10,310 research outputs found

    Heavy Quark Physics From Lattice QCD

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    We review the application of lattice QCD to the phenomenology of b- and c-quarks. After a short discussion of the lattice techniques used to evaluate hadronic matrix elements and the corresponding systematic uncertainties, we summarise results for leptonic decay constants, B--Bbar mixing, semileptonic and rare radiative decays. A discussion of the determination of heavy quark effective theory parameters is followed by an explanation of the difficulty in applying lattice methods to exclusive nonleptonic decays.Comment: 52 pages LaTeX with 10 eps files. Requires: hfsprocl.sty (included) plus axodraw.sty, rotating.sty and array.sty. To appear in Heavy Flavours (2nd edition) edited by A J Buras and M Lindner (World Scientific, Singapore). Revised version corrects typo in axis labelling of Fig 1

    On the problems of measuring transient temperature in cryogenic fluids

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    Cryogenic sensor errors in measuring transient temperature in cryogenic fluid

    The Digital Flynn Effect: Complexity of Posts on Social Media Increases over Time

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    Parents and teachers often express concern about the extensive use of social media by youngsters. Some of them see emoticons, undecipherable initialisms and loose grammar typical for social media as evidence of language degradation. In this paper, we use a simple measure of text complexity to investigate how the complexity of public posts on a popular social networking site changes over time. We analyze a unique dataset that contains texts posted by 942, 336 users from a large European city across nine years. We show that the chosen complexity measure is correlated with the academic performance of users: users from high-performing schools produce more complex texts than users from low-performing schools. We also find that complexity of posts increases with age. Finally, we demonstrate that overall language complexity of posts on the social networking site is constantly increasing. We call this phenomenon the digital Flynn effect. Our results may suggest that the worries about language degradation are not warranted

    The Railroadā€™s Impact on Land Values in the Upper Great Plains at the Closing of the Frontier

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    We show that the impact of transportation improvements on land values is complex with a direct, positive relationship on the price of land and also a positive relationship with the ratio of improved acres to total acres, another important influence on the per acre price of land. We construct a two step estimation that removes the impact of transportation outlets on the ratio of improved to total acres before including the transportation variables and the adjusted ratio variable as independent variables in a regression on price per acre. This estimation gives us the expected positive impact of railroads on land price. We also use Box-Cox regressions to show the semi-log form, a common model specification, may be inappropriate for our data and possibly then for other land price research.Box-Cox, Railroads, Great Plains

    Teaching Bank Runs Through Films

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    The author advocates the use of films to supplement textbook treatments of bank runs and panics in money and banking or general banking classes.Ā  Modern students, particularly those in developed countries, tend to be unfamiliar with potential fragilities of financial systems such as a lack of deposit insurance or other safety net mechanisms.Ā  Films provide a dramatic example of the panic and uncertainty experienced by depositors and banks during bank runs.Ā  Students learn the value of deposit insurance and the types of informational asymmetries safety net mechanisms overcome.Ā  The author provides examples of assignments given in the past and possible extensions.

    Here Today, Gone Tomorrow? Post-Grant Review and PTAB Interpretation of Ā§ 101 Subject Matter after \u3cem\u3eMyriad\u3c/em\u3e

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    Post-grant review is a new review procedure for granted patents in the United States. The procedure, instituted as a mechanism to get rid of bad patents, allows any outside party, within nine months of the patent grant date, to challenge the validity of a granted patent on any ground under the patent law, including patentable subject matter, provided that the petitioner can demonstrate that it is more likely than not that at least one of the claims challenged in the petition is unpatentable, or if there is a showing that the petition raises a novel or unsettled legal question that is important to other patents. This review and decision on novel or unsettled legal questions is done by a trial-like proceeding before the newly-created Patent Trial and Appeal Board, whose decisions are appealable to the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. This note uses a model developed by positive political theory to argue that (1) the new post-grant review proceeding gives the PTO a considerable amount of power to determine what constitutes patentable subject matter; (2) the PTO\u27s power to determine what constitutes patentable subject matter may not create long-term security in what patentable subject matter is; and (3) that the best way to create security for long-term investment in patent protection may be for the Court of Appeals to take a more active, policymaking role in its review of PTAB decisions

    Assessing the Effectiveness of Automated Emotion Recognition in Adults and Children for Clinical Investigation

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    Recent success stories in automated object or face recognition, partly fuelled by deep learning artiļ¬cial neural network (ANN) architectures, has led to the advancement of biometric research platforms and, to some extent, the resurrection of Artiļ¬cial Intelligence (AI). In line with this general trend, inter-disciplinary approaches have taken place to automate the recognition of emotions in adults or children for the beneļ¬t of various applications such as identiļ¬cation of children emotions prior to a clinical investigation. Within this context, it turns out that automating emotion recognition is far from being straight forward with several challenges arising for both science(e.g., methodology underpinned by psychology) and technology (e.g., iMotions biometric research platform). In this paper, we present a methodology, experiment and interesting ļ¬ndings, which raise the following research questions for the recognition of emotions and attention in humans: a) adequacy of well-established techniques such as the International Affective Picture System (IAPS), b) adequacy of state-of-the-art biometric research platforms, c) the extent to which emotional responses may be different among children or adults. Our ļ¬ndings and ļ¬rst attempts to answer some of these research questions, are all based on a mixed sample of adults and children, who took part in the experiment resulting into a statistical analysis of numerous variables. These are related with, both automatically and interactively, captured responses of participants to a sample of IAPS pictures
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