23,150 research outputs found
The Determination of the Effective Resistance of a Spindle Supporting a Model Airfoil
An attempt was made to determine the effect of spindle interference on the lift of the airfoil by measuring moments about the axis parallel to the direction of air flow. The values obtained are of the same degree as the experimental error, and for the present this effect will be neglected. The results obtained using a U.S.A. 15 wing (plotted here) show that the correction is nearly constant from 0 degrees to 10 degrees incidence and that at greater angles its value becomes erratic. At such angles, however, the wing drag is so high that the spindle correction and its attendant errors become relatively small and unimportant
Machine Learning and Irresponsible Inference: Morally Assessing the Training Data for Image Recognition Systems
Just as humans can draw conclusions responsibly or irresponsibly, so too can computers. Machine learning systems that have been trained on data sets that include irresponsible judgments are likely to yield irresponsible predictions as outputs. In this paper I focus on a particular kind of inference a computer system might make: identification of the intentions with which a person acted on the basis of photographic evidence. Such inferences are liable to be morally objectionable, because of a way in which they are presumptuous. After elaborating this moral concern, I explore the possibility that carefully procuring the training data for image recognition systems could ensure that the systems avoid the problem. The lesson of this paper extends beyond just the particular case of image recognition systems and the challenge of responsibly identifying a person’s intentions. Reflection on this particular case demonstrates the importance (as well as the difficulty) of evaluating machine learning systems and their training data from the standpoint of moral considerations that are not encompassed by ordinary assessments of predictive accuracy
Assessing the impacts of nonindigenous marine macroalgae: an update of current knowledge
Nonindigenous marine species continue to be one of the foremost threats to marine biodiversity. As an update to a 2007 review of the impacts of introduced macroalgae, we assessed 142 additional publications to describe species’ impacts as well as to appraise information on the mechanisms of impact. Only 10% of the currently known nonindigenous macroalgal species were subjects of ecological impact studies, with changed community composition as the most commonly reported effect. Economic impacts were rarely published. Recent research has focused on the impacts of introduced macroalgal assemblages: red algal introductions to the Hawaiian Islands and turf algae in the Mediterranean. Several general issues were apparent. First, many publications included nonsignificant results of statistical analyses but did not report associated power. As many of the studies also had low effect and sample size, the potential for type II errors is considerable. Second, there was no widely accepted framework to categorize and compare impacts between studies. Information in this updated review was still too sparse to identify general patterns and mechanisms of impact. This is a critical knowledge gap as rates of introductions and hence impacts of nonindigenous macroalgae are expected to accelerate with climate change and increasing global trade connectivity
Measurement and analysis of critical crack tip processes during fatigue crack growth
The mechanics of fatigue crack growth under constant-amplitudes and variable-amplitude loading were examined. Critical loading histories involving relatively simple overload and overload/underload cycles were studied to provide a basic understanding of the underlying physical processes controlling crack growth. The material used for this study was 7091-T7E69, a powder metallurgy aluminum alloy. Local crack-tip parameters were measured at various times before, during, and after the overloads, these include crack-tip opening loads and displacements, and crack-tip strain fields. The latter were useed, in combination with the materials cyclic and monotonic stress-strain properties, to compute crack-tip residual stresses. The experimental results are also compared with analytical predictions obtained using the FAST-2 computer code. The sensitivity of the analytical model to constant-amplitude fatigue crack growth rate properties and to through-thickness constrain are studied
Persistent Homology in Sparse Regression and its Application to Brain Morphometry
Sparse systems are usually parameterized by a tuning parameter that
determines the sparsity of the system. How to choose the right tuning parameter
is a fundamental and difficult problem in learning the sparse system. In this
paper, by treating the the tuning parameter as an additional dimension,
persistent homological structures over the parameter space is introduced and
explored. The structures are then further exploited in speeding up the
computation using the proposed soft-thresholding technique. The topological
structures are further used as multivariate features in the tensor-based
morphometry (TBM) in characterizing white matter alterations in children who
have experienced severe early life stress and maltreatment. These analyses
reveal that stress-exposed children exhibit more diffuse anatomical
organization across the whole white matter region.Comment: submitted to IEEE Transactions on Medical Imagin
Development of welding techniques and filler metals for high strength aluminum alloys second quarterly report, 1 oct. - 31 dec. 1964
Welding techniques and filler metals for high strength aluminum alloys evaluated by bulge test progra
On the Curious Resemblance Between Fly Ash and Meteoritic Dust
This paper is a discussion of W. J. Thomsen\u27s prize-winning paper presented to the Geology Section of the Iowa Academy of Science in 1952 and entitled The Annual Contribution of Meteoritic Dust to the Mass of the Earth (1). The present paper presents evidence that Thomsen\u27s unusually high estimate for the annual deposition of meteoritic dust may be due to the presence of fly-ash in the magnetic dust samples he collected
Scotland, Catalonia and the “right” to self-determination: a comment suggested by Kathryn Crameri’s “Do Catalans Have the Right to Decide?
No abstract available
Parker and Usery: Portended Constitutional Limits on the Federal Interdiction of Anticompetitive State Action
This Article examines in detail the policies underlying these recent Supreme Court decisions interpreting the Sherman Act and shows that they have equal applicability to FTC enforcement of the Clayton and FTC Acts. The Article identifies the factual criteria used by the courts for distinguishing state and private conduct that is subject to the antitrust laws, and to congressional commerce dictates, from sovereign state regulatory conduct that is immune from antitrust sanction. The Article then focuses on the impact of Usery, which provides constitutional support for the so-called state action doctrine that was originated in Parker v. Brown. Finally, we conclude that the state action doctrine is not limited to the confines of the Sherman, Clayton, or FTC Acts but may well stand as a constitutional limitation on the substantive, economic powers of Congress and its regulatory agencies
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