228,522 research outputs found
Construction of Wannier Functions in Disordered Systems
We propose a general method of constructing Wannier functions in disordered
systems directly out of energy eigenstates. This method consists of two
successive operations: (i) a phase transformation setting the proper
localization center; (ii) the mixing of adjacent states in energy to
sufficiently minimize the spread of the Wannier functions. The latter operation
can be well approximated by a band matrix, further facilitating the
calculation. Detailed implementation of our method is illustrated with one
dimensional systems; the generalization to higher dimensions is
straightforward.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Local theta correspondence and nilpotent invariants
We consider two types of nilpotent invariants associated to smooth
representations, namely generalized Whittaker models, and associated characters
(in the case of a real reductive group). We survey some recent results on the
behavior of these nilpotent invariants under local theta correspondence, and
highlight the special role of a certain double fiberation of moment maps.Comment: Submitted to the conference proceedings in honor of Joseph Bernstei
Exponentially Consistent Kernel Two-Sample Tests
Given two sets of independent samples from unknown distributions and ,
a two-sample test decides whether to reject the null hypothesis that .
Recent attention has focused on kernel two-sample tests as the test statistics
are easy to compute, converge fast, and have low bias with their finite sample
estimates. However, there still lacks an exact characterization on the
asymptotic performance of such tests, and in particular, the rate at which the
type-II error probability decays to zero in the large sample limit. In this
work, we establish that a class of kernel two-sample tests are exponentially
consistent with Polish, locally compact Hausdorff sample space, e.g., . The obtained exponential decay rate is further shown to be optimal among
all two-sample tests satisfying the level constraint, and is independent of
particular kernels provided that they are bounded continuous and
characteristic. Our results gain new insights into related issues such as fair
alternative for testing and kernel selection strategy. Finally, as an
application, we show that a kernel based test achieves the optimal detection
for off-line change detection in the nonparametric setting.Comment: 17 pages. Added application to off-line change detectio
Recommended from our members
Family income affects children's altruistic behavior in the dictator game.
This study aimed to examine how family income and social distance influence young rural Chinese children's altruistic behavior in the dictator game (DG). A total of 469 four-year-old children from eight rural areas in China, including many children left behind by parents who had migrated to urban areas for work, played the DG. Stickers comprised the resource, while recipients in the game were assumed to be either their friends or strangers, with the social distance (i.e., strangers compared to friends) as a between-subjects variable. Children donated significantly more stickers to their friends than to strangers. Moreover, children from lower income families donated more stickers than children from higher income families. However, no gender and parental migrant status differences in children's prosocial behaviors were evident in this sample. Findings of this study suggest that children's altruistic behaviours to peers are influenced by family characteristics since preschool age. The probable influence of local socialization practices on development and the possible adaptive significance were discussed
Revisiting Street-to-Aerial View Image Geo-localization and Orientation Estimation
Street-to-aerial image geo-localization, which matches a query street-view
image to the GPS-tagged aerial images in a reference set, has attracted
increasing attention recently. In this paper, we revisit this problem and point
out the ignored issue about image alignment information. We show that the
performance of a simple Siamese network is highly dependent on the alignment
setting and the comparison of previous works can be unfair if they have
different assumptions. Instead of focusing on the feature extraction under the
alignment assumption, we show that improvements in metric learning techniques
significantly boost the performance regardless of the alignment. Without
leveraging the alignment information, our pipeline outperforms previous works
on both panorama and cropped datasets. Furthermore, we conduct visualization to
help understand the learned model and the effect of alignment information using
Grad-CAM. With our discovery on the approximate rotation-invariant activation
maps, we propose a novel method to estimate the orientation/alignment between a
pair of cross-view images with unknown alignment information. It achieves
state-of-the-art results on the CVUSA dataset.Comment: WACV 202
Dropout Training for SVMs with Data Augmentation
Dropout and other feature noising schemes have shown promising results in
controlling over-fitting by artificially corrupting the training data. Though
extensive theoretical and empirical studies have been performed for generalized
linear models, little work has been done for support vector machines (SVMs),
one of the most successful approaches for supervised learning. This paper
presents dropout training for both linear SVMs and the nonlinear extension with
latent representation learning. For linear SVMs, to deal with the intractable
expectation of the non-smooth hinge loss under corrupting distributions, we
develop an iteratively re-weighted least square (IRLS) algorithm by exploring
data augmentation techniques. Our algorithm iteratively minimizes the
expectation of a re-weighted least square problem, where the re-weights are
analytically updated. For nonlinear latent SVMs, we consider learning one layer
of latent representations in SVMs and extend the data augmentation technique in
conjunction with first-order Taylor-expansion to deal with the intractable
expected non-smooth hinge loss and the nonlinearity of latent representations.
Finally, we apply the similar data augmentation ideas to develop a new IRLS
algorithm for the expected logistic loss under corrupting distributions, and we
further develop a non-linear extension of logistic regression by incorporating
one layer of latent representations. Our algorithms offer insights on the
connection and difference between the hinge loss and logistic loss in dropout
training. Empirical results on several real datasets demonstrate the
effectiveness of dropout training on significantly boosting the classification
accuracy of both linear and nonlinear SVMs. In addition, the nonlinear SVMs
further improve the prediction performance on several image datasets.Comment: 15 pages. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1404.417
Very free curves on Fano Complete Intersections
In this paper, we show that general Fano complete intersections over an
algebraically closed field of arbitrary characteristics are separably
rationally connected. Our proof also implies that general log Fano complete
intersections with smooth tame boundary divisors admit very free -curves.Comment: 17 pages; final versio
Representations of the Drazin inverse involving idempotents in a ring
We present some formulae for the Drazin inverse of difference and product of
idempotents in a ring. A number of results of bounded linear operators in
Banach spaces are extended to the ring case.Comment: 11 page
Cyclic DNA codes over F2+uF2+vF2+uvF2
In this work, we study the structure of cyclic DNA codes of arbitrary lengths
over the ring R=F2+uF2+vF2+uvF2 and establish relations to codes over R1=F2+uF2
by defining a Gray map between R and R1^2 where R1 is the ring with 4 elements.
Cyclic codes of arbitrary lengths over R satisfied the reverse constraint and
the reverse-complement constraint are studied in this paper. The GC content
constraint is considered in the last
A Game-Theoretic Framework for Resilient and Distributed Generation Control of Renewable Energies in Microgrids
The integration of microgrids that depend on the renewable distributed energy
resources with the current power systems is a critical issue in the smart grid.
In this paper, we propose a non-cooperative game-theoretic framework to study
the strategic behavior of distributed microgrids that generate renewable
energies and characterize the power generation solutions by using the Nash
equilibrium concept. Our framework not only incorporates economic factors but
also takes into account the stability and efficiency of the microgrids,
including the power flow constraints and voltage angle regulations. We develop
two decentralized update schemes for microgrids and show their convergence to a
unique Nash equilibrium. Also, we propose a novel fully distributed PMU-enabled
algorithm which only needs the information of voltage angle at the bus. To show
the resiliency of the distributed algorithm, we introduce two failure models of
the smart grid. Case studies based on the IEEE 14-bus system are used to
corroborate the effectiveness and resiliency of the proposed algorithms.Comment: 11 pages; This paper has been accepted to publish in IEEE
Transactions on Smart Grid. This is the final versio
- …