1,351 research outputs found
Attractive regular stochastic chains: perfect simulation and phase transition
We prove that uniqueness of the stationary chain, or equivalently, of the
-measure, compatible with an attractive regular probability kernel is
equivalent to either one of the following two assertions for this chain: (1) it
is a finitary coding of an i.i.d. process with countable alphabet, (2) the
concentration of measure holds at exponential rate. We show in particular that
if a stationary chain is uniquely defined by a kernel that is continuous and
attractive, then this chain can be sampled using a coupling-from-the-past
algorithm. For the original Bramson-Kalikow model we further prove that there
exists a unique compatible chain if and only if the chain is a finitary coding
of a finite alphabet i.i.d. process. Finally, we obtain some partial results on
conditions for phase transition for general chains of infinite order.Comment: 22 pages, 1 pseudo-algorithm, 1 figure. Minor changes in the
presentation. Lemma 6 has been remove
Sharp oracle inequalities and slope heuristic for specification probabilities estimation in discrete random fields
We study the problem of estimating the one-point specification probabilities
in non-necessary finite discrete random fields from partially observed
independent samples. Our procedures are based on model selection by
minimization of a penalized empirical criterion. The selected estimators
satisfy sharp oracle inequalities in -risk. We also obtain theoretical
results on the slope heuristic for this problem, justifying the slope algorithm
to calibrate the leading constant in the penalty. The practical performances of
our methods are investigated in two simulation studies. We illustrate the
usefulness of our approach by applying the methods to a multi-unit neuronal
data from a rat hippocampus.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.3150/14-BEJ660 in the Bernoulli
(http://isi.cbs.nl/bernoulli/) by the International Statistical
Institute/Bernoulli Society (http://isi.cbs.nl/BS/bshome.htm
Self-switching random walks on Erd\"os-R\'enyi random graphs feel the phase transition
We study random walks on Erd\"os-R\'enyi random graphs in which, every time
the random walk returns to the starting point, first an edge probability is
independently sampled according to a priori measure , and then an
Erd\"os-R\'enyi random graph is sampled according to that edge probability.
When the edge probability does not depend on the size of the graph
(dense case), we show that the proportion of time the random walk spends on
different values of -- {\it occupation measure} -- converges to the a
priori measure as goes to infinity. More interestingly, when
(sparse case), we show that the occupation measure converges to a
limiting measure with a density that is a function of the survival probability
of a Poisson branching process. This limiting measure is supported on the
supercritial values for the Erd\"os-R\'enyi random graphs, showing that
self-witching random walks can detect the phase transition
Canonical information flow decomposition among neural structure subsets
Partial directed coherence (PDC) and directed coherence (DC) which describe complementary aspects of the directed information flow between pairs of univariate components that belong to a vector of simultaneously observed time series have recently been generalized as bPDC/bDC respectively to portray the relationship between subsets of component vectors (Takahashi, 2009; Faes and Nollo, 2013). This generalization is specially important for neuroscience applications as one often wishes to address the link between the set of time series from an observed ROI (region of interest) with respect to series from some other physiologically relevant ROI. bPDC/bDC are limited, however, in that several time series within a given subset may be irrelevant or may even interact opposingly with respect to one another leading to interpretation difficulties. To address this, we propose an alternative measure, termed cPDC/cDC, employing canonical decomposition to reveal the main frequency domain modes of interaction between the vector subsets. We also show bPDC/bDC and cPDC/cDC are related and possess mutual information rate interpretations. Numerical examples and a real data set illustrate the concepts. The present contribution provides what is seemingly the first canonical decomposition of information flow in the frequency domain
Novel critical exponent of magnetization curves near the ferromagnetic quantum phase transitions of Sr1-xAxRuO3 (A = Ca, La0.5Na0.5, and La)
We report a novel critical exponent delta=3/2 of magnetization curves
M=H^{1/delta} near the ferromagnetic quantum phase transitions of Sr1-xAxRuO3
(A = Ca, La0.5Na0.5, and La), which the mean field theory of the
Ginzburg-Landau-Wilson type fails to reproduce. The effect of dirty
ferromagnetic spin fluctuations might be a key.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Optical coherence tomography imaging in commotio retinae: case report
O objetivo deste relato é correlacionar achados à tomografia de coerência óptica e prognóstico visual de pacientes com commotio retina e de gravidades diferentes. Dois pacientes do sexo masculino, de 20 e 23 anos com baixa visual unilateral após trauma ocular contuso atribuível a edema de Berlin foram avaliados pela retinografia e tomografia de coerência óptica. A acuidade visual no olho afetado era de 20/25 no primeiro paciente e conta dedos a 2 metros no segundo. O exame oftalmológico revelou uveíte traumática e, na fundoscopia, evidenciaram-se opacificação retiniana moderada no primeiro caso e grave no segundo. A tomografia de coerência óptica confirmou discreta diminuição da depressão foveal no primeiro caso e desorganização das camadas retinianas no segundo. Houve resolução anatômica e funcional completa a tomografia de coerência óptica no primeiro paciente, enquanto o segundo evoluiu com baixa visual permanente e desorganização da arquitetura retiniana. A tomografia de coerência óptica é um exame complementar útil na avaliação do trauma retiniano, ajudando a entender sua fisiopatologia e predizer prognóstico a partir da análise anatômica da região acometida.The purpose of this case report was to correlate optical coherence tomography findings and visual outcomes of patients with different degrees of commotio retinae. A 20-year-old male and a 23-year-old male that presented with decreased vision due to Berlin's edema after blunt ocular trauma were evaluated by optical coherence tomography and retinography. The visual acuity in the affected eye was 20/25 in the first patient and counting fingers in the second one. The ophthalmic examination showed traumatic uveitis and fundoscopy revealed mild retinal opacification in the first case and severe opacification in the latter. The optical coherence tomography confirmed the reduction of foveal depression on the first case and the disarrangement of all retinal layers on the second. There has been complete functional and anatomical resolution by optical coherence tomography in the first patient, while the second evolved to permanent visual loss. Optical coherence tomography is a useful method in the evaluation of retinal trauma, helping to understand its physiopathology and to predict its prognosis through the anatomical analysis of the affected region
Mécanismes neuronaux pour la communication chez les primates
International audiencePrimates, like all animals live in an environment that includes others. They can be detected by others and can influence the likelihood (and consequences) of this detection by sending signals. Signals are bodily features or behaviors of the signaler that trigger specific behaviors in the receiver. The receiver, signaler, signal and medium are the four basic building blocks of any communication cycle. Each component can be considered separately, but in the service of communication they are interdependent and defined only in relation to one other. Cycles of reciprocal signal exchange mediate social interactions, but even “asocial” species coordinate reproduction, manage conflict over territory, and may anticipate and influence potential predators and prey. Communication arose long before the evolution of primates, animals and even neurons, yet is a crucial aspect of primate behavior and of their nervous system evolution. In this review, we examine how exchanges take place among primates and how neural systems act to mediate them.Les primates, comme tous les animaux, vivent dans un environnement qui comprend d'autres individus. Ils peuvent être détectés par ceux-ci et influencer la probabilité (et les conséquences) de cette détection en envoyant des signaux. Les signaux sont des caractéristiques corporelles transitoires ou des comportements produits par l’émetteur qui déclenchent des comportements spécifiques chez le récepteur. Le récepteur, l’émetteur, le signal (ou message) et les signes qui constituent le message sont les quatre éléments de base du cycle de communication. Chaque composant peut être considéré séparément, mais au service de la communication, ils sont interdépendants et définis uniquement les uns par rapport aux autres. Les échanges de signaux interviennent pendant les interactions sociales, mais même les espèces « non-sociales » coordonnent leur reproduction, gèrent les conflits sur leur territoire et peuvent anticiper et influencer les prédateurs et les proies potentiels. La communication est apparue bien avant l'évolution des primates, des animaux et même des neurones, mais constitue un aspect crucial du comportement des primates et de l'évolution de leur système nerveux. Dans cette revue, nous examinons comment les primates communiquent entre eux et comment les systèmes neuronaux sous-tendent ces échanges
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