2,586,410 research outputs found
Phase Diagrams of Three-Dimensional Anderson and Quantum Percolation Models using Deep Three-Dimensional Convolutional Neural Network
The three-dimensional Anderson model is a well-studied model of disordered
electron systems that shows the delocalization--localization transition. As in
our previous papers on two- and three-dimensional (2D, 3D) quantum phase
transitions [J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. {\bf 85}, 123706 (2016), {\bf 86}, 044708
(2017)], we used an image recognition algorithm based on a multilayered
convolutional neural network. However, in contrast to previous papers in which
2D image recognition was used, we applied 3D image recognition to analyze
entire 3D wave functions. We show that a full phase diagram of the
disorder-energy plane is obtained once the 3D convolutional neural network has
been trained at the band center. We further demonstrate that the full phase
diagram for 3D quantum bond and site percolations can be drawn by training the
3D Anderson model at the band center.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures. Published versio
Journal Staff
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 18th Scandinavian Conference on Image Analysis, SCIA 2013, held in Espoo, Finland, in June 2013. The 67 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 132 submissions. The papers are organized in topical sections on feature extraction and segmentation, pattern recognition and machine learning, medical and biomedical image analysis, faces and gestures, object and scene recognition, matching, registration, and alignment, 3D vision, color and multispectral image analysis, motion analysis, systems and applications, human-centered computing, and video and multimedia analysis
The KK-theory of amalgamated free products
We prove a long exact sequence in KK-theory for both full and reduced
amalgamated free products in the presence of conditional expectations. In the
course of the proof, we established the KK-equivalence between the full
amalgamated free product of two unital C*-algebras and a newly defined reduced
amalgamated free product that is valid even for non GNS-faithful conditional
expectations. Our results unify, simplify and generalize all the previous
results obtained before by Cuntz, Germain and Thomsen.Comment: V.3, the paper has been splitted into two papers, this is the first
part on amalgamated free product
Two-dimensional full particle simulation of a perpendicular collisionless shock with a shock-rest-frame model
A two-dimensional (2D) shock-rest-frame model for particle simulations is
developed. Then full kinetic dynamics of a perpendicular collisionless shock is
examined by means of a 2D full particle simulation. We found that in the 2D
simulation there are fewer nonthermal electrons due to surfing acceleration
which was seen in the previous 1D simulations of a high Mach number
perpendicular shock in a low-beta and weakly magnetized plasma. This is because
the particle motion along the ambient magnetic field disturbs the formation of
coherent electrostatic solitary structures which is necessary for electron
surfing acceleration.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, ApJL in press. The paper with full resolution
images is
http://theo.phys.sci.hiroshima-u.ac.jp/~ryo/papers/shock_rest_2D.pd
Replications and Extensions in Marketing – Rarely Published But Quite Contrary
Replication is rare in marketing. Of 1,120 papers sampled from three major marketing journals, none were replications. Only 1.8% of the papers were extensions, and they consumed 1.1% of the journal space. On average, these extensions appeared seven years after the original study. The publication rate for such works has been decreasing since the 1970s. Published extensions typically produced results that conflicted with the original studies; of the 20 extensions published, 12 conflicted with the earlier results, and only 3 provided full confirmation. Published replications do not attract as many citations after publication as do the original studies, even when the results fail to support the original studies
Country institutional report: New Zealand
Waikato University pioneered the development of Women’s Studies as an academic discipline in New Zealand, with the first paper on this subject being offered in 1974. By 1982, a programme of papers was offered within five departments and the subject could be taken as a second supporting subject. A Centre for Women’s Studies was established in 1986, and, by 1988, was offering five taught core undergraduate papers and six electives, all of which could be taken towards a first or second support. A supporting BSocSci major in Women’s Studies became available in 1988, along with a Diploma in Women’s Studies. The full major became available in 1990. At this time, the major comprised a limited selection of core Women’s Studies papers complemented by a wider range of elective papers offered by other departments. This structure ensured that the programme had strong interdisciplinary, and in some cases inter-faculty linkages, along with wide support across the university through a network of elective teachers. These linkages appear to have facilitated strong growth in student numbers during the late 1980s and early 1990s
Finding similar research papers using language models
The task of assessing the similarity of research papers is of interest in a variety of application contexts. It is a challenging task, however, as the full text of the papers is often not available, and similarity needs to be determined based on the papers' abstract, and some additional features such as authors, keywords, and journal. Our work explores the possibility of adapting language modeling techniques to this end. The basic strategy we pursue is to augment the information contained in the abstract by interpolating the corresponding language model with language models for the authors, keywords and journal of the paper. This strategy is then extended by finding topics and additionally interpolating with the resulting topic models. These topics are found using an adaptation of Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA), in which the keywords that were provided by the authors are used to guide the process
Unsteady hybrid vortex technique for transonic vortex flows and flutter application
Papers resulting from work performed from January 1, 1987 to July 31, 1987 are listed. Transonic computational schemes based on Integral Equation Formulation of the full potential equation were presented. Classical and zero-total pressure-loss sets of Euler equations applied to delta wings were examined
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