19,245 research outputs found
Spatial Econometric Issues for Bio-Economic and Land-Use Modeling
We survey the literature on spatial bio-economic and land-use modelling and review thematic developments. Unobserved site-specific heterogeneity is common in almost all of the surveyed works. Heterogeneity appears also to be a significant catalyst engendering significant methodological innovation. To better equip prototypes to adequately incorporate heterogeneity, we consider a smorgasbord of extensions. We highlight some problems arising with their application; provide Bayesian solutions to some; and conjecture solutions for others.spatial econometrics, bio-economic and land-use modelling, Bayesian solution, Land Economics/Use,
Intelligent fault isolation and diagnosis for communication satellite systems
Discussed here is a prototype diagnosis expert system to provide the Advanced Communication Technology Satellite (ACTS) System with autonomous diagnosis capability. The system, the Fault Isolation and Diagnosis EXpert (FIDEX) system, is a frame-based system that uses hierarchical structures to represent such items as the satellite's subsystems, components, sensors, and fault states. This overall frame architecture integrates the hierarchical structures into a lattice that provides a flexible representation scheme and facilitates system maintenance. FIDEX uses an inexact reasoning technique based on the incrementally acquired evidence approach developed by Shortliffe. The system is designed with a primitive learning ability through which it maintains a record of past diagnosis studies
Operator monotones, the reduction criterion and the relative entropy
We introduce the theory of operator monotone functions and employ it to
derive a new inequality relating the quantum relative entropy and the quantum
conditional entropy. We present applications of this new inequality and in
particular we prove a new lower bound on the relative entropy of entanglement
and other properties of entanglement measures.Comment: Final version accepted for publication, added references in reference
[1] and [13
An Empirical Exploration of Exchange Rate Target-Zones
In the context of a flexible-price monetary exchange rate model and the assumption of uncovered interest parity, we obtain a measure of the fundamental determinant of exchange rates. Daily data for the European Monetary System are used to explore the importance of non-linearities in the relationship between the exchange rates and fundamentals. Many implications of existing "target-zone" exchange rate models are tested; little support is found for existing non-linear models of limited exchange rate flexibility.
Construction and evaluation of classifiers for forensic document analysis
In this study we illustrate a statistical approach to questioned document
examination. Specifically, we consider the construction of three classifiers
that predict the writer of a sample document based on categorical data. To
evaluate these classifiers, we use a data set with a large number of writers
and a small number of writing samples per writer. Since the resulting
classifiers were found to have near perfect accuracy using leave-one-out
cross-validation, we propose a novel Bayesian-based cross-validation method for
evaluating the classifiers.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/10-AOAS379 the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Blue horizontal branch stars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey: II. Kinematics of the Galactic halo
We carry out a maximum-likelihood kinematic analysis of a sample of 1170 blue
horizontal branch (BHB) stars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey presented in
Sirko et al. (2003) (Paper I). Monte Carlo simulations and resampling show that
the results are robust to distance and velocity errors at least as large as the
estimated errors from Paper I. The best-fit velocities of the Sun (circular)
and halo (rotational) are 245.9 +/- 13.5 km/s and 23.8 +/- 20.1 km/s but are
strongly covariant, so that v_0 - v_halo = 222.1 +/- 7.7 km/s. If one adopts
standard values for the local standard of rest and solar motion, then the halo
scarcely rotates. The velocity ellipsoid inferred for our sample is much more
isotropic [(sigma_r,sigma_theta,sigma_phi) = (101.4 +/- 2.8, 97.7 +/- 16.4,
107.4 +/- 16.6) km/s] than that of halo stars in the solar neighborhood, in
agreement with a recent study of the distant halo by Sommer-Larsen et al.
(1997). The line-of-sight velocity distribution of the entire sample, corrected
for the Sun's motion, is accurately gaussian with a dispersion of 101.6 +/- 3.0
km/s.Comment: 23 pages including 4 figures, 1 color; submitted to A
Formation of Box Canyon, Idaho, by megaflood: implications for seepage erosion on Earth and Mars
Amphitheater- headed canyons have been used as diagnostic indicators of erosion by groundwater seepage, which has important implications for landscape evolution on Earth and astrobiology on Mars. Of perhaps any canyon studied, Box Canyon, Idaho, most strongly meets the proposed morphologic criteria for groundwater sapping because it is incised into a basaltic plain with no drainage network upstream, and approximately 10 cubic meters per second of seepage emanates from its vertical headwall. However, sediment transport constraints, ^4He and ^14C dates, plunge pools, and scoured rock indicate that a megaflood (greater than 220 cubic meters per second) carved the canyon about 45,000 years ago. These results add to a growing recognition of Quaternary catastrophic flooding in the American northwest, and may imply that similar features on Mars also formed by floods rather than seepage erosion
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