2,883 research outputs found
System study of the carbon dioxide observational platform system (CO-OPS): Project overview
The resulting options from a system study for a near-space, geo-stationary, observational monitoring platform system for use in the Department of Energy's (DOE) National Carbon Dioxide Observational Platform System (CO-OPS) on the greenhouse effect are discussed. CO-OPS is being designed to operate continuously for periods of up to 3 months in quasi-fixed position over most global regional targets of interest and could make horizon observations over a land-sea area of circular diameter up to about 600 to 800 statute miles. This affords the scientific and engineering community a low-cost means of operating their payloads for monitoring the regional parameters they deem relevant to their investigations of the carbon dioxide greenhouse effect at one-tenth the cost of most currently utilized comparable remote sensing techniques
The Elusive Experience of Agency
I here present some doubts about whether Mandik’s (2010) proposed intermediacy and recurrence constraints are necessary and sufficient for agentive experience. I also argue that in order to vindicate the conclusion that agentive experience is an exclusively perceptual phenomenon (Prinz, 2007), it is not enough to show that the predictions produced by forward models of planned motor actions are conveyed by mock sensory signals. Rather, it must also be shown that the outputs of “comparator” mechanisms that compare these predictions against actual sensory feedback are also coded in a perceptual representational format
The experience of coping with chronic pain : a phenomenological investigation
The goal of this investigation was to describe the thematic structure of how people experience and cope with chronic pain. To accomplish this task, phenomenological interviews were conducted with twelve different participants who had chronic pain for at least six months duration.Participants responded to a research question which asked them to describe how they coped with chronic pain.All interviews were audio taped and then transcribed.Following this, individual protocols were interpreted within the context of a phenomenological research group. In this group, an attempt is made to describe the thematic structure of the experience of coping with chronic pain as articulated by participants. On the basis of these procedures, a two part thematic structure emerged: one describing the experience of chronic pain and the second describing how participants coped with the pain. Four themes described the experience of chronic pain itself: (1) Invisibility toothers, (2) Limitations, (3) Out of control, and(4) Separation. Five themes emerged to describe the ways in which participants reported coping with each of these various themes Characterizing the experience of chronic pain: (1) Hiding/Revealing, (2) Accepting/Denying,VI(3) Enduring/Managing, (4) Connecting/Withdrawing, and(5) Monitoring/Evaluating/Deciding. Taken together, these themes formed the structure of coping with chronic pain for participants in this study.Each of these themes was inextricably connected with one another despite the fact that all emerged as figure within the context of a changed way of life for participants. The themes of coping were derived from the themes of the experience of pain and represented a method by which participants sought to modulate the experience of chronic pain. In describing one theme, it was necessary to include aspects of the other themes.The findings of the current study are related to the existing literature in the field of counseling psychology and to that of medicine. Suggestions for researchers,therapists, and health care providers are offered;implications for the treatment of chronic pain also were discussed. These suggestions and implications are derived from the current investigation, which emphasizes the interrelatedness of all aspects of the experience of coping with chronic pain
Perceiving the Present: Systematization of Illusions or Illusion of Systematization?
Mark Changizi et al. (2008) claim that it is possible systematically to organize more than 50 kinds of illusions in a 7 × 4 matrix of 28 classes. This systematization, they further maintain, can be explained by the operation of a single visual processing latency correction mechanism that they call “perceiving the present” (PTP). This brief report raises some concerns about the way a number of illusions are classified by the proposed systematization. It also poses two general problems—one empirical and one conceptual—for the PTP approach
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HOO 2012 Error Recognition and Correction Shared Task: Cambridge University Submission Report
Previous work on automated error recognition and correction of texts written by learners of English as a Second Language has demonstrated experimentally that training classifiers on error-annotated ESL text generally outperforms training on native text alone and that adaptation of error correction models to the native language (L1) of the writer improves performance. Nevertheless, most extant models have poor precision, particularly when attempting error correction, and this limits their usefulness in practical applications requiring feedback. We experiment with various feature types, varying quantities of error-corrected data, and generic versus L1-specific adaptation to typical errors using Naïve Bayes (NB) classifiers and develop one model which maximizes precision. We report and discuss the results for 8 models, 5 trained on the HOO data and 3 (partly) on the full error-coded Cambridge Learner Corpus, from which the HOO data is drawn.We thank Cambridge ESOL, a division of Cambridge Assessment for a partial grant to the first author and a research contract with iLexIR Ltd. We also thank them and Cambridge University Press for granting us access to the CLC for research purposes
Evaluation of the gn-->pi-p differential cross sections in the Delta-isobar region
Differential cross sections for the process gn-->pi-p have been extracted
from MAMI-B measurements of gd-->pi-pp, accounting for final-state interaction
effects, using a diagrammatic technique taking into account the NN and piN
final-state interaction amplitudes. Results are compared to previous
measurements of the inverse process, pi-p--> ng, and recent multipole analyses.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. v2: Further clarifications and minor changes. A
new figure inserte
On the Extraction of Cross Sections for pi0 and eta Photoproduction off Neutrons from Deuteron Data
We discuss the procedure of extracting the photoproduction cross section for
neutral pseudoscalar mesons off neutrons from deuteron data. The main statement
is that the final-state interaction (FSI) corrections for the proton and
neutron target are in general not equal, but for pi0 production there are
special cases were they have to be identical and there are large regions in the
parameter space of incident photon energy and pion polar angle, \theta^*, where
they happen to be quite similar. The corrections for both target nucleons are
practically identical for production in the energy range of the
Delta(1232)3/2+ resonance due to the specific isospin structure of this
excitation. Also above the -isobar range large differences between
proton and neutron correction factors are only predicted for extreme forward
angles ( < 20 deg), but the results are similar for larger angles.
Numerical results for the gp-->pi0p and gn-->pi0n correction factors are
discussed. Also the model description for the available data on the
differential gd-->pi0pn cross sections are given.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures; v2 fixed several minor typo
Extracting the photoproduction cross section off the neutron gn-->pi-p from deuteron data with FSI effects
The incoherent pion photoproduction reaction gd-->pi-pp is considered
theoretically in a wide energy region Eth =< Eg =< 2700 MeV. The model applied
contains the impulse approximation as well as the NN- and piN-FSI amplitudes.
The aim of the paper is to study a reliable way for getting the information on
elementary gn-->pi-p reaction cross section beyond the impulse approximation
for gd-->pi-pp. For the elementary gN-->piN, NN-->NN, and piN-->piN amplitudes,
the results of the GW DAC are used. There are no additional theoretical
constraints. The calculated cross section dSigma/dOmega(gd->pi-pp) are compared
with existing data. The procedure used to extract information on the
differential cross section dSigma/dOmega(gn-->pi-p) on the neutron from the
deuteron data using the FSI correction factor R is discussed. The calculations
for R versus pi-p CM angle \theta_1 of the outgoing pion are performed at
different photon-beam energies with kinematical cuts for "quasi-free" process
gn-->pi-p. The results show a sizeable FSI effect R \neq 1 from S-wave part of
pp-FSI at small angles close to \theta_1 ~ 0: this region narrows as the photon
energy increases. At larger angles, the effect is small (|R-1|<<1) and agrees
with estimations of FSI in the Glauber approach.Comment: 28 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Extended Partial-Wave Analysis of piN Scattering Data
We present results from a comprehensive partial-wave analysis of pi+-p
elastic scattering and charge-exchange data, covering the region from threshold
to 2.6 GeV in the lab pion kinetic energy, employing a coupled-channel
formalism to simultaneously fit pi-p-->eta n data to 0.8 GeV. Our main result,
solution SP06, utilizes a complete set of forward and fixed-t dispersion
relation constraints applied to the piN elastic amplitude. The results of these
analyses are compared with previous solutions in terms of their resonance
spectra and preferred values for couplings and low-energy parameters.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figure
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