3,345 research outputs found

    Loss-Avoidance and Forward Induction in Experimental Coordination Games

    Get PDF
    We report experiments on how players select among multiple Pareto-ranked equilibria in a coordination game. Subjects initially choose inefficient equilibria. Charging a fee to play (which makes initial equilibria money-losing) creates coordination on better equilibria. When fees are optional, improved coordination is consistent with forward induction. But coordination improves even when subjects must pay the fee (forward induction does not apply). Subjects appear to use a "loss-avoidance" selection principle: they expect others to avoid strategies that always result in losses. Loss-avoidance implies that "mental accounting" of outcomes can affect choices in games

    Overview of Constrained PARAFAC Models

    Get PDF
    In this paper, we present an overview of constrained PARAFAC models where the constraints model linear dependencies among columns of the factor matrices of the tensor decomposition, or alternatively, the pattern of interactions between different modes of the tensor which are captured by the equivalent core tensor. Some tensor prerequisites with a particular emphasis on mode combination using Kronecker products of canonical vectors that makes easier matricization operations, are first introduced. This Kronecker product based approach is also formulated in terms of the index notation, which provides an original and concise formalism for both matricizing tensors and writing tensor models. Then, after a brief reminder of PARAFAC and Tucker models, two families of constrained tensor models, the co-called PARALIND/CONFAC and PARATUCK models, are described in a unified framework, for NthN^{th} order tensors. New tensor models, called nested Tucker models and block PARALIND/CONFAC models, are also introduced. A link between PARATUCK models and constrained PARAFAC models is then established. Finally, new uniqueness properties of PARATUCK models are deduced from sufficient conditions for essential uniqueness of their associated constrained PARAFAC models

    Self-excited vibrations in turning: cutting moment analysis

    Full text link
    This work aims at analysing the moment effects at the tool tip point and at the central axis, in the framework of a turning process. A testing device in turning, including a six-component dynamometer, is used to measure the complete torsor of the cutting actions in the case of self-excited vibrations. Many results are obtained regarding the mechanical actions torsor. A confrontation of the moment components at the tool tip and at the central axis is carried out. It clearly appears that analysing moments at the central axis avoids the disturbances induced by the transport of the moment of the mechanical actions resultant at the tool tip point. For instance, the order relation between the components of the forces is single. Furthermore, the order relation between the moments components expressed at the tool tip point is also single and the same one. But at the central axis, two different order relations regarding moments are conceivable. A modification in the rolling moment localization in the (y, z) tool plan is associated to these two order relations. Thus, the moments components at the central axis are particularly sensitive at the disturbances of machining, here the self-excited vibrations.Comment: 8 page

    Transition from the annealed to the quenched asymptotics for a random walk on random obstacles

    Full text link
    In this work we study a natural transition mechanism describing the passage from a quenched (almost sure) regime to an annealed (in average) one, for a symmetric simple random walk on random obstacles on sites having an identical and independent law. The transition mechanism we study was first proposed in the context of sums of identical independent random exponents by Ben Arous, Bogachev and Molchanov in [Probab. Theory Related Fields 132 (2005) 579--612]. Let p(x,t)p(x,t) be the survival probability at time tt of the random walk, starting from site xx, and let L(t)L(t) be some increasing function of time. We show that the empirical average of p(x,t)p(x,t) over a box of side L(t)L(t) has different asymptotic behaviors depending on L(t)L(t). T here are constants 0<Îł1<Îł20<\gamma_1<\gamma_2 such that if L(t)≄eÎłtd/(d+2)L(t)\ge e^{\gamma t^{d/(d+2)}}, with Îł>Îł1\gamma>\gamma_1, a law of large numbers is satisfied and the empirical survival probability decreases like the annealed one; if L(t)≄eÎłtd/(d+2)L(t)\ge e^{\gamma t^{d/(d+2)}}, with Îł>Îł2\gamma>\gamma_2, also a central limit theorem is satisfied. If L(t)â‰Șt{L(t)\ll t}, the averaged survival probability decreases like the quenched survival probability. If tâ‰ȘL(t)t\ll L(t) and log⁥L(t)â‰Ștd/(d+2)\log L(t)\ll t^{d/(d+2)} we obtain an intermediate regime. Furthermore, when the dimension d=1d=1 it is possible to describe the fluctuations of the averaged survival probability when L(t)=eÎłtd/(d+2)L(t)=e^{\gamma t^{d/(d+2)}} with Îł<Îł2\gamma<\gamma_2: it is shown that they are infinitely divisible laws with a L\'{e}vy spectral function which explodes when x→0x\to0 as stable laws of characteristic exponent α<2\alpha<2. These results show that the quenched and annealed survival probabilities correspond to a low- and high-temperature behavior of a mean-field type phase transition mechanism.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/009117905000000404 in the Annals of Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aop/) by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org

    Absolutely continuous spectrum for the isotropic Maxwell operator with coefficients that are periodic in some directions and decay in others

    Full text link
    The purpose of this paper is to prove that the spectrum of an isotropic Maxwell operator with electric permittivity and magnetic permeability that are periodic along certain directions and tending to a constant super-exponentially fast in the remaining directions is purely absolutely continuous. The basic technical tools is a new ``operatorial'' identity relating the Maxwell operator to a vector-valued Schrodinger operator. The analysis of the spectrum of that operator is then handled using ideas developed by the same authors in a previous paper

    An approach to anomalous diffusion in the n-dimensional space generated by a self-similar Laplacian

    Full text link
    We analyze a quasi-continuous linear chain with self-similar distribution of harmonic interparticle springs as recently introduced for one dimension (Michelitsch et al., Phys. Rev. E 80, 011135 (2009)). We define a continuum limit for one dimension and generalize it to n=1,2,3,..n=1,2,3,.. dimensions of the physical space. Application of Hamilton's (variational) principle defines then a self-similar and as consequence non-local Laplacian operator for the nn-dimensional space where we proof its ellipticity and its accordance (up to a strictly positive prefactor) with the fractional Laplacian −(−Δ)α2-(-\Delta)^\frac{\alpha}{2}. By employing this Laplacian we establish a Fokker Planck diffusion equation: We show that this Laplacian generates spatially isotropic L\'evi stable distributions which correspond to L\'evi flights in nn-dimensions. In the limit of large scaled times ∌t/rα>>1\sim t/r^{\alpha} >>1 the obtained distributions exhibit an algebraic decay ∌t−nα→0\sim t^{-\frac{n}{\alpha}} \rightarrow 0 independent from the initial distribution and spacepoint. This universal scaling depends only on the ratio n/αn/\alpha of the dimension nn of the physical space and the L\'evi parameter α\alpha.Comment: Submitted manuscrip
    • 

    corecore