5,857 research outputs found
Entanglement and magnetic order
In recent years quantum statistical mechanics have benefited of cultural
interchanges with quantum information science. There is a bulk of evidence that
quantifying the entanglement allows a fine analysis of many relevant properties
of many-body quantum systems. Here we review the relation between entanglement
and the various type of magnetic order occurring in interacting spin systems.Comment: 29 pages, 10 eps figures. Review article for the special issue
"Entanglement entropy in extended systems" in J. Phys. A, edited by P.
Calabrese, J. Cardy and B. Doyo
Mapping hybrid functional-structural connectivity traits in the human connectome
One of the crucial questions in neuroscience is how a rich functional
repertoire of brain states relates to its underlying structural organization.
How to study the associations between these structural and functional layers is
an open problem that involves novel conceptual ways of tackling this question.
We here propose an extension of the Connectivity Independent Component Analysis
(connICA) framework, to identify joint structural-functional connectivity
traits. Here, we extend connICA to integrate structural and functional
connectomes by merging them into common hybrid connectivity patterns that
represent the connectivity fingerprint of a subject. We test this extended
approach on the 100 unrelated subjects from the Human Connectome Project. The
method is able to extract main independent structural-functional connectivity
patterns from the entire cohort that are sensitive to the realization of
different tasks. The hybrid connICA extracted two main task-sensitive hybrid
traits. The first, encompassing the within and between connections of dorsal
attentional and visual areas, as well as fronto-parietal circuits. The second,
mainly encompassing the connectivity between visual, attentional, DMN and
subcortical networks. Overall, these findings confirms the potential ofthe
hybrid connICA for the compression of structural/functional connectomes into
integrated patterns from a set of individual brain networks.Comment: article: 34 pages, 4 figures; supplementary material: 5 pages, 5
figure
Algebraic equivalence between certain models for superfluid--insulator transition
Algebraic contraction is proposed to realize mappings between models
Hamiltonians. This transformation contracts the algebra of the degrees of
freedom underlying the Hamiltonian. The rigorous mapping between the
anisotropic Heisenberg model, the Quantum Phase Model, and the Bose
Hubbard Model is established as the contractions of the algebra
underlying the dynamics of the Heisenberg model.Comment: 5 pages, revte
Bound entanglement in the XY model
We study the multi-spin entanglement for the 1D anisotropic XY model
concentrating on the simplest case of three-spin entanglement. As compared to
the pairwise entanglement, three-party quantum correlations have a longer range
and they are more robust on increasing the temperature.
We find regions of the phase diagram of the system where bound entanglement
occurs, both at zero and finite temperature. Bound entanglement in the ground
state can be obtained by tuning the magnetic field. Thermal bound entanglement
emerges naturally due to the effect of temperature on the free ground state
entanglement.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures; some typos corrected, references adde
Centralized and distributed cognitive task processing in the human connectome
A key question in modern neuroscience is how cognitive changes in a human
brain can be quantified and captured by functional connectomes (FC) . A
systematic approach to measure pairwise functional distance at different brain
states is lacking. This would provide a straight-forward way to quantify
differences in cognitive processing across tasks; also, it would help in
relating these differences in task-based FCs to the underlying structural
network. Here we propose a framework, based on the concept of Jensen-Shannon
divergence, to map the task-rest connectivity distance between tasks and
resting-state FC. We show how this information theoretical measure allows for
quantifying connectivity changes in distributed and centralized processing in
functional networks. We study resting-state and seven tasks from the Human
Connectome Project dataset to obtain the most distant links across tasks. We
investigate how these changes are associated to different functional brain
networks, and use the proposed measure to infer changes in the information
processing regimes. Furthermore, we show how the FC distance from resting state
is shaped by structural connectivity, and to what extent this relationship
depends on the task. This framework provides a well grounded mathematical
quantification of connectivity changes associated to cognitive processing in
large-scale brain networks.Comment: 22 pages main, 6 pages supplementary, 6 figures, 5 supplementary
figures, 1 table, 1 supplementary table. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1710.0219
Electrostatic analogy for integrable pairing force Hamiltonians
For the exactly solved reduced BCS model an electrostatic analogy exists; in
particular it served to obtain the exact thermodynamic limit of the model from
the Richardson Bethe ansatz equations. We present an electrostatic analogy for
a wider class of integrable Hamiltonians with pairing force interactions. We
apply it to obtain the exact thermodynamic limit of this class of models. To
verify the analytical results, we compare them with numerical solutions of the
Bethe ansatz equations for finite systems at half-filling for the ground state.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, revtex4. Minor change
Subjectivity and complexity of facial attractiveness
The origin and meaning of facial beauty represent a longstanding puzzle.
Despite the profuse literature devoted to facial attractiveness, its very
nature, its determinants and the nature of inter-person differences remain
controversial issues. Here we tackle such questions proposing a novel
experimental approach in which human subjects, instead of rating natural faces,
are allowed to efficiently explore the face-space and 'sculpt' their favorite
variation of a reference facial image. The results reveal that different
subjects prefer distinguishable regions of the face-space, highlighting the
essential subjectivity of the phenomenon.The different sculpted facial vectors
exhibit strong correlations among pairs of facial distances, characterising the
underlying universality and complexity of the cognitive processes, and the
relative relevance and robustness of the different facial distances.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures. Supplementary information: 26 pages, 13 figure
Quasi-classical descendants of disordered vertex models with boundaries
We study descendants of inhomogeneous vertex models with boundary reflections
when the spin-spin scattering is assumed to be quasi--classical. This
corresponds to consider certain power expansion of the boundary-Yang-Baxter
equation (or reflection equation). As final product, integrable -spin
chains interacting with a long range with anisotropy are obtained. The
spin-spin couplings are non uniform, and a non uniform tunable external
magnetic field is applied; the latter can be obtained when the boundary
conditions are assumed to be quasi-classical as well. The exact spectrum is
achieved by algebraic Bethe ansatz. Having realized the operators in
terms of fermions, the class of models we found turns out to describe confined
fermions with pairing force interactions. The class of models presented in this
paper is a one-parameter extension of certain Hamiltonians constructed
previously. Extensions to -spin open chains are discussed.Comment: 27 pages; 2 eps figures; elsart. Revised version, appendix C adde
The Importance of Tourism in the European Mediterranean Area
Europe and Mediterranean areas have political and symbolic importance even if they have not definite limits. From a geographical point of view Europe and Mediterranean are the southern and western part of the “Eurasiaâ€, while politically speaking they represent two areas with a strong instability. However they have tourist resources that succeed in attracting the international tourism; these elements give originality and unicity to the territory of the Mediterranean area. This has an important role in the tourist field, also helped by lots of tourist activities and by the typical climate. All these aspects contribute to the creation of the “Mediterranean circular†of the coast countries. As they have not the same distribution of the tourist flows, the have the problem of unbalance in the relation between resources and utilization, especially in the north sea-side. Although these problems, tourism becomes for the mediterranean States a common activity, giving them a new economic dimension. The most important feature of the Mediterranean tourism is the diffused sea-side installation; it can cause a strong impact on the sea ecosystem and by the time it can generate a dangerous ecological situation of the mediterranean area. If we consider that 120.000.000 people live in this area with 200.000.000 tourists that during the summer period are in the sea-side countries, this means a considerable antropic presence. It is important that tourism and economic activities take into consideration the balance of the sea ecosystem because its protection is linked to the quality of sea-side people’s life and to the continuation of the tourist importance of the area. The central problem of Mediterranean tourism is that the growth must be compatible with the environmental quality and with local way of life. In this way “the hotel-countries†and other ways of hospitality can contribute to give life to the countries and territories and to diversify and to enrich the tourist offer. Our work’s aim is to analyse and verify social and economic impact of tourist flows in the mediterranean countries, considering general differences and effects.
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