24,708 research outputs found
Therapeutic and educational objectives in robot assisted play for children with autism
âThis material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. In most cases, these works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder." âCopyright IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or to reuse any copyrighted component of this work in other works must be obtained from the IEEE.â DOI: 10.1109/ROMAN.2009.5326251This article is a methodological paper that describes the therapeutic and educational objectives that were identified during the design process of a robot aimed at robot assisted play. The work described in this paper is part of the IROMEC project (Interactive Robotic Social Mediators as Companions) that recognizes the important role of play in child development and targets children who are prevented from or inhibited in playing. The project investigates the role of an interactive, autonomous robotic toy in therapy and education for children with special needs. This paper specifically addresses the therapeutic and educational objectives related to children with autism. In recent years, robots have already been used to teach basic social interaction skills to children with autism. The added value of the IROMEC robot is that play scenarios have been developed taking children's specific strengths and needs into consideration and covering a wide range of objectives in children's development areas (sensory, communicational and interaction, motor, cognitive and social and emotional). The paper describes children's developmental areas and illustrates how different experiences and interactions with the IROMEC robot are designed to target objectives in these areas
How to squeeze the toothpaste back into the tube
We consider "bridges" for the simple exclusion process on Z, either symmetric
or asymmetric, in which particles jump to the right at rate p and to the left
at rate 1-p. The initial state O has all negative sites occupied and all
non-negative sites empty. We study the probability that the process is again in
state O at time t, and the behaviour of the process on [0,t] conditioned on
being in state O at time t. In the case p=1/2, we find that such a bridge
typically goes a distance of order t (in the sense of graph distance) from the
initial state. For the asymmetric systems, we note an interesting duality which
shows that bridges with parameters p and 1-p have the same distribution; the
maximal distance of the process from the original state behaves like c(p)log(t)
for some constant c(p) depending on p. (For p>1/2, the front particle therefore
travels much less far than the bridge of the corresponding random walk, even
though in the unconditioned process the path of the front particle dominates a
random walk.) We mention various further questions.Comment: 15 page
Stationary distributions of multi-type totally asymmetric exclusion processes
We consider totally asymmetric simple exclusion processes with n types of
particle and holes (-TASEPs) on and on the cycle . Angel recently gave an elegant construction of the stationary measures
for the 2-TASEP, based on a pair of independent product measures. We show that
Angel's construction can be interpreted in terms of the operation of a
discrete-time queueing server; the two product measures correspond to
the arrival and service processes of the queue. We extend this construction to
represent the stationary measures of an n-TASEP in terms of a system of queues
in tandem. The proof of stationarity involves a system of n 1-TASEPs, whose
evolutions are coupled but whose distributions at any fixed time are
independent. Using the queueing representation, we give quantitative results
for stationary probabilities of states of the n-TASEP on , and
simple proofs of various independence and regeneration properties for systems
on .Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/009117906000000944 in the
Annals of Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aop/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Optimal Dynamic Procurement Policies for a Storable Commodity with L\'evy Prices and Convex Holding Costs
In this paper we study a continuous time stochastic inventory model for a
commodity traded in the spot market and whose supply purchase is affected by
price and demand uncertainty. A firm aims at meeting a random demand of the
commodity at a random time by maximizing total expected profits. We model the
firm's optimal procurement problem as a singular stochastic control problem in
which controls are nondecreasing processes and represent the cumulative
investment made by the firm in the spot market (a so-called stochastic
"monotone follower problem"). We assume a general exponential L\'evy process
for the commodity's spot price, rather than the commonly used geometric
Brownian motion, and general convex holding costs.
We obtain necessary and sufficient first order conditions for optimality and
we provide the optimal procurement policy in terms of a "base inventory"
process; that is, a minimal time-dependent desirable inventory level that the
firm's manager must reach at any time. In particular, in the case of linear
holding costs and exponentially distributed demand, we are also able to obtain
the explicit analytic form of the optimal policy and a probabilistic
representation of the optimal revenue. The paper is completed by some computer
drawings of the optimal inventory when spot prices are given by a geometric
Brownian motion and by an exponential jump-diffusion process. In the first case
we also make a numerical comparison between the value function and the revenue
associated to the classical static "newsvendor" strategy.Comment: 28 pages, 3 figures; improved presentation, added new results and
section
Generalized Kuhn-Tucker Conditions for N-Firm Stochastic Irreversible Investment under Limited Resources
In this paper we study a continuous time, optimal stochastic investment
problem under limited resources in a market with N firms. The investment
processes are subject to a time-dependent stochastic constraint. Rather than
using a dynamic programming approach, we exploit the concavity of the profit
functional to derive some necessary and sufficient first order conditions for
the corresponding Social Planner optimal policy. Our conditions are a
stochastic infinite-dimensional generalization of the Kuhn-Tucker Theorem. The
Lagrange multiplier takes the form of a nonnegative optional random measure on
[0,T] which is flat off the set of times for which the constraint is binding,
i.e. when all the fuel is spent. As a subproduct we obtain an enlightening
interpretation of the first order conditions for a single firm in Bank (2005).
In the infinite-horizon case, with operating profit functions of Cobb-Douglas
type, our method allows the explicit calculation of the optimal policy in terms
of the `base capacity' process, i.e. the unique solution of the Bank and El
Karoui representation problem (2004).Comment: 25 page
Multiclass Hammersley-Aldous-Diaconis process and multiclass-customer queues
In the Hammersley-Aldous-Diaconis process infinitely many particles sit in R
and at most one particle is allowed at each position. A particle at x$ whose
nearest neighbor to the right is at y, jumps at rate y-x to a position
uniformly distributed in the interval (x,y). The basic coupling between
trajectories with different initial configuration induces a process with
different classes of particles. We show that the invariant measures for the
two-class process can be obtained as follows. First, a stationary M/M/1 queue
is constructed as a function of two homogeneous Poisson processes, the arrivals
with rate \lambda and the (attempted) services with rate \rho>\lambda. Then put
the first class particles at the instants of departures (effective services)
and second class particles at the instants of unused services. The procedure is
generalized for the n-class case by using n-1 queues in tandem with n-1
priority-types of customers. A multi-line process is introduced; it consists of
a coupling (different from Liggett's basic coupling), having as invariant
measure the product of Poisson processes. The definition of the multi-line
process involves the dual points of the space-time Poisson process used in the
graphical construction of the system. The coupled process is a transformation
of the multi-line process and its invariant measure the transformation
described above of the product measure.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figure
The effect of ram pressure on the star formation, mass distribution and morphology of galaxies
We investigate the dependence of star formation and the distribution of the
components of galaxies on the strength of ram pressure. Several mock
observations in X-ray, H and HI wavelength for different ram-pressure
scenarios are presented. By applying a combined N-body/hydrodynamic description
(GADGET-2) with radiative cooling and a recipe for star formation and stellar
feedback 12 different ram-pressure stripping scenarios for disc galaxies were
calculated. Special emphasis was put on the gas within the disc and in the
surroundings. All gas particles within the computational domain having the same
mass resolution. The relative velocity was varied from 100 km/s to 1000 km/s in
different surrounding gas densities in the range from to
g/cm. The temperature of the surrounding gas was
initially K. The star formation of a galaxy is enhanced by more
than a magnitude in the simulation with a high ram-pressure (
dyn/cm) in comparison to the same system evolving in isolation. The
enhancement of the star formation depends more on the surrounding gas density
than on the relative velocity. Up to 95% of all newly formed stars can be found
in the wake of the galaxy out to distances of more than 350 kpc behind the
stellar disc. Continuously stars fall back to the old stellar disc, building up
a bulge-like structure. Young stars can be found throughout the stripped wake
with surface densities locally comparable to values in the inner stellar disc.
Ram-pressure stripping can shift the location of star formation from the disc
into the wake on very short timescales. (Abridged)Comment: 19 pages, 25 figures, A&A accepted, high resolution version can be
found at http://astro.uibk.ac.at/~wolfgang/kapferer_rps_galaxies.pd
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