7,326 research outputs found
The Magnitudes of Economic and Non-Economic Factors on the Demand for U.S. Domestic Air Travel
The primary purpose of this study is to analyze air carriers’ behavior in capturing market share by examining the economic factors affecting passenger behavior toward air travel. This study also examines non-economic factors such as seasonality, unexpected events (9/11 attack), mergers, and trends. Because the airlines included in this study compete with each other, seemingly unrelated regression estimation (SURE) is used to estimate the parameters of the demand models which have correlated error terms. The economic and statistical relationship of the factors with air passenger miles provides valuable information to understand the nature of the demand for the U.S. air passenger industry. In examining demand determinants, this study concludes that air fare, income, seasonality, and mergers play significant roles in determining the demand for air passengers
Multipar-T: Multiparty-Transformer for Capturing Contingent Behaviors in Group Conversations
As we move closer to real-world AI systems, AI agents must be able to deal
with multiparty (group) conversations. Recognizing and interpreting multiparty
behaviors is challenging, as the system must recognize individual behavioral
cues, deal with the complexity of multiple streams of data from multiple
people, and recognize the subtle contingent social exchanges that take place
amongst group members. To tackle this challenge, we propose the
Multiparty-Transformer (Multipar-T), a transformer model for multiparty
behavior modeling. The core component of our proposed approach is the
Crossperson Attention, which is specifically designed to detect contingent
behavior between pairs of people. We verify the effectiveness of Multipar-T on
a publicly available video-based group engagement detection benchmark, where it
outperforms state-of-the-art approaches in average F-1 scores by 5.2% and
individual class F-1 scores by up to 10.0%. Through qualitative analysis, we
show that our Crossperson Attention module is able to discover contingent
behavior.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, IJCA
Korea's developmental program for superconductivity
Superconductivity research in Korea was firstly carried out in the late 70's by a research group in Seoul National University (SNU), who fabricated a small scale superconducting magnetic energy storage system under the financial support from Korea Electric Power Company (KEPCO). But a few researchers were involved in superconductivity research until the oxide high Tc superconductor was discovered by Bednorz and Mueller. After the discovery of YBaCuO superconductor operating above the boiling point of liquid nitrogen (77 K)(exp 2), Korean Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) sponsored a special fund for the high Tc superconductivity research to universities and national research institutes by recognizing its importance. Scientists engaged in this project organized 'High Temperature Superconductivity Research Association (HITSRA)' for effective conducting of research. Its major functions are to coordinate research activities on high Tc superconductivity and organize the workshop for active exchange of information. During last seven years the major superconductivity research has been carried out through the coordination of HITSRA. The major parts of the Korea's superconductivity research program were related to high temperature superconductor and only a few groups were carrying out research on conventional superconductor technology, and Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute (KAERI) and Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute (KERI) have led this research. In this talk, the current status and future plans of superconductivity research in Korea will be reviewed based on the results presented in interim meeting of HITSRA, April 1-2, 1994. Taejeon, as well as the research activity of KAERI
Metal-free organic chromophores featuring an ethynyl-thienothiophene linker with an n-hexyl chain for translucent dye-sensitized solar cells
We report the simple synthesis of two organic chromophores featuring an ethynyl-thienothiophene linker with an n-hexyl chain (CSD-03 and CSD-04), their optical and electrochemical properties, and their use as photosensitizers in dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs). Our theoretical and experimental studies show that adding the second thienothiophene allows for narrowing the bandgap of the molecule and thus ensuring more light harvesting in the visible region. The efficiencies of both CSD-03 (5.46 ± 0.03%) and CSD-04 (5.20 ± 0.03%) are comparable to that of N719 (5.92 ± 0.01%) in translucent DSSCs fabricated with 5 μm-thick TiO2 photoanodes
- …