23,436 research outputs found
The Perceptions of Macao Undergraduates Regarding Help Websites for Problem Gambling
This study conducted a web-surfing exercise and a questionnaire survey among a group of Macao undergraduate students regarding the websites that offered help with problem gambling. The results of this study found that most help websites in Macao and Hong Kong provided basic information-sharing service. The students indicated that they would choose their preferred help organization based on factors such as trust, familiarity, and the characteristics of the websites. They also gave comments/suggestions related to the publicity, design, contents, and focus of the websites. This study discussed the results and their implications for future research and practice
Coordinated Multicasting with Opportunistic User Selection in Multicell Wireless Systems
Physical layer multicasting with opportunistic user selection (OUS) is
examined for multicell multi-antenna wireless systems. By adopting a two-layer
encoding scheme, a rate-adaptive channel code is applied in each fading block
to enable successful decoding by a chosen subset of users (which varies over
different blocks) and an application layer erasure code is employed across
multiple blocks to ensure that every user is able to recover the message after
decoding successfully in a sufficient number of blocks. The transmit signal and
code-rate in each block determine opportunistically the subset of users that
are able to successfully decode and can be chosen to maximize the long-term
multicast efficiency. The employment of OUS not only helps avoid
rate-limitations caused by the user with the worst channel, but also helps
coordinate interference among different cells and multicast groups. In this
work, efficient algorithms are proposed for the design of the transmit
covariance matrices, the physical layer code-rates, and the target user subsets
in each block. In the single group scenario, the system parameters are
determined by maximizing the group-rate, defined as the physical layer
code-rate times the fraction of users that can successfully decode in each
block. In the multi-group scenario, the system parameters are determined by
considering a group-rate balancing optimization problem, which is solved by a
successive convex approximation (SCA) approach. To further reduce the feedback
overhead, we also consider the case where only part of the users feed back
their channel vectors in each block and propose a design based on the balancing
of the expected group-rates. In addition to SCA, a sample average approximation
technique is also introduced to handle the probabilistic terms arising in this
problem. The effectiveness of the proposed schemes is demonstrated by computer
simulations.Comment: Accepted by IEEE Transactions on Signal Processin
Understanding Pure CLIP Guidance for Voxel Grid NeRF Models
We explore the task of text to 3D object generation using CLIP. Specifically,
we use CLIP for guidance without access to any datasets, a setting we refer to
as pure CLIP guidance. While prior work has adopted this setting, there is no
systematic study of mechanics for preventing adversarial generations within
CLIP. We illustrate how different image-based augmentations prevent the
adversarial generation problem, and how the generated results are impacted. We
test different CLIP model architectures and show that ensembling different
models for guidance can prevent adversarial generations within bigger models
and generate sharper results. Furthermore, we implement an implicit voxel grid
model to show how neural networks provide an additional layer of
regularization, resulting in better geometrical structure and coherency of
generated objects. Compared to prior work, we achieve more coherent results
with higher memory efficiency and faster training speeds
Recommended from our members
The Evolution and Functional Significance of Nested Gene Structures in Drosophila melanogaster
Nearly ten percent of the genes in the genome of Drosophila melanogaster are in nested structures, in which one gene is completely nested within the intron of another gene (nested and including gene, respectively). Even though the coding sequences and UTRs of these nested/including gene pairs do not overlap, their intimate structures and the possibility of shared regulatory sequences raise questions about the evolutionary forces governing the origination, and subsequent functional and evolutionary impacts of these structures. In this study, we show that nested genes experience weaker evolutionary constraint, have faster rates of protein evolution and are expressed in fewer tissues than other genes, while including genes show the opposite patterns. Surprisingly, despite completely overlapping with each other, nested and including genes are less likely to display correlated gene expression and biological function than the nearby yet non-overlapping genes. Interestingly, significantly fewer nested genes are transcribed from the same strand as the including gene. We found that same-strand nested genes are more likely to be single-exon genes. In addition, same-strand including genes are less likely to have known lethal or sterile phenotypes than opposite-strand including genes only when the corresponding nested genes have introns. These results support our hypothesis that selection against potential erroneous mRNA splicing when nested and including genes are on the same strand plays an important role in the evolution of nested gene structures
- …