1,748 research outputs found

    Probabilistic Perspectives on Collecting Human Uncertainty in Predictive Data Mining

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    In many areas of data mining, data is collected from humans beings. In this contribution, we ask the question of how people actually respond to ordinal scales. The main problem observed is that users tend to be volatile in their choices, i.e. complex cognitions do not always lead to the same decisions, but to distributions of possible decision outputs. This human uncertainty may sometimes have quite an impact on common data mining approaches and thus, the question of effective modelling this so called human uncertainty emerges naturally. Our contribution introduces two different approaches for modelling the human uncertainty of user responses. In doing so, we develop techniques in order to measure this uncertainty at the level of user inputs as well as the level of user cognition. With support of comprehensive user experiments and large-scale simulations, we systematically compare both methodologies along with their implications for personalisation approaches. Our findings demonstrate that significant amounts of users do submit something completely different (action) than they really have in mind (cognition). Moreover, we demonstrate that statistically sound evidence with respect to algorithm assessment becomes quite hard to realise, especially when explicit rankings shall be built

    Characterizing the Quantum Confined Stark Effect in Semiconductor Quantum Dots and Nanorods for Single-Molecule Electrophysiology

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    We optimized the performance of quantum confined Stark effect QCSE based voltage nanosensors. A high throughput approach for single particle QCSE characterization was developed and utilized to screen a library of such nanosensors. Type II ZnSe CdS seeded nanorods were found to have the best performance among the different nanosensors evaluated in this work. The degree of correlation between intensity changes and spectral changes of the excitons emission under applied field was characterized. An upper limit for the temporal response of individual ZnSe CdS nanorods to voltage modulation was characterized by high throughput, high temporal resolution intensity measurements using a novel photon counting camera. The measured 3.5 us response time is limited by the voltage modulation electronics and represents about 30 times higher bandwidth than needed for recording an action potential in a neuron.Comment: 36 pages, 6 figure

    Understanding the Origins of a Pandemic Virus

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    Understanding the pre-pandemic conditions and the origin of infectious diseases provides scientifically based rationales for implementing public health measures that help to avoid, or at least to mitigate, future epidemics. The recent ancestors of a pandemic virus provide an invaluable information about the set of minimal genomic alterations that transformed a zoonotic agent into a full human pandemic. Since the first confirmed cases of the H1N1pdm virus in the spring of 2009 several hypotheses about the strain's origins have been proposed. However, how, where, and when it first infected humans is still far from clear. The only way to piece together such an epidemiological puzzle relies on the collective effort of the international scientific community to increase genomic sequencing of influenza isolates, especially ones collected in the months prior to the origin of the pandemic

    Moving Vertices to Make Drawings Plane

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    A straight-line drawing δ\delta of a planar graph GG need not be plane, but can be made so by moving some of the vertices. Let shift(G,δ)(G,\delta) denote the minimum number of vertices that need to be moved to turn δ\delta into a plane drawing of GG. We show that shift(G,δ)(G,\delta) is NP-hard to compute and to approximate, and we give explicit bounds on shift(G,δ)(G,\delta) when GG is a tree or a general planar graph. Our hardness results extend to 1BendPointSetEmbeddability, a well-known graph-drawing problem.Comment: This paper has been merged with http://arxiv.org/abs/0709.017

    Cryopreservation of Brassia rex Orchid Shoots Using PVS2 Technique

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    In vitro grown shoots of Brassia rex orchid hybrid was cryopreserved by means of plant vitrification solution 2 (PVS2) technique. For the preculture treatment, the shoots were excised into two standard sizes of 0.5-1.0 and 1.0-1.5 cm and were precultured on half-strength Murashige and Skoog (MS) semi solid medium supplemented with different concentrations of sucrose (control (0.06 M), 0.1, 0.25, 0.5 and 0.75 M) for 24 and 48 h. For the PVS2 dehydration treatment, the 0.1 M precultured (48 h and 1.0-1.5 cm) shoots were chosen for further experiment where the shoots were dehydrated in PVS2 solution at various durations (5, 10, 15, 20, 25 and 30 min) at 0 and 24°C for positive and negative storage in Liquid Nitrogen (LN). The viability of the cryopreserved cells were determined by 2, 3, 5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC) assay and chlorophyll extraction techniques. The best condition of PVS2 treatment was at 20 min of PVS2 treatment at 0°C prior to storage in liquid nitrogen. In chlorophyll determination based on chlorophyll assay, the highest concentration of total chlorophyll concentration (56.250 µg g-1) was obtained from shoots that were dehydrated for 25 min in PVS2 solution at 0°C without storage in liquid nitrogen

    Implementation of the SU(2) Hamiltonian Symmetry for the DMRG Algorithm

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    In the Density Matrix Renormalization Group (DMRG) algorithm, Hamiltonian symmetries play an important role. Using symmetries, the matrix representation of the Hamiltonian can be blocked. Diagonalizing each matrix block is more efficient than diagonalizing the original matrix. This paper explains how the the DMRG++ code has been extended to handle the non-local SU(2) symmetry in a model independent way. Improvements in CPU times compared to runs with only local symmetries are discussed for the one-orbital Hubbard model, and for a two-orbital Hubbard model for iron-based superconductors. The computational bottleneck of the algorithm and the use of shared memory parallelization are also addressed.Comment: elsarticle, 1 figur

    Photopolymérisation et modulation d'indice de réfraction en holographie

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    5 pagesNational audienceLes systèmes ici mis en œuvre en tant que support d'enregistrement holographique reposent sur la mise en commun des compétences, d'une part, du LPIM dans le domaine des photoamorceurs et des supports d'enregistrement holographique, et celles, d'autre part, du laboratoire Foton. Les systèmes photoamorceurs considérés sont composés de trois éléments : un colorant et deux co-amorceurs (un donneur d'électron et un accepteur d'électron). Le système SFH+-NPG-ClHABI est, après optimisation des formulations, celui qui conduit aux meilleures performances holographiques, tant du point de vue rendement final de diffraction que de la vitesse de formation du réseau, tout en se stabilisant rapidement à son maximum

    Deformations of duality-symmetric theories

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    We prove that a sum of free non-covariant duality-symmetric actions does not allow consistent, continuous and local self-interactions that deform the gauge transformations. For instance, non-Abelian deformations are not allowed, even in 4 dimensions where Yang-Mills type interactions of 1-forms are allowed in the non-manifestly duality-symmetric formulation. This suggests that non-Abelian duality should require to leave the standard formalism of perturbative local field theories. The analyticity of self-interactions for a single duality-symmetric gauge field in four dimensions is also analyzed.Comment: 35 pages, typo corrections and one reference added, submitted to Nucl. Phy
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