3,058 research outputs found
Improving Optimization Bounds using Machine Learning: Decision Diagrams meet Deep Reinforcement Learning
Finding tight bounds on the optimal solution is a critical element of
practical solution methods for discrete optimization problems. In the last
decade, decision diagrams (DDs) have brought a new perspective on obtaining
upper and lower bounds that can be significantly better than classical bounding
mechanisms, such as linear relaxations. It is well known that the quality of
the bounds achieved through this flexible bounding method is highly reliant on
the ordering of variables chosen for building the diagram, and finding an
ordering that optimizes standard metrics is an NP-hard problem. In this paper,
we propose an innovative and generic approach based on deep reinforcement
learning for obtaining an ordering for tightening the bounds obtained with
relaxed and restricted DDs. We apply the approach to both the Maximum
Independent Set Problem and the Maximum Cut Problem. Experimental results on
synthetic instances show that the deep reinforcement learning approach, by
achieving tighter objective function bounds, generally outperforms ordering
methods commonly used in the literature when the distribution of instances is
known. To the best knowledge of the authors, this is the first paper to apply
machine learning to directly improve relaxation bounds obtained by
general-purpose bounding mechanisms for combinatorial optimization problems.Comment: Accepted and presented at AAAI'1
Heterogeneity and Disorder: Contributions of Rolf Landauer
Rolf Landauer made important contributions to many branches of science.
Within the broad area of transport in disordered media, he wrote seminal papers
on electrical conduction in macroscopically inhomogeneous materials, as well as
fundamental analyses of electron transport in quantum mechanical systems with
disorder on the atomic scale. We review here some of these contributions. We
also briefly describe some main events in his personal and scientific life.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures; presented on the occasion when Rolf Landauer was
awarded, posthumously, the inaugural ETOPIM Medal at the ETOPIM 8 Conference,
which took place during 7--12 June, 2009 in Rethymnon, Cret
Functional Evolution of a cis-Regulatory Module
Lack of knowledge about how regulatory regions evolve in relation to their structureâfunction may limit the utility of comparative sequence analysis in deciphering cis-regulatory sequences. To address this we applied reverse genetics to carry out a functional genetic complementation analysis of a eukaryotic cis-regulatory moduleâthe even-skipped stripe 2 enhancerâfrom four Drosophila species. The evolution of this enhancer is non-clock-like, with important functional differences between closely related species and functional convergence between distantly related species. Functional divergence is attributable to differences in activation levels rather than spatiotemporal control of gene expression. Our findings have implications for understanding enhancer structureâfunction, mechanisms of speciation and computational identification of regulatory modules
LINNAEUS: A species name identification system for biomedical literature
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The task of recognizing and identifying species names in biomedical literature has recently been regarded as critical for a number of applications in text and data mining, including gene name recognition, species-specific document retrieval, and semantic enrichment of biomedical articles.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In this paper we describe an open-source species name recognition and normalization software system, LINNAEUS, and evaluate its performance relative to several automatically generated biomedical corpora, as well as a novel corpus of full-text documents manually annotated for species mentions. LINNAEUS uses a dictionary-based approach (implemented as an efficient deterministic finite-state automaton) to identify species names and a set of heuristics to resolve ambiguous mentions. When compared against our manually annotated corpus, LINNAEUS performs with 94% recall and 97% precision at the mention level, and 98% recall and 90% precision at the document level. Our system successfully solves the problem of disambiguating uncertain species mentions, with 97% of all mentions in PubMed Central full-text documents resolved to unambiguous NCBI taxonomy identifiers.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>LINNAEUS is an open source, stand-alone software system capable of recognizing and normalizing species name mentions with speed and accuracy, and can therefore be integrated into a range of bioinformatics and text-mining applications. The software and manually annotated corpus can be downloaded freely at <url>http://linnaeus.sourceforge.net/</url>.</p
Genetic Determinants of Human Health Span and Life Span: Progress and New Opportunities
We review three approaches to the genetic analysis of the biology and pathobiology of human aging. The first and so far the best-developed is the search for the biochemical genetic basis of varying susceptibilities to major geriatric disorders. These include a range of progeroid syndromes. Collectively, they tell us much about the genetics of health span. Given that the major risk factor for virtually all geriatric disorders is biological aging, they may also serve as markers for the study of intrinsic biological aging. The second approach seeks to identify allelic contributions to exceptionally long life spans. While linkage to a locus on Chromosome 4 has not been confirmed, association studies have revealed a number of significant polymorphisms that impact upon late-life diseases and life span. The third approach remains theoretical. It would require longitudinal studies of large numbers of middle-aged sib-pairs who are extremely discordant or concordant for their rates of decline in various physiological functions. We can conclude that there are great opportunities for research on the genetics of human aging, particularly given the huge fund of information on human biology and pathobiology, and the rapidly developing knowledge of the human genome
Anomalies in Noncommutative Dipole Field Theories
We study chiral symmetries of fermionic non commutative dipole theories. By
using Fujikawa's approach we obtain explicit expressions of the anomalies for
Dirac and chiral fermions in 2 and 4 dimensions.Comment: 11pages, latex file. Comments adde
On the quantum equivalence of commutative and noncommutative Chern-Simons theories at higher orders
We continue our investigation of the quantum equivalence between commutative
and noncommutative Chern-Simons theories by computing the complete set of
two-loop quantum corrections to the correlation function of a pure open Wilson
line and an open Wilson line with a field strength insertion, on the
noncommutative side in a covariant gauge. The conjectured perturbative
equivalence between the free commutative theory and the apparently interacting
noncommutative one requires that the sum of these corrections vanish, and
herein we exhibit the remarkable cancellations that enforce this. From this
computation we speculate on the form of a possible all-order result for this
simplest nonvanishing correlator of gauge invariant observables.Comment: 34 pages, 13 figures; v2: typos fixed (version to appear in NPB
Bacillus anthracis genome organization in light of whole transcriptome sequencing
Emerging knowledge of whole prokaryotic transcriptomes could validate a number of theoretical concepts introduced in the early days of genomics. What are the rules connecting gene expression levels with sequence determinants such as quantitative scores of promoters and terminators? Are translation efficiency measures, e.g. codon adaptation index and RBS score related to gene expression? We used the whole transcriptome shotgun sequencing of a bacterial pathogen Bacillus anthracis to assess correlation of gene expression level with promoter, terminator and RBS scores, codon adaptation index, as well as with a new measure of gene translational efficiency, average translation speed. We compared computational predictions of operon topologies with the transcript borders inferred from RNA-Seq reads. Transcriptome mapping may also improve existing gene annotation. Upon assessment of accuracy of current annotation of protein-coding genes in the B. anthracis genome we have shown that the transcriptome data indicate existence of more than a hundred genes missing in the annotation though predicted by an ab initio gene finder. Interestingly, we observed that many pseudogenes possess not only a sequence with detectable coding potential but also promoters that maintain transcriptional activity
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Functional Evolution of a <i>cis-</i>Regulatory Module
Lack of knowledge about how regulatory regions evolve in relation to their structureâfunction may limit the utility of comparative sequence analysis in deciphering cis-regulatory sequences. To address this we applied reverse genetics to carry out a functional genetic complementation analysis of a eukaryotic cis-regulatory moduleâthe even-skipped stripe 2 enhancerâfrom four Drosophila species. The evolution of this enhancer is non-clock-like, with important functional differences between closely related species and functional convergence between distantly related species. Functional divergence is attributable to differences in activation levels rather than spatiotemporal control of gene expression. Our findings have implications for understanding enhancer structureâfunction, mechanisms of speciation and computational identification of regulatory modules.</p
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