1,094 research outputs found
Quantum marking and quantum erasure for neutral kaons
Entangled K0 anti-K0 pairs are shown to be suitable to discuss extensions and
tests of Bohr's complementarity principle through the quantum marking and
quantum erasure techniques suggested by M. O. Scully and K. Druehl [Phys. Rev.
A 25, 2208 (1982)]. Strangeness oscillations play the role of the traditional
interference pattern linked to wave-like behaviour, whereas the distinct
propagation in free space of the K_S and K_L components mimics the two possible
interferometric paths taken by particle-like objects.Comment: 4 RevTeX page
Does Social Presence or the Potential for Interaction reduce Social Gaze in Online Social Scenarios? Introducing the "Live Lab" paradigm.
Research has shown that people’s gaze is biased away from faces in the real-world but
towards them when they are viewed onscreen. Non-equivalent stimulus conditions may have
represented a confound in this research however, as participants viewed onscreen stimuli as
pre-recordings where interaction was not possible, compared to real-world stimuli which
were viewed in real-time where interaction was possible. We assessed the independent
contributions of online social presence and ability for interaction on social gaze by
developing the “live lab” paradigm. Participants in three groups (N = 132) viewed a
confederate either as a) a live webcam stream where interaction was not possible (one-way),
b) a live webcam stream where an interaction was possible (two-way) or c) as a prerecording.
Potential for interaction, rather than online social presence, was the primary
influence on gaze behaviour: Participants in the pre-recorded and one-way conditions looked
more to the face than those in the two-way condition, particularly when the confederate made
“eye contact”. Fixation durations to the face were shorter when the scene was viewed live,
particularly during a bid for eye contact
Our findings support the dual function of gaze, but suggest that online social presence alone
is not sufficient to activate social norms of civil inattention. Implications for the
reinterpretation of previous research are discussed
Afshar's Experiment does not show a Violation of Complementarity
A recent experiment performed by S. Afshar [first reported by M. Chown, New
Scientist {\bf 183}, 30 (2004)] is analyzed. It was claimed that this
experiment could be interpreted as a demonstration of a violation of the
principle of complementarity in quantum mechanics. Instead, it is shown here
that it can be understood in terms of classical wave optics and the standard
interpretation of quantum mechanics. Its performance is quantified and it is
concluded that the experiment is suboptimal in the sense that it does not fully
exhaust the limits imposed by quantum mechanics.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Quantitative wave-particle duality and non-erasing quantum erasure
The notion of wave-particle duality may be quantified by the inequality
V^2+K^2 <=1, relating interference fringe visibility V and path knowledge K.
With a single-photon interferometer in which polarization is used to label the
paths, we have investigated the relation for various situations, including
pure, mixed, and partially-mixed input states. A quantum eraser scheme has been
realized that recovers interference fringes even when no which-way information
is available to erase.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
A Delayed Choice Quantum Eraser
This paper reports a "delayed choice quantum eraser" experiment proposed by
Scully and Dr\"{u}hl in 1982. The experimental results demonstrated the
possibility of simultaneously observing both particle-like and wave-like
behavior of a quantum via quantum entanglement. The which-path or both-path
information of a quantum can be erased or marked by its entangled twin even
after the registration of the quantum.Comment: twocolumn, 4pages, submitted to PR
Observation of off-diagonal geometric phase in polarized neutron interferometer experiments
Off-diagonal geometric phases acquired in the evolution of a spin-1/2 system
have been investigated by means of a polarized neutron interferometer. Final
counts with and without polarization analysis enable us to observe
simultaneously the off-diagonal and diagonal geometric phases in two detectors.
We have quantitatively measured the off-diagonal geometric phase for noncyclic
evolutions, confirming the theoretical predictions. We discuss the significance
of our experiment in terms of geometric phases (both diagonal and off-diagonal)
and in terms of the quantum erasing phenomenon.Comment: pdf, 22 pages + 8 figures (included in the pdf). In print on Phys.
Rev.
Why I tense up when you watch me: inferior parietal cortex mediates an audience’s influence on motor performance
The presence of an evaluative audience can alter skilled motor performance through changes in force output. To investigate how this is mediated within the brain, we emulated real-time social monitoring of participants’ performance of a fine grip task during functional magnetic resonance neuroimaging. We observed an increase in force output during social evaluation that was accompanied by focal reductions in activity within bilateral inferior parietal cortex. Moreover, deactivation of the left inferior parietal cortex predicted both inter- and intra-individual differences in socially-induced change in grip force. Social evaluation also enhanced activation within the posterior superior temporal sulcus, which conveys visual information about others’ actions to the inferior parietal cortex. Interestingly, functional connectivity between these two regions was attenuated by social evaluation. Our data suggest that social evaluation can vary force output through the altered engagement of inferior parietal cortex; a region implicated in sensorimotor integration necessary for object manipulation, and a component of the action-observation network which integrates and facilitates performance of observed actions. Social-evaluative situations may induce high-level representational incoherence between one’s own intentioned action and the perceived intention of others which, by uncoupling the dynamics of sensorimotor facilitation, could ultimately perturbe motor output
Collective emotions online and their influence on community life
E-communities, social groups interacting online, have recently become an
object of interdisciplinary research. As with face-to-face meetings, Internet
exchanges may not only include factual information but also emotional
information - how participants feel about the subject discussed or other group
members. Emotions are known to be important in affecting interaction partners
in offline communication in many ways. Could emotions in Internet exchanges
affect others and systematically influence quantitative and qualitative aspects
of the trajectory of e-communities? The development of automatic sentiment
analysis has made large scale emotion detection and analysis possible using
text messages collected from the web. It is not clear if emotions in
e-communities primarily derive from individual group members' personalities or
if they result from intra-group interactions, and whether they influence group
activities. We show the collective character of affective phenomena on a large
scale as observed in 4 million posts downloaded from Blogs, Digg and BBC
forums. To test whether the emotions of a community member may influence the
emotions of others, posts were grouped into clusters of messages with similar
emotional valences. The frequency of long clusters was much higher than it
would be if emotions occurred at random. Distributions for cluster lengths can
be explained by preferential processes because conditional probabilities for
consecutive messages grow as a power law with cluster length. For BBC forum
threads, average discussion lengths were higher for larger values of absolute
average emotional valence in the first ten comments and the average amount of
emotion in messages fell during discussions. Our results prove that collective
emotional states can be created and modulated via Internet communication and
that emotional expressiveness is the fuel that sustains some e-communities.Comment: 23 pages including Supporting Information, accepted to PLoS ON
Developing Creativity: Artificial Barriers in Artificial Intelligence
The greatest rhetorical challenge to developers of creative artificial intelligence systems is convincingly arguing that their software is more than just an extension of their own creativity. This paper suggests that “creative autonomy,” which exists when a system not only evaluates creations on its own, but also changes its standards without explicit direction, is a necessary condition for making this argument. Rather than requiring that the system be hermetically sealed to avoid perceptions of human influence, developing creative autonomy is argued to be more plausible if the system is intimately embedded in a broader society of other creators and critics. Ideas are presented for constructing systems that might be able to achieve creative autonomy
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