11,411 research outputs found
Deep Cover HCI
The growing popularity of methodologies that turn "to the wild" for real world data creates new ethical issues for the HCI community. For investigations questioning interactions in public or transient spaces, crowd interaction, or natural behaviour, uncontrolled and uninfluenced (by the experimenter) experiences represent the ideal evaluation environment. We argue that covert research can be completed rigorously and ethically to expand our knowledge of ubiquitous technologies. Our approach, which we call Deep Cover HCI, utilises technology-supported observation in public spaces to stage completely undisturbed experiences for evaluation. We complete studies without informed consent and without intervention from an experimenter in order to gain new insights into how people use technology in public settings. We argue there is clear value in this approach, reflect on the ethical issues of such investigations, and describe our ethical guidelines for completing Deep Cover HCI Research
Dimensionality of spin modulations in 1/8-doped lanthanum cuprates from the perspective of NQR and muSR experiments
We investigate the dimensionality of inhomogeneous spin modulation patterns
in the cuprate family of high-temperature superconductors with particular focus
on 1/8-doped lanthanum cuprates. We compare one-dimensional stripe modulation
pattern with two-dimensional checkerboard of spin vortices in the context of
nuclear quadrupole resonance(NQR) and muon spin rotation(muSR) experiments. In
addition, we also consider the third pattern, a two-dimensional superposition
of spin spirals. Overall, we have found that none of the above patterns leads
to a consistent interpretation of the two types of experiments considered.
This, in particular, implies that the spin vortex checkerboard cannot be ruled
out on the basis of available NQR/muSR experimental results.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Typical state of an isolated quantum system with fixed energy and unrestricted participation of eigenstates
This work describes the statistics for the occupation numbers of quantum
levels in a large isolated quantum system, where all possible superpositions of
eigenstates are allowed, provided all these superpositions have the same fixed
energy. Such a condition is not equivalent to the conventional micro-canonical
condition, because the latter limits the participating eigenstates to a very
narrow energy window. The statistics is obtained analytically for both the
entire system and its small subsystem. In a significant departure from the
Boltzmann-Gibbs statistics, the average occupation numbers of quantum states
exhibit in the present case weak algebraic dependence on energy. In the
macroscopic limit, this dependence is routinely accompanied by the condensation
into the lowest energy quantum state. This work contains initial numerical
tests of the above statistics for finite systems, and also reports the
following numerical finding: When the basis states of large but finite random
matrix Hamiltonians are expanded in terms of eigenstates, the participation of
eigenstates in such an expansion obeys the newly obtained statistics. The above
statistics might be observable in small quantum systems, but for the
macroscopic systems, it rather reenforces doubts about self-sufficiency of
non-relativistic quantum mechanics for justifying the Boltzmann-Gibbs
equilibrium.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figure
Ultrastructural Distribution of the 7 Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Subunit in Rat Hippocampus
Acetylcholine (ACh) is an important neurotransmitter in the mammalian brain; it is implicated in arousal, learning, and other cognitive functions. Recent studies indicate that nicotinic receptors contribute to these cholinergic effects, in addition to the established role of muscarinic receptors. In the hippocampus, where cholinergic involvement in learning and memory is particularly well documented, 7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunits (7 nAChRs) are highly expressed, but their precise ultrastructural localization has not been determined. Here, we describe the results of immunogold labeling of serial ultrathin sections through stratum radiatum of area CA1 in the rat. Using both anti-7 nAChR immunolabeling and -bungarotoxin binding, we find that 7 nAChRs are present at nearly all synapses in CA1 stratum radiatum, with immunolabeling present at both presynaptic and postsynaptic elements. Morphological considerations and double immunolabeling indicate that GABAergic as well as glutamatergic synapses bear 7 nAChRs, at densities approaching those observed for glutamate receptors in CA1 stratum radiatum. Postsynaptically, 7 nAChRs often are distributed at dendritic spines in a perisynaptic annulus. In the postsynaptic cytoplasm, immunolabeling is associated with spine apparatus and other membranous structures, suggesting that 7 nAChRs may undergo dynamic regulation, with insertion into the synapse and subsequent internalization. The widespread and substantial expression of 7 nAChRs at synapses in the hippocampus is consistent with an important role in mediating and/or modulating synaptic transmission, plasticity, and neurodegeneration
Phase relationship between the long-time beats of free induction decays and spin echoes in solids
Recent theoretical work on the role of microscopic chaos in the dynamics and
relaxation of many-body quantum systems has made several experimentally
confirmed predictions about the systems of interacting nuclear spins in solids,
focusing, in particular, on the shapes of spin echo responses measured by
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). These predictions were based on the idea that
the transverse nuclear spin decays evolve in a manner governed at long times by
the slowest decaying eigenmode of the quantum system, analogous to a chaotic
resonance in a classical system. The present paper extends the above
investigations both theoretically and experimentally. On the theoretical side,
the notion of chaotic eigenmodes is used to make predictions about the
relationships between the long-time oscillation phase of the nuclear free
induction decay (FID) and the amplitudes and phases of spin echoes. On the
experimental side, the above predictions are tested for the nuclear spin decays
of F-19 in CaF2 crystals and Xe-129 in frozen xenon. Good agreement between the
theory and the experiment is found.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, significant new experimental content in
comparison with version
On Lyndon's equation in some Λ-free groups and HNN extensions
In this paper we study Lyndon's equation xpyqzr = 1, with x, y, z group elements and p, q, r positive integers, in HNN extensions of free and fully residually free groups, and draw some conclusions about its behavior in Λ-free group
Nonparametric Bounds and Sensitivity Analysis of Treatment Effects
This paper considers conducting inference about the effect of a treatment (or
exposure) on an outcome of interest. In the ideal setting where treatment is
assigned randomly, under certain assumptions the treatment effect is
identifiable from the observable data and inference is straightforward.
However, in other settings such as observational studies or randomized trials
with noncompliance, the treatment effect is no longer identifiable without
relying on untestable assumptions. Nonetheless, the observable data often do
provide some information about the effect of treatment, that is, the parameter
of interest is partially identifiable. Two approaches are often employed in
this setting: (i) bounds are derived for the treatment effect under minimal
assumptions, or (ii) additional untestable assumptions are invoked that render
the treatment effect identifiable and then sensitivity analysis is conducted to
assess how inference about the treatment effect changes as the untestable
assumptions are varied. Approaches (i) and (ii) are considered in various
settings, including assessing principal strata effects, direct and indirect
effects and effects of time-varying exposures. Methods for drawing formal
inference about partially identified parameters are also discussed.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/14-STS499 the Statistical
Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Rhabdomyolysis in an HIV cohort: epidemiology, causes and outcomes.
BackgroundThe Literature on rhabdomyolysis in the HIV-positive population is sparse and limited. We aimed to explore the incidence, patient characteristics, etiologies and outcomes of rhabdomyolysis in a cohort of HIV-positive patients identified through the Johns Hopkins HIV clinical registry between June 1992 and April 2014.MethodsA retrospective analysis of 362 HIV-positive patients with non-cardiac CK elevation ≥1000 IU/L was performed. Both inpatients and outpatients were included. Incidence rate and potential etiologies for rhabdomyolysis were ascertained. The development of acute kidney injury (AKI, defined as doubling of serum creatinine), need for dialysis, and death in the setting of rhabdomyolysis were determined. Logistic regression was used to evaluate the association of peak CK level with the development of AKI.ResultsThree hundred sixty two cases of rhabdomyolysis were identified in a cohort of 7079 patients with a 38,382 person years follow-up time. The incidence rate was nine cases per 1000 person-years (95% CI: 8.5-10.5). Infection was the most common etiology followed by compression injury and drug/alcohol use. One-third of cases had multiple potential etiologies. AKI developed in 46% of cases; 20% of which required dialysis. Thirteen percent died during follow-up. After adjustment, AKI was associated with higher CK (OR 2.05 for each 1-log increase in CK [95% CI: 1.40-2.99]), infection (OR 5.48 [95% CI 2.65-11.31]) and higher HIV viral load (OR 1.22 per 1-log increase [95% CI: 1.03-1.45]).ConclusionRhabdomyolysis in the HIV-positive population has many possible causes and is frequently multifactorial. HIV-positive individuals with rhabdomyolysis have a high risk of AKI and mortality
Technology Suuply Chains: An Introductory Essay
This essay addresses strategic technology sourcing -- the determination of what
technologies are strategic to a firm (or nation) and the management of the policy
options that follow from this determination. This work is certainly not the first
word on this subject, nor will it be the last. In fact, we hope that it will stimulate
significant discussion about strategic technology sourcing especially in those
organizations where such discussion has been absent, naive, or just shouted down
by the manage-by-the-numbers types. In the business press today, outsourcing is the
rage. "Restructure and downsize your organization; outsource as many functions as
possible" seems to be the message from many of the world's most profitable
corporations -- large and small -- as well as their consultant-armies.MIT: Leaders for Manufacturing, the International
Motor Vehicle Program, the Industrial Performance Center, the International Center for Research on
the Management of Technology, and the Japan Program; Chrysler; Intel; Sematech; and
Texas Instruments
A quantum group version of quantum gauge theories in two dimensions
For the special case of the quantum group we present an alternative approach to quantum gauge theories in
two dimensions. We exhibit the similarities to Witten's combinatorial approach
which is based on ideas of Migdal. The main ingredient is the Turaev-Viro
combinatorial construction of topological invariants of closed, compact
3-manifolds and its extension to arbitrary compact 3-manifolds as given by the
authors in collaboration with W. Mueller.Comment: 6 pages (plain TeX
- …
