6,168 research outputs found
Discovering Evolutionary Stepping Stones through Behavior Domination
Behavior domination is proposed as a tool for understanding and harnessing
the power of evolutionary systems to discover and exploit useful stepping
stones. Novelty search has shown promise in overcoming deception by collecting
diverse stepping stones, and several algorithms have been proposed that combine
novelty with a more traditional fitness measure to refocus search and help
novelty search scale to more complex domains. However, combinations of novelty
and fitness do not necessarily preserve the stepping stone discovery that
novelty search affords. In several existing methods, competition between
solutions can lead to an unintended loss of diversity. Behavior domination
defines a class of algorithms that avoid this problem, while inheriting
theoretical guarantees from multiobjective optimization. Several existing
algorithms are shown to be in this class, and a new algorithm is introduced
based on fast non-dominated sorting. Experimental results show that this
algorithm outperforms existing approaches in domains that contain useful
stepping stones, and its advantage is sustained with scale. The conclusion is
that behavior domination can help illuminate the complex dynamics of
behavior-driven search, and can thus lead to the design of more scalable and
robust algorithms.Comment: To Appear in Proceedings of the Genetic and Evolutionary Computation
Conference (GECCO 2017
A High-Fidelity Realization of the Euclid Code Comparison -body Simulation with Abacus
We present a high-fidelity realization of the cosmological -body
simulation from the Schneider et al. (2016) code comparison project. The
simulation was performed with our Abacus -body code, which offers high force
accuracy, high performance, and minimal particle integration errors. The
simulation consists of particles in a box,
for a particle mass of with $10\
h^{-1}\mathrm{kpc}z=0<0.3\%k<10\
\mathrm{Mpc}^{-1}h0.01\%$. Simulation snapshots are available at
http://nbody.rc.fas.harvard.edu/public/S2016 .Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures. Minor changes to match MNRAS accepted versio
Bringing Climate Politics Home: Lived Experiences of Flooding and Housing Insecurity in a Natural Gas Boomtown
As the extraction of shale gas and oil transforms localities, these places emerge as important if understudied sites of contemporary carbon politics. In this paper, we develop a new approach for examining lived connections between fossil fuel extraction and climate change. We propose the concept of carbon mobilization to describe the multiple stages of fossil fuel extraction and combustion that may be experienced separately (as an economic boom, climate disaster, or air pollution, for example) or simultaneously, in locally distinctive combinations – but until now have been considered separately in most scholarship and public policy. We explore lived experiences of carbon mobilization in Bradford County, Pennsylvania, a community that, in the last decade, has gone through a shale gas boom and bust and has suffered from severe flooding. Interviews with social service providers and county leaders indicated that connections between the fossil fuel industry and climate disaster manifested most saliently around housing security—particularly the loss of housing due to floods and economic insecurity related to boom-bust cycles. Economic changes that gas development brought to the community made flood resilience more challenging for some, and easier for others. Perhaps surprisingly, the natural gas industry was a “double winner,” benefitting from climate disaster by gaining a reputation for helping with flood recovery. We suggest that while global climate discourse may not resonate locally in communities that host fossil fuel extraction, people make locally-salient connections between different stages of carbon mobilization, and these connections have important public policy and social justice implications
Importance of Baryon-Baryon Coupling in Hypernuclei
The coupling in --hypernuclei and coupling in --hypernuclei produce novel
physics not observed in the conventional, nonstrange sector. Effects of
conversion in H are reviewed.
The role of coupling suppression in the
--hypernuclei due to Pauli blocking is highlighted, and the
implications for the structure of B are explored.
Suppression of conversion in He is hypothesized as the reason that the
matrix element is small. Measurement of H is
proposed to investigate the full interaction. The
implication for analog states is discussed.Comment: 17 pages LATEX, 1 figure uuencoded postscrip
Separator development for a heat sterilizable battery Final summary progress report, 1 May 1966 - 15 Mar. 1967
Development and testing of vivyl polymer separator materials for sterilized silver-zinc secondary batter
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FABRIC: A National-Scale Programmable Experimental Network Infrastructure
FABRIC is a unique national research infrastructure to enable cutting-edge and exploratory research at-scale in networking, cybersecurity, distributed computing and storage systems, machine learning, and science applications. It is an everywhere-programmable nationwide instrument comprised of novel extensible network elements equipped with large amounts of compute and storage, interconnected by high speed, dedicated optical links. It will connect a number of specialized testbeds for cloud research (NSF Cloud testbeds CloudLab and Chameleon), for research beyond 5G technologies (Platforms for Advanced Wireless Research or PAWR), as well as production high-performance computing facilities and science instruments to create a rich fabric for a wide variety of experimental activities
Learning the Designer's Preferences to Drive Evolution
This paper presents the Designer Preference Model, a data-driven solution
that pursues to learn from user generated data in a Quality-Diversity
Mixed-Initiative Co-Creativity (QD MI-CC) tool, with the aims of modelling the
user's design style to better assess the tool's procedurally generated content
with respect to that user's preferences. Through this approach, we aim for
increasing the user's agency over the generated content in a way that neither
stalls the user-tool reciprocal stimuli loop nor fatigues the user with
periodical suggestion handpicking. We describe the details of this novel
solution, as well as its implementation in the MI-CC tool the Evolutionary
Dungeon Designer. We present and discuss our findings out of the initial tests
carried out, spotting the open challenges for this combined line of research
that integrates MI-CC with Procedural Content Generation through Machine
Learning.Comment: 16 pages, Accepted and to appear in proceedings of the 23rd European
Conference on the Applications of Evolutionary and bio-inspired Computation,
EvoApplications 202
The Abacus Cosmos: A Suite of Cosmological N-body Simulations
We present a public data release of halo catalogs from a suite of 125
cosmological -body simulations from the Abacus project. The simulations span
40 CDM cosmologies centered on the Planck 2015 cosmology at two mass
resolutions, and , in and
boxes, respectively. The boxes are phase-matched to
suppress sample variance and isolate cosmology dependence. Additional volume is
available via 16 boxes of fixed cosmology and varied phase; a few boxes of
single-parameter excursions from Planck 2015 are also provided. Catalogs
spanning to are available for friends-of-friends and Rockstar
halo finders and include particle subsamples. All data products are available
at https://lgarrison.github.io/AbacusCosmosComment: 13 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables. Additional figures added for mass
resolution convergence tests, and additional redshifts added for existing
tests. Matches ApJS accepted versio
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