23,552 research outputs found
Why "consciousness" means what it does.
âConsciousnessâ seems to be a polysemic, ambiguous, term. Because of this, theorists have sought to distinguish the different kinds of phenomena that âconsciousnessâ denotes, leading to a proliferation of terms for different kinds of consciousness. However, some philosophersâunivocalists about consciousnessâargue that âconsciousnessâ is not polysemic or ambiguous. By drawing upon the history of philosophy and psychology, and some resources from semantic theory, univocalism about consciousness is shown to be implausible. This finding is important, for if we accept the univocalist account then we are less likely to subject our thought and talk about the mind to the kind of critical analysis that it needs. The exploration of the semantics of âconsciousnessâ offered here, by way of contrast, clarifies and fine-tunes our thought and talk about consciousness and conscious mentality and explains why âconsciousnessâ means what it does, and why it means a number of different, but related, things
Evaluation of Intelligent Intrusion Detection Models
This paper discusses an evaluation methodology that can be used to assess the performance of intelligent techniques at detecting, as well as predicting, unauthorised activities in networks. The effectiveness and the performance of any developed intrusion detection model will be determined by means of evaluation and validation. The evaluation and the learning prediction performance for this task will be discussed, together with a description of validation procedures. The performance of developed detection models that incorporate intelligent elements can be evaluated using well known standard methods, such as matrix confusion, ROC curves and Lift charts. In this paper these methods, as well as other useful evaluation approaches, are discussed.Peer reviewe
Periodic homogenization with an interface
We consider a diffusion process with coefficients that are periodic outside
of an 'interface region' of finite thickness. The question investigated in the
articles [1,2] is the limiting long time / large scale behaviour of such a
process under diffusive rescaling. It is clear that outside of the interface,
the limiting process must behave like Brownian motion, with diffusion matrices
given by the standard theory of homogenization. The interesting behaviour
therefore occurs on the interface. Our main result is that the limiting process
is a semimartingale whose bounded variation part is proportional to the local
time spent on the interface. We also exhibit an explicit way of identifying its
parameters in terms of the coefficients of the original diffusion.
Our method of proof relies on the framework provided by Freidlin and Wentzell
for diffusion processes on a graph in order to identify the generator of the
limiting process.Comment: ISAAC 09 conference proceeding
Modifications to the Theory of the Differential Absorption Experiment
Use of Fresnel reflection coefficient for studying reflections from mesospher
Metal cooldown, flow instability, and heat transfer in two-phase hydrogen flow
Studies of the properties of five metals with varying tube-wall thickness, with or without and internal coating of trifluorochloroethylene polymer, show that wall characteristics influence flow stability, affect heat transfer coefficients, and influence the transition point from dry- to wet-wall flow
Does volatility improve UK earnings forecasts?
We investigate the relation between UK accounting earnings volatility and the level of future earnings using a unique sample comprising some 10,480 firm-year observations for 1,481 non-financial firms over the 1985-2003 period. The findings confirm the in-sample result of an inverse volatility-earnings relation only for the 1998-2003 sub-period and for the most profitable firms. The out-of-sample forecast accuracy for the top earnings quintile when volatility is added as a regressor is superior to the model including only lagged earnings. The findings are consistent with the over-investment hypothesis and the view that the earnings of the most volatile firms tend to mean-revert more rapidly
Attributing Benefits to Voluntary Programs in EPAâs Office of Resource Conservation and Recovery: Challenges and Options
This paper reviews the economic justification for voluntary environmental programs to derive defensible measures of their positive social outcomes. We consider ideal experimental and statistical designs to detect and attribute benefits. We also explore a set of more practical approaches to benefit attribution that take into account the data gaps and statistical challenges that often make more rigorous approaches infeasible.voluntary programs, costâbenefit assessment, program evaluation
- âŠ