler Jolie (born Janka Tilleman). Her parents were both from Hungarian Jewish families. She was the first of the sisters to immigrate to the U.S., shortly after ...
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Magda Gabor
Magdolna "Magda" Gabor (June 11, 1915 – June 6, 1997) was a Hungarian-American actress and socialite, and the elder sister of Zsa Zsa and Eva Gabor. Early life The eldest daughter of a jeweler, Jolie (1896–1997), and a soldier, Vilmos Gábor (1881–1962), she was born in 1915 in Budapest. Her parents were both from Jewish families. She is listed in ''Hungary: Jewish Names from the Central Zionist Archives'', under her first married name, as "Magda Bychowsky".The online database is based in Provo, Utah: The Generations Network, Inc. (2008); information accessed at http://www.ancestry.com on December 30, 2011. During World War II, Gabor was reported to have been the fiancée of the Portuguese ambassador to Hungary, Carlos Sampaio Garrido; another source claims she was his mistress and another claims she was his aide. After she fled to Portugal in 1944, following the Nazi occupation of Hungary, and, with Sampaio's assistance, she was reportedly the mistress of a Spanish nob ...
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Zsa Zsa Gabor
Zsa Zsa Gabor (, ; born Sári Gábor ; February 6, 1917 – December 18, 2016) was a Hungarian Americans, Hungarian-American socialite and actress. Her sisters were actresses Eva Gabor, Eva and Magda Gabor. Gabor competed in the 1933 Miss Hungary pageant, where she placed as second runner-up, and began her stage career in Vienna the following year. She emigrated from Hungary to the United States in 1941. Becoming a sought-after actress with "European flair and style", she was considered to have a personality that "exuded charm and grace". Her first film role was a supporting role in ''Lovely to Look At'' (1952). She later acted in ''We're Not Married!'' (1952) and played one of her few leading roles in the John Huston-directed film, ''Moulin Rouge (1952 film), Moulin Rouge'' (1952). Huston would later describe her as a "creditable" actress. Outside her acting career, Gabor was known for her extravagant Hollywood lifestyle, her glamorous personality, and her many marriages ...
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Dennis Gabor
Dennis Gabor ( ; hu, Gábor Dénes, ; 5 June 1900 – 9 February 1979) was a Hungarian-British electrical engineer and physicist, most notable for inventing holography, for which he later received the 1971 Nobel Prize in Physics. He obtained British citizenship in 1934, and spent most of his life in England. Life and career Gabor was born as Günszberg Dénes, into a Jewish family in Budapest, Hungary. In 1918, his family converted to Lutheranism. Dennis was the first-born son of Günszberg Bernát and Jakobovits Adél. Despite having a religious background, religion played a minor role in his later life and he considered himself agnostic. In 1902, the family received permission to change their surname from Günszberg to Gábor. He served with the Hungarian artillery in northern Italy during World War I. He began his studies in engineering at the Technical University of Budapest in 1918, later in Germany, at the Charlottenburg Technical University in Berlin, now known as t ...
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Gabor Atom
In applied mathematics, Gabor atoms, or Gabor functions, are functions used in the analysis proposed by Dennis Gabor in 1946 in which a family of functions is built from translations and modulations of a generating function. Overview In 1946, Dennis Gabor suggested the idea of using a granular system to produce sound. In his work, Gabor discussed the problems with Fourier analysis. Although he found the mathematics to be correct, it did not reflect the behaviour of sound in the world, because sounds, such as the sound of a siren, have variable frequencies over time. Another problem was the underlying supposition, as we use sine waves analysis, that the signal under concern has infinite duration even though sounds in real life have limited duration – see time–frequency analysis. Gabor applied ideas from quantum physics to sound, allowing an analogy between sound and quanta. He proposed a mathematical method to reduce Fourier analysis into cells. His research aimed at the info ...
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Gabor Filter
In image processing, a Gabor filter, named after Dennis Gabor, is a linear filter used for texture analysis, which essentially means that it analyzes whether there is any specific frequency content in the image in specific directions in a localized region around the point or region of analysis. Frequency and orientation representations of Gabor filters are claimed by many contemporary vision scientists to be similar to those of the human visual system. They have been found to be particularly appropriate for texture representation and discrimination. In the spatial domain, a 2-D Gabor filter is a Gaussian kernel function modulated by a sinusoidal plane wave (see Gabor transform). Some authors claim that simple cells in the visual cortex of mammalian brains can be modeled by Gabor functions. Thus, image analysis with Gabor filters is thought by some to be similar to perception in the human visual system. Definition Its impulse response is defined by a sinusoidal wave (a plane ...
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Gabor Transform
The Gabor transform, named after Dennis Gabor, is a special case of the short-time Fourier transform. It is used to determine the sinusoidal frequency and phase content of local sections of a signal as it changes over time. The function to be transformed is first multiplied by a Gaussian function, which can be regarded as a window function, and the resulting function is then transformed with a Fourier transform to derive the time-frequency analysis.E. Sejdić, I. Djurović, J. Jiang, “Time-frequency feature representation using energy concentration: An overview of recent advances,” ''Digital Signal Processing'', vol. 19, no. 1, pp. 153-183, January 2009. The window function means that the signal near the time being analyzed will have higher weight. The Gabor transform of a signal ''x''(''t'') is defined by this formula: : G_x(\tau,\omega) = \int_^\infty x(t)e^e^\,dt The Gaussian function has infinite range and it is impractical for implementation. However, a level of signific ...
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