115,364 research outputs found
On a Conjecture of Givental
These brief notes record our puzzles and findings surrounding Givental's
recent conjecture which expresses higher genus Gromov-Witten invariants in
terms of the genus-0 data. We limit our considerations to the case of a
projective line, whose Gromov-Witten invariants are well-known and easy to
compute. We make some simple checks supporting his conjecture.Comment: 13 pages, no figures; v.2: new title, minor change
On Perturbation Spectra of N-flation
In this note we study the adiabatic perturbation spectrum of N-flation with
power law potential. We show that the scalar spectrum of N-flation is generally
redder than that of its corresponding single field. The result obtained for
that with unequal massive fields is consistent with the recent numerical
investigation of Kim and Liddle.Comment: 3 pages, refs. added, comments added, typos corrected, abstract
changed, to publish in PRD brief repor
A Model of Consistent Node Types in Signed Directed Social Networks
Signed directed social networks, in which the relationships between users can
be either positive (indicating relations such as trust) or negative (indicating
relations such as distrust), are increasingly common. Thus the interplay
between positive and negative relationships in such networks has become an
important research topic. Most recent investigations focus upon edge sign
inference using structural balance theory or social status theory. Neither of
these two theories, however, can explain an observed edge sign well when the
two nodes connected by this edge do not share a common neighbor (e.g., common
friend). In this paper we develop a novel approach to handle this situation by
applying a new model for node types. Initially, we analyze the local node
structure in a fully observed signed directed network, inferring underlying
node types. The sign of an edge between two nodes must be consistent with their
types; this explains edge signs well even when there are no common neighbors.
We show, moreover, that our approach can be extended to incorporate directed
triads, when they exist, just as in models based upon structural balance or
social status theory. We compute Bayesian node types within empirical studies
based upon partially observed Wikipedia, Slashdot, and Epinions networks in
which the largest network (Epinions) has 119K nodes and 841K edges. Our
approach yields better performance than state-of-the-art approaches for these
three signed directed networks.Comment: To appear in the IEEE/ACM International Conference on Advances in
Social Network Analysis and Mining (ASONAM), 201
Large Scale Structure Formation of Normal Branch in DGP Brane World Model
In this paper, we study the large scale structure formation of the normal
branch in DGP model (Dvail, Gabadadze and Porrati brane world model) by
applying the scaling method developed by Sawicki, Song and Hu for solving the
coupled perturbed equations of motion of on-brane and off-brane. There is
detectable departure of perturbed gravitational potential from LCDM even at the
minimal deviation of the effective equation of state w_eff below -1. The
modified perturbed gravitational potential weakens the integrated Sachs-Wolfe
effect which is strengthened in the self-accelerating branch DGP model.
Additionally, we discuss the validity of the scaling solution in the de Sitter
limit at late times.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Quantum correction for electron transfer rates. Comparison of polarizable versus nonpolarizable descriptions of solvent
The electron transfer rate constant is treated using the spin-boson Hamiltonian model. The spectral density is related to the experimentally accessible data on the dielectric dispersion of the solvent, using a dielectric continuum approximation. On this basis the quantum correction for the ferrous–ferric electron transfer rate is found to be a factor 9.6. This value is smaller than the corresponding result (36) of Chandler and co-workers in their pioneering quantum simulation using a molecular model of the system [J. S. Bader, R. A. Kuharski, and D. Chandler, J. Chem. Phys. 93, 230 (1990)]. The likely reason for the difference lies in use of a rigid water molecular model in the simulation, since we find that other models for water in the literature which neglect the electronic and vibrational polarizability also give a large quantum effect. Such models are shown to overestimate the dielectric dispersion in one part of the quantum mechanically important region and to underestimate it in another part. It will be useful to explore a polarizable molecular model which reproduces the experimental dielectric response over the relevant part of the frequency spectrum
Stack- and Queue-like Dynamics in Recurrent Neural Networks
What dynamics do simple recurrent networks (SRNs) develop to represent stack-like and queue-like memories? SRNs have been widely used as models in cognitive science. However, they are interesting in their own right as non-symbolic computing devices from the viewpoints of analogue computing and dynamical systems theory. In this paper, SRNs are trained oil two prototypical formal languages with recursive structures that need stack-like or queue-like memories for processing, respectively. The evolved dynamics are analysed, then interpreted in terms of simple dynamical systems, and the different ease with which SRNs aquire them is related to the properties of these simple dynamical Within the dynamical systems framework, it is concluded that the stack-like language is simpler than the queue-like language, without making use of arguments from symbolic computation theory
Unit roots in moving averages beyond first order
The asymptotic theory of various estimators based on Gaussian likelihood has
been developed for the unit root and near unit root cases of a first-order
moving average model. Previous studies of the MA(1) unit root problem rely on
the special autocovariance structure of the MA(1) process, in which case, the
eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the covariance matrix of the data vector have
known analytical forms. In this paper, we take a different approach to first
consider the joint likelihood by including an augmented initial value as a
parameter and then recover the exact likelihood by integrating out the initial
value. This approach by-passes the difficulty of computing an explicit
decomposition of the covariance matrix and can be used to study unit root
behavior in moving averages beyond first order. The asymptotics of the
generalized likelihood ratio (GLR) statistic for testing unit roots are also
studied. The GLR test has operating characteristics that are competitive with
the locally best invariant unbiased (LBIU) test of Tanaka for some local
alternatives and dominates for all other alternatives.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/11-AOS935 the Annals of
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
An asymptotic sampling formula for the coalescent with Recombination
Ewens sampling formula (ESF) is a one-parameter family of probability
distributions with a number of intriguing combinatorial connections. This
elegant closed-form formula first arose in biology as the stationary
probability distribution of a sample configuration at one locus under the
infinite-alleles model of mutation. Since its discovery in the early 1970s, the
ESF has been used in various biological applications, and has sparked several
interesting mathematical generalizations. In the population genetics community,
extending the underlying random-mating model to include recombination has
received much attention in the past, but no general closed-form sampling
formula is currently known even for the simplest extension, that is, a model
with two loci. In this paper, we show that it is possible to obtain useful
closed-form results in the case the population-scaled recombination rate
is large but not necessarily infinite. Specifically, we consider an asymptotic
expansion of the two-locus sampling formula in inverse powers of and
obtain closed-form expressions for the first few terms in the expansion. Our
asymptotic sampling formula applies to arbitrary sample sizes and
configurations.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/09-AAP646 the Annals of
Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
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