34,131 research outputs found
Evolution of cooperation in multilevel public goods games with community structures
In a community-structured population, public goods games (PGG) occur both
within and between communities. Such type of PGG is referred as multilevel
public goods games (MPGG). We propose a minimalist evolutionary model of the
MPGG and analytically study the evolution of cooperation. We demonstrate that
in the case of sufficiently large community size and community number, if the
imitation strength within community is weak, i.e., an individual imitates
another one in the same community almost randomly, cooperation as well as
punishment are more abundant than defection in the long run; if the imitation
strength between communities is strong, i.e., the more successful strategy in
two individuals from distinct communities is always imitated, cooperation and
punishment are also more abundant. However, when both of the two imitation
intensities are strong, defection becomes the most abundant strategy in the
population. Our model provides insight into the investigation of the
large-scale cooperation in public social dilemma among contemporary
communities.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, Accepted by EP
Survey and monitoring of opium poppy and wheat in Afghanistan: 2003-2009
An integrated application of remote-sensing technology was devised and applied in Afghanistan during 2003–2009 providing critical information on cereal and poppy cultivation and poppy eradication. The results influenced UK and international policy and counter-narcotics actions in Afghanistan
The application of time-series MODIS NDVI profiles for the acquisition of crop information across Afghanistan
We investigated and developed a prototype crop information system integrating 250 m Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) data with other available remotely sensed imagery, field data, and knowledge as part of a wider project monitoring opium and cereal crops. NDVI profiles exhibited large geographical variations in timing, height, shape, and number of peaks, with characteristics determined by underlying crop mixes, growth cycles, and agricultural practices. MODIS pixels were typically bigger than the field sizes, but profiles were indicators of crop phenology as the growth stages of the main first-cycle crops (opium poppy and cereals) were in phase. Profiles were used to investigate crop rotations, areas of newly exploited agriculture, localized variation in land management, and environmental factors such as water availability and disease. Near-real-time tracking of the current years’ profile provided forecasts of crop growth stages, early warning of drought, and mapping of affected areas. Derived data products and bulletins provided timely crop information to the UK Government and other international stakeholders to assist the development of counter-narcotic policy, plan activity, and measure progress. Results show the potential for transferring these techniques to other agricultural systems
Optimal distinction between non-orthogonal quantum states
Given a finite set of linearly independent quantum states, an observer who
examines a single quantum system may sometimes identify its state with
certainty. However, unless these quantum states are orthogonal, there is a
finite probability of failure. A complete solution is given to the problem of
optimal distinction of three states, having arbitrary prior probabilities and
arbitrary detection values. A generalization to more than three states is
outlined.Comment: 9 pages LaTeX, one PostScript figure on separate pag
Self-contained Kondo effect in single molecules
Kondo coupling of f and conduction electrons is a common feature of
f-electron intermetallics. Similar effects should occur in carbon ring
systems(metallocenes). Evidence for Kondo coupling in Ce(C8H8)2 (cerocene) and
the ytterbocene Cp*2Yb(bipy) is reported from magnetic susceptibility and
L_III-edge x-ray absorption spectroscopy. These well-defined systems provide a
new way to study the Kondo effect on the nanoscale, should generate insight
into the Anderson Lattice problem, and indicate the importance of this
often-ignored contribution to bonding in organometallics.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures (eps
The Geographic Distribution of Bowhead Whales, Balaena mysticetus, in the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas: Evidence from Whaleship Records, 1849–1914
We have extracted, digitized, and analyzed information about
bowhead whales, Balaena mysticetus, contained in records of whaling cruises that were undertaken in the Bering, Chukchi,
and Beaufort Seas from 1849 to 1914. Our database consists of 65,000 days of observations which provide insights into whether this bowhead stock may comprise more than one population
FMRI Clustering and False Positive Rates
Recently, Eklund et al. (2016) analyzed clustering methods in standard FMRI
packages: AFNI (which we maintain), FSL, and SPM [1]. They claimed: 1) false
positive rates (FPRs) in traditional approaches are greatly inflated,
questioning the validity of "countless published fMRI studies"; 2)
nonparametric methods produce valid, but slightly conservative, FPRs; 3) a
common flawed assumption is that the spatial autocorrelation function (ACF) of
FMRI noise is Gaussian-shaped; and 4) a 15-year-old bug in AFNI's 3dClustSim
significantly contributed to producing "particularly high" FPRs compared to
other software. We repeated simulations from [1] (Beijing-Zang data [2], see
[3]), and comment on each point briefly.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure. A Letter accepted in PNA
Equilibrium Properties of Temporally Asymmetric Hebbian Plasticity
A theory of temporally asymmetric Hebb (TAH) rules which depress or
potentiate synapses depending upon whether the postsynaptic cell fires before
or after the presynaptic one is presented. Using the Fokker-Planck formalism,
we show that the equilibrium synaptic distribution induced by such rules is
highly sensitive to the manner in which bounds on the allowed range of synaptic
values are imposed. In a biologically plausible multiplicative model, we find
that the synapses in asynchronous networks reach a distribution that is
invariant to the firing rates of either the pre- or post-synaptic cells. When
these cells are temporally correlated, the synaptic strength varies smoothly
with the degree and phase of synchrony between the cells.Comment: 3 figures, minor corrections of equations and tex
Scale-Invariant Curvature Fluctuations from an Extended Semiclassical Gravity
We present an extension of the semiclassical Einstein equations which couples
n-point correlation functions of a stochastic Einstein tensor to the n-point
functions of the quantum stress-energy tensor. We apply this extension to
calculate the quantum fluctuations during an inflationary period, where we take
as a model a massive conformally coupled scalar field on a perturbed de Sitter
space and describe how a renormalization independent, almost-scale-invariant
power spectrum of the scalar metric perturbation is produced. Furthermore, we
discuss how this model yields a natural basis for the calculation of
non-Gaussianities of the considered metric fluctuations.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures; final versio
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