78,146 research outputs found

    Thinking with darkmatter: Re-routing race in the networks of info-capitalism

    Get PDF
    In the form of a discussion the founding editors of darkmatter journal reflect on the challenges of developing an online race project in the neoliberal context of knowledge production. The independent open access journal, operating at the borders of academia, attempts to grasp the shifting contours of contemporary race and racism in a networked postcolonial world. Against the limitations of solely working within disciplines such as Postcolonial or Cultural Studies, darkmatter brings into dialogue a diverse range of conceptual frameworks to address the proliferation of race discourses. Interrogating and reworking the developments in digital publishing, the project constructs a space for the exploration and dissemination of race thinking and creating relations between different fields, sites and groups. The threats posed by the info-colonialism of corporate academic publishing are transversed through the evolution of darkmatter with its experiments in techno-cultural design and innovations in autonomous working practices

    Studying and Modeling the Connection between People's Preferences and Content Sharing

    Full text link
    People regularly share items using online social media. However, people's decisions around sharing---who shares what to whom and why---are not well understood. We present a user study involving 87 pairs of Facebook users to understand how people make their sharing decisions. We find that even when sharing to a specific individual, people's own preference for an item (individuation) dominates over the recipient's preferences (altruism). People's open-ended responses about how they share, however, indicate that they do try to personalize shares based on the recipient. To explain these contrasting results, we propose a novel process model of sharing that takes into account people's preferences and the salience of an item. We also present encouraging results for a sharing prediction model that incorporates both the senders' and the recipients' preferences. These results suggest improvements to both algorithms that support sharing in social media and to information diffusion models.Comment: CSCW 201

    On the Generalized Class of PR\mathcal{P}\mathcal{R}-warped product submanifolds in para-K\"{a}hler Manifolds

    Full text link
    In this paper, we study a new generalized class of PR\mathcal{P}\mathcal{R}-warped product submanifolds under the name PR\mathcal{P}\mathcal{R}-pseudo-slant warped product submanifolds in para-K\"{a}hler manifolds Mˉ\bar{M}. The results of existence and non-existence for PR\mathcal{P}\mathcal{R}-pseudo-slant warped product submanifolds with proper slant factor in Mˉ\bar{M} are shown. In addition to these results, we give an elementary illustration of such warped product submanifold in Mˉ\bar{M}.Comment: Welcome. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1601.0171

    Reply on `comment on our paper `Single two-level ion in an anharmonic-oscillator trap: Time evolution of the Q function and population inversion ''

    Get PDF
    We show here that the model Hamiltonian used in our paper for ion vibrating in a q-analog harmonic oscillator trap and interacting with a classical single-mode light field is indeed obtained by replacing the usual bosonic creation and annihilation operators of the harmonic trap model by their q-deformed counterparts. The approximations made in our paper amount to using for the ion-laser interaction in a q-analog harmonic oscillator trap, the operator F_{q}=exp{-(|\epsilon|^2}/2)}exp{i\epsilon A^{\dagger}}exp{i\epsilon A}, which is analogous to the corresponding operator for ion in a harmonic oscillator trap that is F=exp−(∣ϵ∣2/2)expiϵa†expiϵaF=exp{-(|\epsilon|^2 /2)}exp{i\epsilon a^{\dagger }}exp{i\epsilon a}. In our article we do not claim to have diagonalized the operator, Fq=expiϵ(A†+A)F_q = exp{i \epsilon (A^{\dagger}+A)}, for which the basis states |g,m> and |e,m> are not analytic vectors.Comment: Revtex, 4pages. To be Published in Physical Review A59, NO.4(April 99

    Methods for the Study of Transverse Momentum Differential Correlations

    Full text link
    We introduce and compare three differential correlation functions for the study of transverse momentum correlation in p+pp+p and A+AA+A collisions. These consist of {\it inclusive}, {\it event-wise} and a differential version of the correlation measure C~\tilde C introduced by Gavin \cite{Gavin} for experimental study of the viscosity per unit entropy of the matter produced in A+AA+A collisions. We study the quantitative difference between the three observables on the basis of PYTHIA simulations of p+pp+p collisions and A+AA+A collisions consisting of an arbitrary superposition of p+pp+p collision events at s=\sqrt{s} = 200 GeV. We observe that {\it inclusive} and {\it event-wise} correlation functions are remarkably identical to each other where as the observable C~\tilde C differs from the two. We study the robustness and efficiency dependencies of these observables based on truncated Taylor expansions in efficiency in p+pp+p collisions and on the basis of Monte Carlo simulation using an adhoc detector efficiency parameterization. We find that all the three observables are essentially independent of detector efficiency. We additionally study the scaling of the correlation measures and find all the observables exhibit an approximate 1/N1/N dependence of the number of participants ({\it N}) in A+AA+A collisions. Finally, we study the impact of flow-like anisotropy on the {\it inclusive} correlation function and find flow imparts azimuthal modulations similar to those observed with two-particle densities.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figure
    • …
    corecore