1,564 research outputs found
The Fully Frustrated Hypercubic Model is Glassy and Aging at Large
We discuss the behavior of the fully frustrated hypercubic cell in the
infinite dimensional mean-field limit. In the Ising case the system undergoes a
glass transition, well described by the random orthogonal model. Under the
glass temperature aging effects show clearly. In the case there is no sign
of a phase transition, and the system is always a paramagnet.Comment: Figures added in uufiles format, and epsf include
Spectroscopic survey of M--type asteroids
M-type asteroids, as defined in the Tholen taxonomy (Tholen, 1984), are
medium albedo bodies supposed to have a metallic composition and to be the
progenitors both of differentiated iron-nickel meteorites and enstatite
chondrites. We carried out a spectroscopic survey in the visible and near
infrared wavelength range (0.4-2.5 micron) of 30 asteroids chosen from the
population of asteroids initially classified as Tholen M -types, aiming to
investigate their surface composition. The data were obtained during several
observing runs during the years 2004-2007 at the TNG, NTT, and IRTF telescopes.
We computed the spectral slopes in several wavelength ranges for each observed
asteroid, and we searched for diagnostic spectral features. We confirm a large
variety of spectral behaviors for these objects as their spectra are extended
into the near-infrared, including the identification of weak absorption bands,
mainly of the 0.9 micron band tentatively attributed to orthopyroxene, and of
the 0.43 micron band that may be associated to chlorites and Mg-rich
serpentines or pyroxene minerals such us pigeonite or augite. A comparison with
previously published data indicates that the surfaces of several asteroids
belonging to the M-class may vary significantly. We attempt to constrain the
asteroid surface compositions of our sample by looking for meteorite spectral
analogues in the RELAB database and by modelling with geographical mixtures of
selected meteorites/minerals. We confirm that iron meteorites, pallasites, and
enstatite chondrites are the best matches to most objects in our sample, as
suggested for M-type asteroids. The presence of subtle absorption features on
several asteroids confirms that not all objects defined by the Tholen M-class
have a pure metallic composition.Comment: 10 figures, 6 tables; Icarus, in pres
Replica Field Theory for Deterministic Models (II): A Non-Random Spin Glass with Glassy Behavior
We introduce and study a model which admits a complex landscape without
containing quenched disorder. Continuing our previous investigation we
introduce a disordered model which allows us to reconstruct all the main
features of the original phase diagram, including a low spin glass phase
and a complex dynamical behavior.Comment: 35 pages with uu figures, Roma 102
Promoting data provenance tracking in the archaeological interpretation process
n this paper we propose a model and a set of derivation rules for tracking data provenance during the archaeological interpretation process. The interpretation process is the main task performed by an archaeologist that, starting from ground data about evidences and findings, tries to derive knowledge about an ancient object or event. In particular, in this work we concentrate on the dating process used by archaeologists to assign one or more time intervals to a finding in order to define its lifespan on the temporal axis and we propose a framework to represent such information and infer new knowledge including provenance of data. Archaeological data, and in particular their temporal dimension, are typically vague, since many different interpretations can coexist, thus we will use Fuzzy Logic to assign a degree of confidence to values and Fuzzy Temporal Constraint Networks to model relationships between dating of different finding
A context-based approach for partitioning big data
In recent years, the amount of available data keeps growing at fast rate, and it is therefore crucial to be able to process them in an efficient way. The level of parallelism in tools such as Hadoop or Spark is determined, among other things, by the partitioning applied to the dataset. A common method is to split the data into chunks considering the number of bytes. While this approach may work well for text-based batch processing, there are a number of cases where the dataset contains structured information, such as the time or the spatial coordinates, and one may be interested in exploiting such a structure to improve the partitioning. This could have an impact on the processing time and increase the overall resource usage efficiency. This paper explores an approach based on the notion of context, such as temporal or spatial information, for partitioning the data. We design a context-based multi-dimensional partitioning technique that divides an n 12dimensional space into splits by considering the distribution of the each contextual dimension in the dataset. We tested our approach on a dataset from a touristic scenario, and our experiments show that we are able to improve the efficiency of the resource usage
What is the role of context in fair group recommendations?
We investigate the role played by the context, i.e. the situation the group is currently experiencing, in the design of a system that recommends sequences of activities as a multi-objective optimization problem, where the satisfaction of the group and the available time interval are two of the functions to be optimized. In particular, we highlight that the dynamic evolution of the group can be the key contextual feature that has to be considered to produce fair suggestions
Dynamical Behaviour of Low Autocorrelation Models
We have investigated the nature of the dynamical behaviour in low
autocorrelation binary sequences. These models do have a glass transition
of a purely dynamical nature. Above the glass transition the dynamics is not
fully ergodic and relaxation times diverge like a power law with close to . Approaching the glass transition
the relaxation slows down in agreement with the first order nature of the
dynamical transition. Below the glass transition the system exhibits aging
phenomena like in disordered spin glasses. We propose the aging phenomena as a
precise method to determine the glass transition and its first order nature.Comment: 19 pages + 14 figures, LateX, figures uuencoded at the end of the
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Single cell cloning and recombinant monoclonal antibodies generation from RA synovial B cells reveal frequent targeting of citrullinated histones of NETs
This work was funded by research grants from Arthritis Research UK
(grant 20089 to MB; grant 20858 to ECo; Arthritis Research UK Experimental
Arthritis Treatment Centre - grant 20022 to CP) and the William Harvey Research
Foundation (WHRF grant 2011–2013 to MB); Elisa Corsiero was recipient of
short-term travel fellowships from EMBO (ASTF 318-2010 and ASTF 102-2013
Differential structural remodelling of heparan sulfate by chemokines: the role of chemokine oligomerization
Chemokines control the migration of cells in normal physiological processes and in the context of disease such as inflammation, autoimmunity and cancer. Two major interactions are involved: (i) binding of chemokines to chemokine receptors, which activates the cellular machinery required for movement; and (ii) binding of chemokines to glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), which facilitates the organization of chemokines into haptotactic gradients that direct cell movement. Chemokines can bind and activate their receptors as monomers; however, the ability to oligomerize is critical for the function of many chemokines in vivo. Chemokine oligomerization is thought to enhance their affinity for GAGs, and here we show that it significantly affects the ability of chemokines to accumulate on and be retained by heparan sulfate (HS). We also demonstrate that several chemokines differentially rigidify and cross-link HS, thereby affecting HS rigidity and mobility, and that HS cross-linking is significantly enhanced by chemokine oligomerization. These findings suggest that chemokine–GAG interactions may play more diverse biological roles than the traditional paradigms of physical immobilization and establishment of chemokine gradients; we hypothesize that they may promote receptor-independent events such as physical re-organization of the endothelial glycocalyx and extracellular matrix, as well as signalling through proteoglycans to facilitate leukocyte adhesion and transmigration
Finite-Connectivity Spin-Glass Phase Diagrams and Low Density Parity Check Codes
We obtain phase diagrams of regular and irregular finite connectivity
spin-glasses. Contact is firstly established between properties of the phase
diagram and the performances of low density parity check codes (LDPC) within
the Replica Symmetric (RS) ansatz. We then study the location of the dynamical
and critical transition of these systems within the one step Replica Symmetry
Breaking theory (RSB), extending similar calculations that have been performed
in the past for the Bethe spin-glass problem. We observe that, away from the
Nishimori line, in the low temperature region, the location of the dynamical
transition line does change within the RSB theory, in comparison with the (RS)
case. For LDPC decoding over the binary erasure channel we find, at zero
temperature and rate R=1/4 an RS critical transition point located at p_c =
0.67 while the critical RSB transition point is located at p_c = 0.7450, to be
compared with the corresponding Shannon bound 1-R. For the binary symmetric
channel (BSC) we show that the low temperature reentrant behavior of the
dynamical transition line, observed within the RS ansatz, changes within the
RSB theory; the location of the dynamical transition point occurring at higher
values of the channel noise. Possible practical implications to improve the
performances of the state-of-the-art error correcting codes are discussed.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figure
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