26 research outputs found
The influence of risk perception in epidemics: a cellular agent model
Our work stems from the consideration that the spreading of a disease is
modulated by the individual's perception of the infected neighborhood and
his/her strategy to avoid being infected as well. We introduced a general
``cellular agent'' model that accounts for a hetereogeneous and variable
network of connections. The probability of infection is assumed to depend on
the perception that an individual has about the spreading of the disease in her
local neighborhood and on broadcasting media. In the one-dimensional
homogeneous case the model reduces to the DK one, while for long-range coupling
the dynamics exhibits large fluctuations that may lead to the complete
extinction of the disease
Can the Pioneer anomaly be of gravitational origin? A phenomenological answer
In order to satisfy the equivalence principle, any non-conventional mechanism
proposed to gravitationally explain the Pioneer anomaly, in the form in which
it is presently known from the so-far analyzed Pioneer 10/11 data, cannot leave
out of consideration its impact on the motion of the planets of the Solar
System as well, especially those orbiting in the regions in which the anomalous
behavior of the Pioneer probes manifested itself. In this paper we, first,
discuss the residuals of the right ascension \alpha and declination \delta of
Uranus, Neptune and Pluto obtained by processing various data sets with
different, well established dynamical theories (JPL DE, IAA EPM, VSOP). Second,
we use the latest determinations of the perihelion secular advances of some
planets in order to put on the test two gravitational mechanisms recently
proposed to accommodate the Pioneer anomaly based on two models of modified
gravity. Finally, we adopt the ranging data to Voyager 2 when it encountered
Uranus and Neptune to perform a further, independent test of the hypothesis
that a Pioneer-like acceleration can also affect the motion of the outer
planets of the Solar System. The obtained answers are negative.Comment: Latex2e, 26 pages, 6 tables, 2 figure, 47 references. It is the
merging of gr-qc/0608127, gr-qc/0608068, gr-qc/0608101 and gr-qc/0611081.
Final version to appear in Foundations of Physic
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Somatostatin content of the hypothalamic ventromedial and arcuate nuclei and the circumventricular organs in the rat
Geocode Matching and Privacy Preservation
Abstract. Geocoding is the process of matching addresses to geographic locations, such as latitudes and longitudes, or local census areas. In many applications, addresses are the key to geo-spatial data analysis and mining. Privacy and confidentiality are of paramount importance when data from, for example, cancer registries or crime databases is geocoded. Various approaches to privacy-preserving data matching, also called record linkage or entity resolution, have been developed in recent times. However, most of these approaches have not considered the specific privacy issues involved in geocode matching. This paper provides a brief introduction to privacy-preserving data and geocode matching, and using several real-world scenarios the issues involved in privacy and confidentiality for data and geocode matching are illustrated. The challenges of making privacy-preserving matching practical for real-world applications are highlighted, and potential directions for future research are discussed