560 research outputs found
Budget Feasible Mechanisms for Experimental Design
In the classical experimental design setting, an experimenter E has access to
a population of potential experiment subjects , each
associated with a vector of features . Conducting an experiment
with subject reveals an unknown value to E. E typically assumes
some hypothetical relationship between 's and 's, e.g., , and estimates from experiments, e.g., through linear
regression. As a proxy for various practical constraints, E may select only a
subset of subjects on which to conduct the experiment.
We initiate the study of budgeted mechanisms for experimental design. In this
setting, E has a budget . Each subject declares an associated cost to be part of the experiment, and must be paid at least her cost. In
particular, the Experimental Design Problem (EDP) is to find a set of
subjects for the experiment that maximizes V(S) = \log\det(I_d+\sum_{i\in
S}x_i\T{x_i}) under the constraint ; our objective
function corresponds to the information gain in parameter that is
learned through linear regression methods, and is related to the so-called
-optimality criterion. Further, the subjects are strategic and may lie about
their costs.
We present a deterministic, polynomial time, budget feasible mechanism
scheme, that is approximately truthful and yields a constant factor
approximation to EDP. In particular, for any small and , we can construct a (12.98, )-approximate mechanism that is
-truthful and runs in polynomial time in both and
. We also establish that no truthful,
budget-feasible algorithms is possible within a factor 2 approximation, and
show how to generalize our approach to a wide class of learning problems,
beyond linear regression
Density of states "width parity" effect in d-wave superconducting quantum wires
We calculate the density of states (DOS) in a clean mesoscopic d-wave
superconducting quantum wire, i.e. a sample of infinite length but finite width
. For open boundary conditions, the DOS at zero energy is found to be zero
if is even, and nonzero if is odd. At finite chemical potential, all
chains are gapped but the qualtitative differences between even and odd
remain.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, new figures and extended discussio
Critical coupling for dynamical chiral-symmetry breaking with an infrared finite gluon propagator
We compute the critical coupling constant for the dynamical chiral-symmetry
breaking in a model of quantum chromodynamics, solving numerically the quark
self-energy using infrared finite gluon propagators found as solutions of the
Schwinger-Dyson equation for the gluon, and one gluon propagator determined in
numerical lattice simulations. The gluon mass scale screens the force
responsible for the chiral breaking, and the transition occurs only for a
larger critical coupling constant than the one obtained with the perturbative
propagator. The critical coupling shows a great sensibility to the gluon mass
scale variation, as well as to the functional form of the gluon propagator.Comment: 19 pages, latex, 3 postscript figures, uses epsf.sty and epsf.tex. To
be published in Phys. Lett.
Spectral and Transport Properties of d-Wave Superconductors With Strong Impurities
One of the remarkable features of disordered d-wave superconductors is strong
sensitivity of long range properties to the microscopic realization of the
disorder potential. Particularly rich phenomenology is observed for the --
experimentally relevant -- case of dilute distributions of isolated impurity
centers. Building on earlier diagrammatic analyses, the present paper derives
and analyses a low energy effective field theory of this system. Specifically,
the results of previous diagrammatic T-matrix approaches are extended into the
perturbatively inaccessible low energy regimes, and the long range (thermal)
transport behaviour of the system is discussed. It turns out that in the
extreme case of a half-filled tight binding band and infinitely strong
impurities (impurities at the unitary limit), the system is in a delocalized
phase.Comment: 14 pages, two figures include
Effect of bilayer coupling on tunneling conductance of double-layer high T_c cuprates
Physical effects of bilayer coupling on the tunneling spectroscopy of high
T cuprates are investigated. The bilayer coupling separates the bonding
and antibonding bands and leads to a splitting of the coherence peaks in the
tunneling differential conductance. However, the coherence peak of the bonding
band is strongly suppressed and broadened by the particle-hole asymmetry in the
density of states and finite quasiparticle life-time, and is difficult to
resolve by experiments. This gives a qualitative account why the bilayer
splitting of the coherence peaks was not clearly observed in tunneling
measurements of double-layer high-T oxides.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to be published in PR
Low-energy quasiparticle excitations in dirty d-wave superconductors and the Bogoliubov-de Gennes kicked rotator
We investigate the quasiparticle density of states in disordered d-wave
superconductors. By constructing a quantum map describing the quasiparticle
dynamics in such a medium, we explore deviations of the density of states from
its universal form (), and show that additional low-energy
quasiparticle states exist provided (i) the range of the impurity potential is
much larger than the Fermi wavelength [allowing to use recently developed
semiclassical methods]; (ii) classical trajectories exist along which the
pair-potential changes sign; and (iii) the diffractive scattering length is
longer than the superconducting coherence length. In the classically chaotic
regime, universal random matrix theory behavior is restored by quantum
dynamical diffraction which shifts the low energy states away from zero energy,
and the quasiparticle density of states exhibits a linear pseudogap below an
energy threshold .Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, RevTe
Interplay of disorder and magnetic field in the superconducting vortex state
We calculate the density of states of an inhomogeneous superconductor in a
magnetic field where the positions of vortices are distributed completely at
random. We consider both the cases of s-wave and d-wave pairing. For both
pairing symmetries either the presence of disorder or increasing the density of
vortices enhances the low energy density of states. In the s-wave case the gap
is filled and the density of states is a power law at low energies. In the
d-wave case the density of states is finite at zero energy and it rises
linearly at very low energies in the Dirac isotropic case
(\alpha_D=t/\Delta_0=1, where t is the hopping integral and \Delta_0 is the
amplitude of the order parameter). For slightly higher energies the density of
states crosses over to a quadratic behavior. As the Dirac anisotropy increases
(as \Delta_0 decreases with respect to the hopping term) the linear region
decreases in width. Neglecting this small region the density of states
interpolates between quadratic and back to linear as \alpha_D increases. The
low energy states are strongly peaked near the vortex cores.Comment: 12 REVTeX pages, 15 figure
Birkhoff type decompositions and the Baker-Campbell-Hausdorff recursion
We describe a unification of several apparently unrelated factorizations
arisen from quantum field theory, vertex operator algebras, combinatorics and
numerical methods in differential equations. The unification is given by a
Birkhoff type decomposition that was obtained from the Baker-Campbell-Hausdorff
formula in our study of the Hopf algebra approach of Connes and Kreimer to
renormalization in perturbative quantum field theory. There we showed that the
Birkhoff decomposition of Connes and Kreimer can be obtained from a certain
Baker-Campbell-Hausdorff recursion formula in the presence of a Rota-Baxter
operator. We will explain how the same decomposition generalizes the
factorization of formal exponentials and uniformization for Lie algebras that
arose in vertex operator algebra and conformal field theory, and the even-odd
decomposition of combinatorial Hopf algebra characters as well as to the Lie
algebra polar decomposition as used in the context of the approximation of
matrix exponentials in ordinary differential equations.Comment: accepted for publication in Comm. in Math. Phy
The β3-integrin endothelial adhesome regulates microtubule-dependent cell migration
Integrin β3 is seen as a key anti-angiogenic target for cancer treatment due to its expression on neovasculature, but the role it plays in the process is complex; whether it is pro- or anti-angiogenic depends on the context in which it is expressed. To understand precisely β3's role in regulating integrin adhesion complexes in endothelial cells, we characterised, by mass spectrometry, the β3-dependent adhesome. We show that depletion of β3-integrin in this cell type leads to changes in microtubule behaviour that control cell migration. β3-integrin regulates microtubule stability in endothelial cells through Rcc2/Anxa2-driven control of active Rac1 localisation. Our findings reveal that angiogenic processes, both in vitro and in vivo, are more sensitive to microtubule targeting agents when β3-integrin levels are reduced
Fokker-Planck equations and density of states in disordered quantum wires
We propose a general scheme to construct scaling equations for the density of
states in disordered quantum wires for all ten pure Cartan symmetry classes.
The anomalous behavior of the density of states near the Fermi level for the
three chiral and four Bogoliubov-de Gennes universality classes is analysed in
detail by means of a mapping to a scaling equation for the reflection from a
quantum wire in the presence of an imaginary potential.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, revised versio
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