13,883 research outputs found
CO or no CO? Narrowing the CO abundance constraint and recovering the H2O detection in the atmosphere of WASP-127 b using SPIRou
Precise measurements of chemical abundances in planetary atmospheres are
necessary to constrain the formation histories of exoplanets. A recent study of
WASP-127b, a close-in puffy sub-Saturn orbiting its solar-type host star in 4.2
d, using HST and Spitzer revealed a feature-rich transmission spectrum with
strong excess absorption at 4.5 um. However, the limited spectral resolution
and coverage of these instruments could not distinguish between CO and/or CO2
absorption causing this signal, with both low and high C/O ratio scenarios
being possible. Here we present near-infrared (0.9--2.5 um) transit
observations of WASP-127 b using the high-resolution SPIRou spectrograph, with
the goal to disentangle CO from CO2 through the 2.3 um CO band. With SPIRou, we
detect H2O at a t-test significance of 5.3 sigma and observe a tentative (3
sigma) signal consistent with OH absorption. From a joint SPIRou + HST +
Spitzer retrieval analysis, we rule out a CO-rich scenario by placing an upper
limit on the CO abundance of log10[CO]<-4.0, and estimate a log10[CO2] of
-3.7^(+0.8)_(-0.6), which is the level needed to match the excess absorption
seen at 4.5um. We also set abundance constraints on other major C-, O-, and
N-bearing molecules, with our results favoring low C/O (0.10^(+0.10)_(-0.06)),
disequilibrium chemistry scenarios. We further discuss the implications of our
results in the context of planet formation. Additional observations at high and
low-resolution will be needed to confirm these results and better our
understanding of this unusual world.Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures, Submitted for publication in the Monthly Notice
of the Royal Astronomical Societ
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Ensuring Access to Safe and Nutritious Food for All Through the Transformation of Food Systems
ARA-net: an attention-aware retinal atrophy segmentation network coping with fundus images
BackgroundAccurately detecting and segmenting areas of retinal atrophy are paramount for early medical intervention in pathological myopia (PM). However, segmenting retinal atrophic areas based on a two-dimensional (2D) fundus image poses several challenges, such as blurred boundaries, irregular shapes, and size variation. To overcome these challenges, we have proposed an attention-aware retinal atrophy segmentation network (ARA-Net) to segment retinal atrophy areas from the 2D fundus image.MethodsIn particular, the ARA-Net adopts a similar strategy as UNet to perform the area segmentation. Skip self-attention connection (SSA) block, comprising a shortcut and a parallel polarized self-attention (PPSA) block, has been proposed to deal with the challenges of blurred boundaries and irregular shapes of the retinal atrophic region. Further, we have proposed a multi-scale feature flow (MSFF) to challenge the size variation. We have added the flow between the SSA connection blocks, allowing for capturing considerable semantic information to detect retinal atrophy in various area sizes.ResultsThe proposed method has been validated on the Pathological Myopia (PALM) dataset. Experimental results demonstrate that our method yields a high dice coefficient (DICE) of 84.26%, Jaccard index (JAC) of 72.80%, and F1-score of 84.57%, which outperforms other methods significantly.ConclusionOur results have demonstrated that ARA-Net is an effective and efficient approach for retinal atrophic area segmentation in PM
Minimum income support systems as elements of crisis resilience in Europe: Final Report
Mindestsicherungssysteme dienen in den meisten entwickelten Wohlfahrtsstaaten als Sicherheitsnetz letzter Instanz. Dementsprechend spielen sie gerade in wirtschaftlichen Krisenzeiten eine besondere Rolle. Inwieweit Mindestsicherungssysteme in Zeiten der Krise beansprucht werden, hĂ€ngt auch von der AusprĂ€gung vorgelagerter Sozialschutzsysteme ab. Diese Studie untersucht die Bedeutung von Systemen der Mindestsicherung sowie vorgelagerter Systeme wie Arbeitslosenversicherung, Kurzarbeit und arbeitsrechtlichem Bestandsschutz fĂŒr die Krisenfestigkeit in Europa. Im Kontext der Finanzkrise von 2008/2009 und der Corona-Krise wird die FĂ€higkeit sozialpolitischer MaĂnahmen untersucht, Armut und EinkommensÂverluste einzudĂ€mmen und gesellschaftliche Ausgrenzung zu vermeiden. Die Studie setzt dabei auf quantitative und qualitative Methoden, etwa multivariate Analysen, Mikrosimulationsmethoden sowie eingehende Fallstudien der LĂ€nder DĂ€nemark, Frankreich, Irland, Polen und Spanien, die fĂŒr unterschiedliche Typen von Wohlfahrtsstaaten stehen.The aim of this study is to analyse the role of social policies in different European welfare states regarding minimum income protection and active inclusion. The core focus lies on crisis resilience, i.e. the capacity of social policy arrangements to contain poverty and inequality and avoid exclusion before, during and after periods of economic shocks. To achieve this goal, the study expands its analytical focus to include other tiers of social protection, in particular upstream systems such as unemployment insurance, job retention and employment protection, as they play an additional and potentially prominent role in providing income and job protection in situations of crisis. A mixed-method approach is used that combines quantitative and qualitative research, such as descriptive and multivariate quantitative analyses, microsimulation methods and in-depth case studies. The study finds consistent differences in terms of crisis resilience across countries and welfare state types. In general, Nordic and Continental European welfare states with strong upstream systems and minimum income support (MIS) show better outcomes in core socio-economic outcomes such as poverty and exclusion risks. However, labour market integration shows some dualisms in Continental Europe. The study shows that MIS holds particular importance if there are gaps in upstream systems or cases of severe and lasting crises
Exploring Potential Domains of Agroecological Transformation in the United States
There is now substantial evidence that agroecology constitutes a necessary pathway towards socially just and ecologically resilient agrifood systems. In the United States, however, agroecology remains relegated to the margins of research and policy spaces. This dissertation explores three potential domains of agroecological transformation in the US. Domains of transformation are sites of contestation in which agroecology interfaces with the industrial agrifood system; these material and conceptual spaces may point to important pathways for scaling agroecology. To explore this concept, I examine formal agroecology education (Chapter 1), extension services and statewide discourses around soil health (Chapter 2), and models of farmland access not based on private property (Chapter 3). While these constitute three distinct topics, I seek to demonstrate that they are linked by similar forces that enable and constrain the extent to which these domains can be sites of agroecological transformation.
First, I use case study methodology to explore the evolution of an advanced undergraduate agroecology course at the University of Vermont. I examine how course content and pedagogy align with a transformative framing of agroecology as inherently transdisciplinary, participatory, action-oriented, and political. I find that student-centered pedagogies and experiential education on farms successfully promote transformative learning whereby students shift their understanding of agrifood systems and their role(s) within them. In my second chapter, I zoom out to consider soil health discourses amongst farmers and extension professionals in Vermont. Using co-created mental models and participatory analysis, I find that a singular notion of soil health based on biological, chemical, and physical properties fails to capture the diverse ways in which farmers and extension professionals understand soil health. I advocate for a principles-based approach to soil health that includes social factors and may provide a valuable heuristic for mobilizing knowledge towards agroecology transition pathways. My third chapter, conducted in collaboration with the national non-profit organization Agrarian Trust, considers equitable farmland access. Through semi-structured interviews with 13 farmers and growers across the US, I explore both farmer motivations for engaging with alternative land access models (ALAMs) and the potential role(s) these models may play within broader transformation processes. I argue that ALAMs constitute material and conceptual âthird spacesâ within which the private property regime is challenged and new identities and language around land ownership can emerge; as such, ALAMs may facilitate a (re)imagining of land-based social-ecological relationships.
I conclude the dissertation by identifying conceptual and practical linkages across the domains explored in Chapters 1-3. I pay particular attention to processes that challenge neoliberal logics, enact plural ways of knowing, and prefigure just futures. In considering these concepts, I apply an expansive notion of pedagogy to explore how processes of teaching and (un)learning can contribute to cultivating foundational capacities for transition processes
Discovering the hidden structure of financial markets through bayesian modelling
Understanding what is driving the price of a financial asset is a question that is currently mostly unanswered. In this work we go beyond the classic one step ahead prediction and instead construct models that create new information on the behaviour of these time series. Our aim is to get a better understanding of the hidden structures that drive the moves of each financial time series and thus the market as a whole.
We propose a tool to decompose multiple time series into economically-meaningful variables to explain the endogenous and exogenous factors driving their underlying variability. The methodology we introduce goes beyond the direct model forecast. Indeed, since our model continuously adapts its variables and coefficients, we can study the time series of coefficients and selected variables. We also present a model to construct the causal graph of relations between these time series and include them in the exogenous factors.
Hence, we obtain a model able to explain what is driving the move of both each specific time series and the market as a whole. In addition, the obtained graph of the time series provides new information on the underlying risk structure of this environment. With this deeper understanding of the hidden structure we propose novel ways to detect and forecast risks in the market. We investigate our results with inferences up to one month into the future using stocks, FX futures and ETF futures, demonstrating its superior performance according to accuracy of large moves, longer-term prediction and consistency over time. We also go in more details on the economic interpretation of the new variables and discuss the created graph structure of the market.Open Acces
Neural Natural Language Generation: A Survey on Multilinguality, Multimodality, Controllability and Learning
Developing artificial learning systems that can understand and generate natural language has been one of the long-standing goals of artificial intelligence. Recent decades have witnessed an impressive progress on both of these problems, giving rise to a new family of approaches. Especially, the advances in deep learning over the past couple of years have led to neural approaches to natural language generation (NLG). These methods combine generative language learning techniques with neural-networks based frameworks. With a wide range of applications in natural language processing, neural NLG (NNLG) is a new and fast growing field of research. In this state-of-the-art report, we investigate the recent developments and applications of NNLG in its full extent from a multidimensional view, covering critical perspectives such as multimodality, multilinguality, controllability and learning strategies. We summarize the fundamental building blocks of NNLG approaches from these aspects and provide detailed reviews of commonly used preprocessing steps and basic neural architectures. This report also focuses on the seminal applications of these NNLG models such as machine translation, description generation, automatic speech recognition, abstractive summarization, text simplification, question answering and generation, and dialogue generation. Finally, we conclude with a thorough discussion of the described frameworks by pointing out some open research directions.This work has been partially supported by the European Commission ICT COST Action âMulti-task, Multilingual, Multi-modal Language Generationâ (CA18231). AE was supported by BAGEP 2021 Award of the Science Academy. EE was supported in part by TUBA GEBIP 2018 Award. BP is in in part funded by Independent Research Fund Denmark (DFF) grant 9063-00077B. IC has received funding from the European Unionâs Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 838188. EL is partly funded by Generalitat Valenciana and the Spanish Government throught projects PROMETEU/2018/089 and RTI2018-094649-B-I00, respectively. SMI is partly funded by UNIRI project uniri-drustv-18-20. GB is partly supported by the Ministry of Innovation and the National Research, Development and Innovation Office within the framework of the Hungarian Artificial Intelligence National Laboratory Programme. COT is partially funded by the Romanian Ministry of European Investments and Projects through the Competitiveness Operational Program (POC) project âHOLOTRAINâ (grant no. 29/221 ap2/07.04.2020, SMIS code: 129077) and by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) through the project âAWAKEN: content-Aware and netWork-Aware faKE News mitigationâ (grant no. 91809005). ESA is partially funded by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) through the project âDeep-Learning Anomaly Detection for Human and Automated Users Behaviorâ (grant no. 91809358)
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