7,700 research outputs found
A new approach to the credibility formula
The usual credibility formula holds whenever, (i) claim size distribution is a member of the exponential family of distributions, (ii) prior distribution conjugates with claim size distribution, and (iii) square error loss has been considered. As long as, one of these conditions is violent, the usual credibility formula no longer holds. This article, using the mean square error minimization technique, develops a simple and practical approach to the credibility theory. Namely, we approximate the Bayes estimator with respect to a general loss function and general prior distribution by a convex combination of the observation mean and mean of prior, say, approximate credibility formula. Adjustment of the approximate credibility for several situations and its form for several important losses are given.Loss function Balanced loss function Mean square error technique
Gate Defined Quantum Confinement in Suspended Bilayer Graphene
Quantum confined devices that manipulate single electrons in graphene are
emerging as attractive candidates for nanoelectronics applications. Previous
experiments have employed etched graphene nanostructures, but edge and
substrate disorder severely limit device functionality. Here we present a
technique that builds quantum confined structures in suspended bilayer graphene
with tunnel barriers defined by external electric fields that break layer
inversion symmetry, thereby eliminating both edge and substrate disorder. We
report clean quantum dot formation in two regimes: at zero magnetic field B
using the single particle energy gap induced by a perpendicular electric field
and at B > 0 using the quantum Hall ferromagnet {\nu} = 0 gap for confinement.
Coulomb blockade oscillations exhibit periodicity consistent with electrostatic
simulations based on local top gate geometry, a direct demonstration of local
control over the band structure of graphene. This technology integrates single
electron transport with high device quality and access to vibrational modes,
enabling broad applications from electromechanical sensors to quantum bits.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, includes supplementary informatio
Universal scale factors relating mesonic fields and quark operators
Scale factor matrices relating mesonic fields in chiral Lagrangians and
quark-level operators of QCD sum-rules are shown to be constrained by chiral
symmetry, resulting in universal scale factors for each chiral nonet. Built
upon this interplay between chiral Lagrangians and QCD sum-rules, the scale
factors relating the isotriplet scalar mesons to their underlying quark
composite field were recently determined. It is shown that the same technique
when applied to isodoublet scalars reproduces the same scale factors,
confirming the universality property and further validating this connection
between chiral Lagrangians and QCD sum-rules which can have nontrivial impacts
on our understanding of the low-energy QCD, in general, and the physics of
scalar mesons in particular.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1909.0724
Pressure forces on sediment particles in turbulent open-channel flow : a laboratory study
Acknowledgements This research was sponsored by EPSRC grant EP/G056404/1 and their financial support is greatly appreciated. We also acknowledge Dr S. Cameron, who developed the PIV system and its algorithms. The design and construction of pressure sensors was carried out at the workshop and the experiments were conducted in the fluids laboratory at the University of Aberdeen. We therefore express our gratitude to the workshop and laboratory technicians and also to Mr M. Witz and Mr S. Gretland for their assistance in carrying out these experiments. The authors would also like to thank Professor J. Frohlich, Professor M. Uhlmann, Dr C.-B. Clemens and Mr B. Vowinckel for their useful suggestions and discussions throughout the course of this project. The Associate Editor Professor I. Marusic and four anonymous reviewers provided many useful and insightful comments and suggestions that have been gratefully incorporated into the final version.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
On a Proper Meta-Analytic Model for Correlations
Combining statistical information across studies is a standard research tool in applied psychology. The most common approach in applied psychology is the fixed effects model. The fixed-effects approach assumes that individual study characteristics such as treatment conditions, study context, or individual differences do not influence study effect sizes. That is, that the majority of the differences between the effect sizes of different studies can be explained by sampling error alone. We critique the fixed-effects methodology for correlations and propose an advancement, the random-effects model, that ameliorates problems imposed by fixed-effects models. The random-effects approach explicitly incorporates between-study differences in data analysis and provides estimates of how those study characteristics influence the relationships among constructs of interest. Because they can model the influence of study characteristics, we assert that random-effects models have advantages for psychological research. Parameter estimates of both models are compared and evidence in favor of the random-effects approach is presented
The rent's too high: Self-archive for fair online publication costs
The main contributors of scientific knowledge, researchers, generally aim to
disseminate their findings far and wide. And yet, publishing companies have
largely kept these findings behind a paywall. With digital publication
technology markedly reducing cost, this enduring wall seems disproportionate
and unjustified; moreover, it has sparked a topical exchange concerning how to
modernize academic publishing. This discussion, however, seems to focus on how
to compensate major publishers for providing open access through a "pay to
publish" model, in turn transferring financial burdens from libraries to
authors and their funders. Large publishing companies, including Elsevier,
Springer Nature, Wiley, PLoS, and Frontiers, continue to earn exorbitant
revenues each year, hundreds of millions of dollars of which now come from
processing charges for open-access articles. A less expensive and equally
accessible alternative exists: widespread self-archiving of peer-reviewed
articles. All we need is awareness of this alternative and the will to employ
itComment: 8 pages, 1 figure, 19 reference
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