16 research outputs found
Modeling the Adaptive Role of Negative Signaling in Honey Bee Intraspecific Competition
Collective decision making in the social insects often proceeds via feedback cycles based on positive signaling. Negative signals have, however, been found in a few contexts in which costs exist for paying attention to no longer useful information. Here we incorporate new research on the specificity and context of the negative stop signal into an agent based model of honey bee foraging to explore the adaptive basis of negative signaling in the dance language. Our work suggests that the stop signal, by acting as a counterbalance to the waggle dance, allows colonies to rapidly shut down attacks on other colonies. This could be a key adaptation, as the costs of attacking a colony strong enough to defend itself are significant
Stock markets and effective exchange rates in European countries: threshold cointegration findings
© 2015, Eurasia Business and Economics Society. The nexus between stock markets and exchange rates is examined in the case of eight European countries. The sample consists of four economies with national currencies and four that have adopted the euro. Thus, if differences between the two groups in the relationship governing the two markets exist, they will be unveiled. To this effect, a threshold cointegration methodology is adopted that allows for more reliable inferences to be drawn for both the short and long run nexus between the two markets. Monthly data is used covering the period 01/2000–12/2014. The findings reported herein offer support in favor of the portfolio approach thesis over the recent economic crisis period, but this finding is not the case for the entire sample. Bidirectional causality is found for Norway and the UK, pointing to a currency effect on stock markets. In view of the findings reported herein, policies aiming at reducing uncertainty in the stock markets can exert beneficial effects on currency markets
Measuring the gravitational field in General Relativity: From deviation equations and the gravitational compass to relativistic clock gradiometry
How does one measure the gravitational field? We give explicit answers to
this fundamental question and show how all components of the curvature tensor,
which represents the gravitational field in Einstein's theory of General
Relativity, can be obtained by means of two different methods. The first method
relies on the measuring the accelerations of a suitably prepared set of test
bodies relative to the observer. The second methods utilizes a set of suitably
prepared clocks. The methods discussed here form the basis of relativistic
(clock) gradiometry and are of direct operational relevance for applications in
geodesy.Comment: To appear in "Relativistic Geodesy: Foundations and Application", D.
Puetzfeld et. al. (eds.), Fundamental Theories of Physics, Springer 2018, 52
pages, in print. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1804.11106,
arXiv:1511.08465, arXiv:1805.1067