2,793,407 research outputs found
Translation-Rotation Coupling in Transient Grating Experiments : Theoretical and Experimental Evidences
The results of a Transient Grating experiment in a supercooled molecular
liquid of anisotropic molecules and its theoretical interpretation are
presented. These results show the existence of two distinct dynamical
contributions in the response function of this experiment, density and
orientation dynamics. These dynamics can be experimentally disentangled by
varying the polarisation of the probe and diffracted beams and they have been
identified and measured in a Heterodyne Detected experiment performed on
m-toluidine. The results of the theory show a good qualitative agreement with
the measurements at all temperatures.Comment: PDF format, 14 pages including 4 figures, accepted for publication in
EPL. minor modification
Resolving the SELEX--LHCb Double-Charm Baryon Conflict: The Impact of Intrinsic Heavy-Quark Hadroproduction and Supersymmetric Light-Front Holographic QCD
In this paper we show that the intrinsic heavy-quark QCD mechanism for the
hadroproduction of heavy hadrons at large can resolve the apparent
conflict between measurements of double-charm baryons by the SELEX fixed-target
experiment and the LHCb experiment at the LHC collider. We show that both
experiments are compatible, and that both results can be correct. The observed
spectroscopy of double-charm hadrons is in agreement with the predictions of
supersymmetric light front holographic QCD.Comment: 15 pages, no figur
Experimental Study Using Functional Size Measurement in Building Estimation Models for Software Project Size
This paper reports on an experiment that investigates the predictability of software project size from software product size. The predictability research problem is analyzed at the stage of early requirements by accounting the size of functional requirements as well as the size of non-functional requirements. The experiment was carried out with 55 graduate students in Computer Science from Concordia University in Canada. In the experiment, a functional size measure and a project size measure were used in building estimation models for sets of web application development projects. The results show that project size is predictable from product size. Further replications of the experiment are, however, planed to obtain more results to confirm or disconfirm our claim
Global Precedence In Visual Search? Not So Fast: Evidence Instead For An Oblique Effect
The evidence from an earlier report of global precedence in visual search is reexamined, Two new experiments are reported. The results of the first experiment indicate that the confusability of oblique orientations (a class-2 oblique effect) rather than global precedence was responsible for the earlier results. The results of the second experiment show that the effect critically depends on the presence of heterogeneous distracters rather than on differences in raw processing speed for different spatial scales. The possible role of symmetry is discussed
Algorithm selection on data streams
We explore the possibilities of meta-learning on data streams, in particular algorithm selection. In a first experiment we calculate the characteristics of a small sample of a data stream, and try to predict which classifier performs best on the entire stream. This yields promising results and interesting patterns. In a second experiment, we build a meta-classifier that predicts, based on measurable data characteristics in a window of the data stream, the best classifier for the next window. The results show that this meta-algorithm is very competitive with state of the art ensembles, such as OzaBag, OzaBoost and Leveraged Bagging. The results of all experiments are made publicly available in an online experiment database, for the purpose of verifiability, reproducibility and generalizability
How Close are the Edges of a Closed Fracture?
A laboratory experiment is peresented where the theory of amplitude reflection tuning in thin beds is tested. The results show a very good agreement with the theory previsio
Viewing a Graph in a Virtual Reality Display is Three Times as Good as a 2D Diagram
An experiment is reported which tests whether network information is more effectively displayed in a three dimensional space than in a two dimensional space. The experimental task is to trace a path in a network and the experiment is carried out in 2D, in a 3D stereo view, in a 2D view with head coupled perspective, and in a 3D stereo view with head coupled perspective; this last condition creates a localized virtual reality display. The results show that the motion parallax obtained from the head coupling of perspective is more important than stereopsis in revealing structural information. Overall the results show that three times as much information can be perceived in the head coupled stereo view as in the 2D view
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