1,759 research outputs found
An Open Letter to the Ohio Supreme Court: Setting a Uniform Standard on \u3ci\u3eAnders\u3c/i\u3e Briefs
Attorneys are faced with an ethical dilemma when they represent indigent defendants who wish to appeal a criminal sentence, but that appeal would be frivolous. In 1967, the United States Supreme Court, in Anders v. California, introduced a procedure protecting the rights of indigent defendants that balanced the ethical concerns of an attorney forced to file a frivolous appeal. In 2000, the Court in Smith v. Robbins held that the states can set their own procedure for the aforementioned ethical dilemma, so long as it protects the rights of indigent defendants in compliance with the Fourteenth Amendment. This has led many states to reject, follow, or modify the holding in Anders v. California. As of 2020, the Supreme Court of Ohio has yet to address whether it will follow Anders. Because of this, the twelve Ohio Appellate districts are left without adequate guidance, resulting in a district split where some districts follow Anders and others do not. Consequently, indigent defendants are receiving vastly different treatment on appeal throughout the state. The Ohio Supreme Court needs to address Anders to set a uniform procedure throughout the state. When it does, the Court should find that—with a few alterations—Anders v. California is a sufficient procedure to handle frivolous appeals raised by indigent defendants
Field effect on surface states in a doped Mott-Insulator thin film
Surface effects of a doped thin film made of a strongly correlated material
are investigated both in the absence and presence of a perpendicular electric
field. We use an inhomogeneous Gutzwiller approximation for a single band
Hubbard model in order to describe correlation effects. For low doping, the
bulk value of the quasiparticle weight is recovered exponentially deep into the
slab, but with increasing doping, additional Friedel oscillations appear near
the surface. We show that the inverse correlation length has a power-law
dependence on the doping level. In the presence of an electrical field,
considerable changes in the quasiparticle weight can be realized throughout the
system. We observe a large difference (as large as five orders of magnitude) in
the quasiparticle weight near the opposite sides of the slab. This effect can
be significant in switching devices that use the surface states for transport
Low density ferromagnetism in the Hubbard model
A single-band Hubbard model with nearest and next-nearest neighbour hopping
is studied for , 2, 3, using both analytical and numerical techniques. In
one dimension, saturated ferromagnetism is found above a critical value of
for a band structure with two minima and for small and intermediate densities.
This is an extension of a scenario recently proposed by M\"uller--Hartmann. For
three dimensions and non-pathological band structures, it is proven that such a
scenario does not work.Comment: 4 pages, 3 postscript figure
Emergence of gravity from interacting simplices
We consider a statistical model of interacting 4-simplices fluctuating in an
N-dimensional target space. We argue that a gravitational theory may arise as a
low energy effective theory in a strongly interacting phase where the simplices
form clusters with an emergent space and time with the Euclidean signature. In
the large N limit, two possible phases are discussed, that is, `gravitational
Coulomb phase' and `gravitational Higgs phase'.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, one-column format; major revisions in version 5
: reviews on emergent gauge theories added; microscopic simplex model for
emergent gravity added; erroneous statements on diffeomorphism invariance
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Feature Selection for Dynamic Range Compressor Parameter Estimation
date-added: 2018-05-07 00:06:23 +0000 date-modified: 2018-05-07 00:09:42 +0000 keywords: feature selection,. intelligent music production, AES, intelligent audio effects local-url: sheng2018aes.pdfdate-added: 2018-05-07 00:06:23 +0000 date-modified: 2018-05-07 00:09:42 +0000 keywords: feature selection,. intelligent music production, AES, intelligent audio effects local-url: sheng2018aes.pdfdate-added: 2018-05-07 00:06:23 +0000 date-modified: 2018-05-07 00:09:42 +0000 keywords: feature selection,. intelligent music production, AES, intelligent audio effects local-url: sheng2018aes.pdfCasual users of audio effects may lack practical experience or knowledge of their low-level signal processing parameters. An intelligent control tool that allows using sound examples to control effects would strongly benefit these users. In a previous work we proposed a control method for the dynamic range compressor (DRC) using a random forest regression model. It maps audio features extracted from a reference sound to DRC parameter values, such that the processed signal resembles the reference. The key to good performance in this system is the relevance and effectiveness of audio features. This paper focusses on a thorough exposition and assessment of the features, as well as the comparison of different strategies to find the optimal feature set for DRC parameter estimation, using automatic feature selection methods. This enables us to draw conclusions about which features are relevant to core DRC parameters. Our results show that conventional time and frequency domain features well known from the literature are sufficient to estimate the DRC’s threshold and ratio parameters, while more specialized features are needed for attack and release time, which induce more subtle changes to the signal
Canonical representation for electrons and its application to the Hubbard model
A new representation for electrons is introduced, in which the electron
operators are written in terms of a spinless fermion and the Pauli operators.
This representation is canonical, invertible and constraint-free. Importantly,
it simplifies the Hubbard interaction. On a bipartite lattice, the Hubbard
model is reduced to a form in which the exchange interaction emerges simply by
decoupling the Pauli subsystem from the spinless fermion bath. This exchange
correctly reproduces the large superexchange. Also derived, for
, is the Hamiltonian to study Nagaoka ferromagnetism. In this
representation, the infinite- Hubbard problem becomes elegant and easier to
handle. Interestingly, the ferromagnetism in Hubbard model is found to be
related to the gauge invariance of the spinless fermions. Generalization of
this representation for the multicomponent fermions, a new representation for
bosons, the notion of a `soft-core' fermion, and some interesting unitary
transformations are introduced and discussed in the appendices.Comment: 10+ pages, 3 Figure
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