21,392 research outputs found
Comments on the T-dual of the gravity dual of D5-branes on
We consider an abelian T-duality on a deformation of the gravitational
solution of \cite{Maldacena2001}, which is the gravity dual of D5-branes
wrapping a three-cycle inside a manifold that admits a structure.
Performing the T-duality we find D-branes wrapping a two-cycle with
non-trivial antisymmetric fields in the NS-NS and RR sector. We study some
aspects of its dual field theory and we compare with the original solution.Comment: 26 page
Innovation Success and Structural Change: An Abstract Agent Based Study
A model is developed to study the effectiveness of innovation and its impact
on structure creation and structure change on agent-based societies. The
abstract model that is developed is easily adapted to any particular field. In
any interacting environment, the agents receive something from the environment
(the other agents) in exchange for their effort and pay the environment a
certain amount of value for the fulfilling of their needs or for the very price
of existence in that environment. This is coded by two bit strings and the
dynamics of the exchange is based on the matching of these strings to those of
the other agents. Innovation is related to the adaptation by the agents of
their bit strings to improve some utility function.Comment: 20 pages, 12 figure
Non-Abelian T-duality for nonrelativistic holographic duals
We find new type II backgrounds with non-relativistic symmetries via
non-Abelian T-duality. First we consider geometries with Galilean symmetries in
type IIA, which have been identified as non-relativistic generalizations of the
ABJM background and massive IIA supergravities. We then consider the
non-Abelian T-duality transformation on the backgrounds with Lifshitz symmetry
constructed by Donos and Gauntlett. Using gauge/gravity duality we study
aspects of the field theory dual to these backgrounds.Comment: 43 pages, 4 figures; typos and one eq. corrected, references adde
Function and form in networks of interacting agents
The main problem we address in this paper is whether function determines form
when a society of agents organizes itself for some purpose or whether the
organizing method is more important than the functionality in determining the
structure of the ensemble. As an example, we use a neural network that learns
the same function by two different learning methods. For sufficiently large
networks, very different structures may indeed be obtained for the same
functionality. Clustering, characteristic path length and hierarchy are
structural differences, which in turn have implications on the robustness and
adaptability of the networks. In networks, as opposed to simple graphs, the
connections between the agents are not necessarily symmetric and may have
positive or negative signs. New characteristic coefficients are introduced to
characterize this richer connectivity structure.Comment: 27 pages Latex, 11 figure
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