1,449 research outputs found
A Note on “A Catalog of Biases in Questionnaires”
The authors of A Catalog of Biases in Questionnaires in the January issue (1) provide a useful catalog of questionnaire biases, but in one of their examples, their recommended response is guilty of the same bias. This error occurs in Overlapping Interval
On the capacities of bipartite Hamiltonians and unitary gates
We consider interactions as bidirectional channels. We investigate the
capacities for interaction Hamiltonians and nonlocal unitary gates to generate
entanglement and transmit classical information. We give analytic expressions
for the entanglement generating capacity and entanglement-assisted one-way
classical communication capacity of interactions, and show that these
quantities are additive, so that the asymptotic capacities equal the
corresponding 1-shot capacities. We give general bounds on other capacities,
discuss some examples, and conclude with some open questions.Comment: V3: extensively rewritten. V4: a mistaken reference to a conjecture
by Kraus and Cirac [quant-ph/0011050] removed and a mistake in the order of
authors in Ref. [53] correcte
Applications of coherent classical communication and the Schur transform to quantum information theory
Quantum mechanics has led not only to new physical theories, but also a new
understanding of information and computation. Quantum information began by
yielding new methods for achieving classical tasks such as factoring and key
distribution but also suggests a completely new set of quantum problems, such
as sending quantum information over quantum channels or efficiently performing
particular basis changes on a quantum computer. This thesis contributes two
new, purely quantum, tools to quantum information theory--coherent classical
communication in the first half and an efficient quantum circuit for the Schur
transform in the second half.Comment: 176 pages. Chapters 1 and 4 are a slightly older version of
quant-ph/0512015. Chapter 2 is quant-ph/0205057 plus unpublished extensions
(slightly outdated by quant-ph/0511219) and chapter 3 is quant-ph/0307091,
quant-ph/0412126 and change. Chapters 5-8 are based on quant-ph/0407082, but
go much furthe
Superdense coding of quantum states
We describe a method to non-obliviously communicate a 2l-qubit quantum state
by physically transmitting l+o(l) qubits of communication, and by consuming l
ebits of entanglement and some shared random bits. In the non-oblivious
scenario, the sender has a classical description of the state to be
communicated. Our method can be used to communicate states that are pure or
entangled with the sender's system; l+o(l) and 3l+o(l) shared random bits are
sufficient respectively.Comment: 5 pages, revtex
Allopurinol use yields potentially beneficial effects on inflammatory indices in those with recent ischemic stroke: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial
<p><b>Background and Purpose</b>: Elevated serum uric acid level is associated with poor outcome and increased risk of recurrent events after stroke. The xanthine oxidase inhibitor allopurinol lowers uric acid but also attenuates expression of inflammatory adhesion molecules in murine models, reduces oxidative stress in the vasculature, and improves endothelial function. We sought to investigate whether allopurinol alters expression of inflammatory markers after acute ischemic stroke.</p>
<p><b>Methods</b>: We performed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to investigate the safety, tolerability, and effect of 6 weeks’ treatment with high- (300 mg once a day) or low- (100 mg once a day) dose allopurinol on levels of uric acid and circulating inflammatory markers after ischemic stroke.</p>
<p><b>Results</b>: We enrolled 50 patients with acute ischemic stroke (17, 17, and 16 in the high, low, and placebo groups, respectively). Mean (±SD) age was 70 (±13) years. Groups had similar characteristics at baseline. There were no serious adverse events. Uric acid levels were significantly reduced at both 7 days and 6 weeks in the high-dose group (by 0.14 mmol/L at 6 weeks, P=0.002). Intercellular adhesion molecule-1 concentration (ng/mL) rose by 51.2 in the placebo group, rose slightly (by 10.6) in the low-dose allopurinol group, but fell in the high-dose group (by 2.6; difference between groups P=0.012, Kruskal-Wallis test).</p>
<p><b>Conclusion</b>: Allopurinol treatment is well tolerated and attenuates the rise in intercellular adhesion molecule-1 levels seen after stroke. Uric acid levels were lowered with high doses. These findings support further evaluation of allopurinol as a preventive measure after stroke.</p>
Compressibility of positive semidefinite factorizations and quantum models
We investigate compressibility of the dimension of positive semidefinite
matrices while approximately preserving their pairwise inner products. This can
either be regarded as compression of positive semidefinite factorizations of
nonnegative matrices or (if the matrices are subject to additional
normalization constraints) as compression of quantum models. We derive both
lower and upper bounds on compressibility. Applications are broad and range
from the statistical analysis of experimental data to bounding the one-way
quantum communication complexity of Boolean functions.Comment: 13 page
Uselessness for an Oracle Model with Internal Randomness
We consider a generalization of the standard oracle model in which the oracle
acts on the target with a permutation selected according to internal random
coins. We describe several problems that are impossible to solve classically
but can be solved by a quantum algorithm using a single query; we show that
such infinity-vs-one separations between classical and quantum query
complexities can be constructed from much weaker separations.
We also give conditions to determine when oracle problems---either in the
standard model, or in any of the generalizations we consider---cannot be solved
with success probability better than random guessing would achieve. In the
oracle model with internal randomness where the goal is to gain any nonzero
advantage over guessing, we prove (roughly speaking) that quantum queries
are equivalent in power to classical queries, thus extending results of
Meyer and Pommersheim.Comment: 18 pages. v2. shortened, presentation improved, same result
AnnoTrack - a tracking system for genome annotation
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>As genome sequences are determined for increasing numbers of model organisms, demand has grown for better tools to facilitate unified genome annotation efforts by communities of biologists. Typically this process involves numerous experts from the field and the use of data from dispersed sources as evidence. This kind of collaborative annotation project requires specialized software solutions for efficient data tracking and processing.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>As part of the scale-up phase of the ENCODE project (Encyclopedia of DNA Elements), the aim of the GENCODE project is to produce a highly accurate evidence-based reference gene annotation for the human genome. The <it>AnnoTrack </it>software system was developed to aid this effort. It integrates data from multiple distributed sources, highlights conflicts and facilitates the quick identification, prioritisation and resolution of problems during the process of genome annotation.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>AnnoTrack has been in use for the last year and has proven a very valuable tool for large-scale genome annotation. Designed to interface with standard bioinformatics components, such as DAS servers and Ensembl databases, it is easy to setup and configure for different genome projects. The source code is available at <url>http://annotrack.sanger.ac.uk</url>.</p
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