65,909 research outputs found
The Variable Markov Oracle: Algorithms for Human Gesture Applications
This article introduces the Variable Markov Oracle (VMO) data structure for multivariate time series indexing. VMO can identify repetitive fragments and find sequential similarities between observations. VMO can also be viewed as a combination of online clustering algorithms with variable-order Markov constraints. The authors use VMO for gesture query-by-content and gesture following. A probabilistic interpretation of the VMO query-matching algorithm is proposed to find an analogy to the inference problem in a hidden Markov model (HMM). This probabilistic interpretation extends VMO to be not only a data structure but also a model for time series. Query-by-content experiments were conducted on a gesture database that was recorded using a Kinect 3D camera, showing state-of-the-art performance. The query-by-content experiments' results are compared to previous works using HMM and dynamic time warping. Gesture following is described in the context of an interactive dance environment that aims to integrate human movements with computer-generated graphics to create an augmented reality performance
Exact Quantum Many-Body Scar States in the Rydberg-Blockaded Atom Chain
A recent experiment in the Rydberg atom chain observed unusual oscillatory
quench dynamics with a charge density wave initial state, and theoretical works
identified a set of many-body "scar states" showing nonthermal behavior in the
Hamiltonian as potentially responsible for the atypical dynamics. In the same
nonintegrable Hamiltonian, we discover several eigenstates at \emph{infinite
temperature} that can be represented exactly as matrix product states with
finite bond dimension, for both periodic boundary conditions (two exact
states) and open boundary conditions (two states and one each ). This discovery explicitly demonstrates violation of strong
eigenstate thermalization hypothesis in this model and uncovers exact quantum
many-body scar states. These states show signatures of translational symmetry
breaking with period-2 bond-centered pattern, despite being in one dimension at
infinite temperature. We show that the nearby many-body scar states can be well
approximated as "quasiparticle excitations" on top of our exact scar
states, and propose a quasiparticle explanation of the strong oscillations
observed in experiments.Comment: Published version. In addition to (v2): (1) Add additional proofs to
the exact scar states and intuitions behind SMA and MMA to the appendices.
(2) Add entanglement scaling of SMA and MMA to the appendice
Replacement Paths via Row Minima of Concise Matrices
Matrix is {\em -concise} if the finite entries of each column of
consist of or less intervals of identical numbers. We give an -time
algorithm to compute the row minima of any -concise matrix.
Our algorithm yields the first -time reductions from the
replacement-paths problem on an -node -edge undirected graph
(respectively, directed acyclic graph) to the single-source shortest-paths
problem on an -node -edge undirected graph (respectively, directed
acyclic graph). That is, we prove that the replacement-paths problem is no
harder than the single-source shortest-paths problem on undirected graphs and
directed acyclic graphs. Moreover, our linear-time reductions lead to the first
-time algorithms for the replacement-paths problem on the following
classes of -node -edge graphs (1) undirected graphs in the word-RAM model
of computation, (2) undirected planar graphs, (3) undirected minor-closed
graphs, and (4) directed acyclic graphs.Comment: 23 pages, 1 table, 9 figures, accepted to SIAM Journal on Discrete
Mathematic
Explicit construction of quasi-conserved local operator of translationally invariant non-integrable quantum spin chain in prethermalization
We numerically construct translationally invariant quasi-conserved operators
with maximum range M which best-commute with a non-integrable quantum spin
chain Hamiltonian, up to M = 12. In the large coupling limit, we find that the
residual norm of the commutator of the quasi-conserved operator decays
exponentially with its maximum range M at small M, and turns into a slower
decay at larger M. This quasi-conserved operator can be understood as a dressed
total "spin-z" operator, by comparing with the perturbative Schrieffer-Wolff
construction developed to high order reaching essentially the same maximum
range. We also examine the operator inverse participation ratio of the
operator, which suggests its localization in the operator Hilbert space. The
operator also shows almost exponentially decaying profile at short distance,
while the long-distance behavior is not clear due to limitations of our
numerical calculation. Further dynamical simulation confirms that the
prethermalization-equilibrated values are described by a generalized Gibbs
ensemble that includes such quasi-conserved operator.Comment: 22 pages with 13 pages of main text, 9 figures and 5 appendices
(published version
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