9,469 research outputs found
Correlation-Compressed Direct Coupling Analysis
Learning Ising or Potts models from data has become an important topic in
statistical physics and computational biology, with applications to predictions
of structural contacts in proteins and other areas of biological data analysis.
The corresponding inference problems are challenging since the normalization
constant (partition function) of the Ising/Potts distributions cannot be
computed efficiently on large instances. Different ways to address this issue
have hence given size to a substantial methodological literature. In this paper
we investigate how these methods could be used on much larger datasets than
studied previously. We focus on a central aspect, that in practice these
inference problems are almost always severely under-sampled, and the
operational result is almost always a small set of leading (largest)
predictions. We therefore explore an approach where the data is pre-filtered
based on empirical correlations, which can be computed directly even for very
large problems. Inference is only used on the much smaller instance in a
subsequent step of the analysis. We show that in several relevant model classes
such a combined approach gives results of almost the same quality as the
computationally much more demanding inference on the whole dataset. We also
show that results on whole-genome epistatic couplings that were obtained in a
recent computation-intensive study can be retrieved by the new approach. The
method of this paper hence opens up the possibility to learn parameters
describing pair-wise dependencies in whole genomes in a computationally
feasible and expedient manner.Comment: 15 pages, including 11 figure
Symmetry Reduction and Boundary Modes for Fe-Chains on an s-wave Superconductor
We investigate the superconducting phase diagram and boundary modes for a
quasi-1D system formed by three Fe-Chains on an s-wave superconductor,
motivated by the recent Princeton experiment. The onsite
spin-orbit term, inter-chain diagonal hopping couplings, and magnetic disorders
in the Fe-chains are shown to be crucial for the superconducting phases, which
can be topologically trivial or nontrivial in different parameter regimes. For
the topological regime a single Majorana and multiple Andreew bound modes are
obtained in the ends of the chain, while for the trivial phase only low-energy
Andreev bound states survive. Nontrivial symmetry reduction mechanism induced
by the term, diagonal hopping couplings, and magnetic
disorder is uncovered to interpret the present results. Our study also implies
that the zero-bias peak observed in the recent experiment may or may not
reflect the Majorana zero modes in the end of the Fe-chains.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; some minor errors are correcte
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