2,463 research outputs found
Comparison of Balancing Techniques for Multimedia IR over Imbalanced Datasets
A promising method to improve the performance of information retrieval systems is to approach retrieval tasks as a supervised classification problem. Previous user interactions, e.g. gathered from a thorough log file analysis, can be used to train classifiers which aim to inference relevance of retrieved documents based on user interactions. A problem in this approach is, however, the large imbalance ratio between relevant and non-relevant documents in the collection. In standard test collection as used in academic evaluation frameworks such as TREC, non-relevant documents outnumber relevant documents by far. In this work, we address this imbalance problem in the multimedia domain. We focus on the logs of two multimedia user studies which are highly imbalanced. We compare a naiinodotve solution of randomly deleting documents belonging to the majority class with various balancing algorithms coming from different fields: data classification and text classification. Our experiments indicate that all algorithms improve the classification performance of just deleting at random from the dominant class
Phonetic Key to The Non-Standard Othography in The Novels of George Eliot
Any writer attempting to represent graphically variant pronunciations is faced with the double problem of being accurate as regards the pronunciation he has in mind and of choosing a spelling easily identifiable with the standard word. As a rule, he will keep most of the normal spelling and alter only the orthography of the syllable pronounced in a different way. The results of this operation should enable the reader to interpret the variant spelling quickly and, at the same time, give him a good idea about how that word sounds in dialect speech. It is not always easy to interpret variant spellings and the extra effort they demand from the reader\u27s attention may sometimes provoke his rejection; it all depends on the writer\u27s ability and on the reader\u27s good disposition. The existence of a long standing tradition in the use of dialects in English literature reaching as far back as Chaucer says much for their general acceptance among the public. Research has been carried out on this aspect of the works of some individual authors who tried to suggest Scottish, northern, southern or Cockney pronunciations in the XIXth century. Those were also the dialects most frequently described in glossaries, essays and periodicals, and the best known to the general reader. Yet very little has been said about the dialect in the novels of George Eliot 0), the first author to fully represent the speech of the West Midlands. The reason for this may be the almost total lack of dialect studies about this region in the XIXth century (2) and also the absence of other writers to continue the path she started
Implanted muon spin spectroscopy on 2-O-adamantane: a model system that mimics the liquid
The transition taking place between two metastable phases in 2-O-adamantane, namely the [Formula: see text] cubic, rotator phase and the lower temperature P21/c, Z  =  4 substitutionally disordered crystal is studied by means of muon spin rotation and relaxation techniques. Measurements carried out under zero, weak transverse and longitudinal fields reveal a temperature dependence of the relaxation parameters strikingly similar to those exhibited by structural glass[Formula: see text]liquid transitions (Bermejo et al 2004 Phys. Rev. B 70 214202; Cabrillo et al 2003 Phys. Rev. B 67 184201). The observed behaviour manifests itself as a square root singularity in the relaxation rates pointing towards some critical temperature which for amorphous systems is located some tens of degrees above that shown as the characteristic transition temperature if studied by thermodynamic means. The implications of such findings in the context of current theoretical approaches concerning the canonical liquid-glass transition are discussed.Postprint (author's final draft
High thermal neutron flux effects on structural and macroscopic properties of alkali-borosilicate glasses used as neutron guide substrate
The behaviour of four alkali-borosilicate glasses under homogeneous thermal neutron irradiation has been studied. These materials are used for the manufacturing of neutron guides which are installed in most facilities as devices to transport neutrons from intense sources such as nuclear reactors or spallation sources up to scientific instruments. Several experimental techniques such as Raman, NMR, SANS and STEM have been employed in order to understand the rather different macroscopic behaviour under irradiation of materials that belong to a same glass family. The results have shown that the remarkable glass shrinking observed for neutron doses below 0.5 · 10 18 n/cm 2 critically depends upon the presence of domains where silicate and borate network do not mix
Why neutron guides may end up breaking down? Some results on the macroscopic behaviour of alkali-borosilicate glass support plates under neutron irradiation
In this paper we report on a first part of a study on the mechanisms leading to brittle fracture in neutron guides made of glass as structural element. Such devices are widely used to deliver thermal and cold neu tron beams to experimental lines in most large neutron research facilities. We present results on macroscopic properties of samples of guide glass substrates which are subjected to neutron irradiation at relatively large fluences. The results show a striking dependence of some of the macroscopic properties such as density, shape or surface curvature upon the specific chemical composition of a given glass. The relevance of the present findings for the installation of either replacement guides at the existing facilities or for the deployment of instruments for ongoing projects such as the European Spallation Source is briefly discussed
Short range order of CCl4: RMC and MD methods
The main objective of this paper is to present a method to fully determine the six
degrees of freedom regarding position and orientation of a neighboring molecule around a central
one, i.e. the g(rCM,Âż) distribution function. This is accomplished by completely determining the
short range structure of liquid carbon tetrachloride, while employing results from two different
methods, Molecular Dynamics (MD) [1] and Reverse Monte Carlo (RMC) [2]. Exclusively, the
structural ordering of the first four molecules will be detailed.Postprint (published version
Single-molecule kinetic energy of condensed normal deuterium
8 págs.; 9 figs.; 1 tab.Inelastic scattering of 300-meV neutrons allows the study of the liquid (T=20 and 30 K, saturated vapor pressure) and solid (T=4.2 K, saturated vapor pressure) phases of the normal deuterium mixture (2/3 o-D2+1/3 p -D2) in the region of momentum transfer where a single-molecule response is expected. The spectra are analyzed within the impulse approximation and assuming Gaussian momentum distributions for the translation of the molecules. For the solid, the estimated value of the single-molecule average kinetic energy does not compare unfavorably with those obtained scaling experimental results in parahydrogen solids. In the liquid state, substantial departures seem to exist from the classical liquid behavior, even if up to second-order quantum corrections are taken into account. ©1996 American Physical SocietyThis research has been made possible in part by the Spanish DGICYT through Grant
No. PB92-0015.Peer Reviewe
Collective excitations in liquid D2 confined within the mesoscopic pores of a MCM-41 molecular sieve
We present a comparative study of the excitations in bulk and liquid D2
confined within the pores of MCM-41. The material (Mobile Crystalline
Material-41) is a silicate obtained by means of a template that yields a
partially crystalline structure composed by arrays of nonintersecting hexagonal
channels of controlled width having walls made of amorphous SiO2. Its porosity
was characterized by means of adsorption isotherms and found to be composed by
a regular array of pores having a narrow distribution of sizes with a most
probable value of 2.45 nm. The assessment of the precise location of the sample
within the pores is carried out by means of pressure isotherms. The study was
conducted at two pressures which correspond to pore fillings above the
capillary condensation regime. Within the range of wave vectors where
collective excitations can be followed up (0.3<Q<3.0 −1), we found
confinement brings forward a large shortening of the excitation lifetimes that
shifts the characteristic frequencies to higher energies. In addition, the
coherent quasielastic scattering shows signatures of reduced diffusivity.Comment: 6 page
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