3,367 research outputs found

    Extending Chatbots to Probe Users: Enhancing Complex Decision-Making Through Probing Conversations

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    Chatbots have become commonplace-they can provide customer support, take orders, collect feedback, and even provide (mental) health support. Despite this diversity, the opportunities of designing chatbots for more complex decision-making tasks remain largely underexplored. Bearing this in mind leads us to ask: How can chatbots be embedded into software tools used for complex decision-making and designed to scaffold and probe human cognition' The goal of our research was to explore possible uses of such "probing bots". The domain we examined was stock investment where many complex decisions need to be made. In our study, different types of investors interacted with a prototype, which we called "ProberBot", and subsequently took part in in-depth interviews. They generally found our ProberBot was effective at supporting their thinking but when this is desirable depends on the type of task and activity. We discuss these and other findings as well as design considerations for developing ProberBots for similar types of decision-making tasks

    TLR9 regulates adipose tissue inflammation and obesity-related metabolic disorders

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    ObjectiveRecent studies have revealed a link between Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling and the adipose tissue inflammation associated with obesity. Although TLR9 is known to play an important role in inflammation and innate immunity, its role in mediating adipose tissue inflammation has not yet been investigated. Thus, the objective of this study was to determine the role of TLR9 in regulating immune cells in visceral adipose tissue and maintaining the metabolic homeostasis. MethodsWild-type and TLR9-deficient mice were fed with a high-fat diet, and the body weight gain, glucose tolerance, insulin sensitivity, and adipose tissue inflammation were examined. ResultsTLR9-deficient mice gained significantly more weight and body fat under a high-fat diet than wild-type mice and exhibited more severe glucose intolerance and insulin resistance. We also found a dramatic increase of M1 macrophages as well as T(H)1 cells in the adipose tissue of TLR9-deficient mice compared to wild-type mice. Furthermore, the levels of various proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines were higher in TLR9-deficient mice. ConclusionsTLR9 signaling is involved in regulating adipose tissue inflammation and controlling obesity and the metabolic syndrome.1174Ysciescopu

    Pure spinor computation towards open string three-loop

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    Using the recent results in the pure spinor formulation, we lay out a ground-work towards the full momentum space amplitudes of open superstrings at three-loop. After briefly reviewing the one-loop amplitude, we directly work out the two-loop and reproduce the result that was obtained by a symmetry argument. For the three-loop, first we use the two-loop regulator as a warm-up exercise. The result vanishes. We then employ the regulator that has been recently proposed by Aisaka and Berkovits (AB). It is noted that the terms in higher power in 1λλˉ\frac{1}{\lambda\bar{\lambda}} that render the two-loop regulator disqualified for the three-loop do not contribute. This with a few other indications suggests a possibility that the AB regulator might also lead to a vanishing result. Nevertheless, we argue that it is possible to acquire the three-loop amplitude, and present a result that we anticipate to be the three-loop amplitude.Comment: 41 pages, latex, cosmetic change

    GPU implementation of Krylov solvers for block-tridiagonal eigenvalue problems

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    The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-32149-3_18In an eigenvalue problem defined by one or two matrices with block-tridiagonal structure, if only a few eigenpairs are required it is interesting to consider iterative methods based on Krylov subspaces, even if matrix blocks are dense. In this context, using the GPU for the associated dense linear algebra may provide high performance. We analyze this in an implementation done in the context of SLEPc, the Scalable Library for Eigenvalue Problem Computations. In the case of a generalized eigenproblem or when interior eigenvalues are computed with shift-and-invert, the main computational kernel is the solution of linear systems with a block-tridiagonal matrix. We explore possible implementations of this operation on the GPU, including a block cyclic reduction algorithm.This work was partially supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness under grant TIN2013-41049-P. Alejandro Lamas was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport through grant FPU13-06655.Lamas Daviña, A.; Román Moltó, JE. (2016). GPU implementation of Krylov solvers for block-tridiagonal eigenvalue problems. En Parallel Processing and Applied Mathematics. Springer. 182-191. https://doi.org/10.1007%2F978-3-319-32149-3_18S182191Baghapour, B., Esfahanian, V., Torabzadeh, M., Darian, H.M.: A discontinuous Galerkin method with block cyclic reduction solver for simulating compressible flows on GPUs. Int. J. Comput. Math. 92(1), 110–131 (2014)Bientinesi, P., Igual, F.D., Kressner, D., Petschow, M., Quintana-Ortí, E.S.: Condensed forms for the symmetric eigenvalue problem on multi-threaded architectures. Concur. Comput. Pract. Exp. 23, 694–707 (2011)Haidar, A., Ltaief, H., Dongarra, J.: Toward a high performance tile divide and conquer algorithm for the dense symmetric eigenvalue problem. SIAM J. Sci. Comput. 34(6), C249–C274 (2012)Heller, D.: Some aspects of the cyclic reduction algorithm for block tridiagonal linear systems. SIAM J. Numer. Anal. 13(4), 484–496 (1976)Hernandez, V., Roman, J.E., Vidal, V.: SLEPc: a scalable and flexible toolkit for the solution of eigenvalue problems. ACM Trans. Math. Softw. 31(3), 351–362 (2005)Hirshman, S.P., Perumalla, K.S., Lynch, V.E., Sanchez, R.: BCYCLIC: a parallel block tridiagonal matrix cyclic solver. J. Comput. Phys. 229(18), 6392–6404 (2010)Minden, V., Smith, B., Knepley, M.G.: Preliminary implementation of PETSc using GPUs. In: Yuen, D.A., Wang, L., Chi, X., Johnsson, L., Ge, W., Shi, Y. (eds.) GPU Solutions to Multi-scale Problems in Science and Engineering. Lecture Notes in Earth System Sciences, pp. 131–140. Springer, Heidelberg (2013)NVIDIA: CUBLAS Library V7.0. Technical report, DU-06702-001 _\_ v7.0, NVIDIA Corporation (2015)Park, A.J., Perumalla, K.S.: Efficient heterogeneous execution on large multicore and accelerator platforms: case study using a block tridiagonal solver. J. Parallel and Distrib. Comput. 73(12), 1578–1591 (2013)Reguly, I., Giles, M.: Efficient sparse matrix-vector multiplication on cache-based GPUs. In: Innovative Parallel Computing (InPar), pp. 1–12 (2012)Roman, J.E., Vasconcelos, P.B.: Harnessing GPU power from high-level libraries: eigenvalues of integral operators with SLEPc. In: International Conference on Computational Science. Procedia Computer Science, vol. 18, pp. 2591–2594. Elsevier (2013)Seal, S.K., Perumalla, K.S., Hirshman, S.P.: Revisiting parallel cyclic reduction and parallel prefix-based algorithms for block tridiagonal systems of equations. J. Parallel Distrib. Comput. 73(2), 273–280 (2013)Stewart, G.W.: A Krylov-Schur algorithm for large eigenproblems. SIAM J. Matrix Anal. Appl. 23(3), 601–614 (2001)Tomov, S., Nath, R., Dongarra, J.: Accelerating the reduction to upper Hessenberg, tridiagonal, and bidiagonal forms through hybrid GPU-based computing. Parallel Comput. 36(12), 645–654 (2010)Vomel, C., Tomov, S., Dongarra, J.: Divide and conquer on hybrid GPU-accelerated multicore systems. SIAM J. Sci. Comput. 34(2), C70–C82 (2012)Zhang, Y., Cohen, J., Owens, J.D.: Fast tridiagonal solvers on the GPU. In: Proceedings of the 15th ACM SIGPLAN Symposium on Principles and Practice of Parallel Programming. PPopp 2010, pp. 127–136 (2010

    The 'Harmonizing Optimal Strategy for Treatment of coronary artery stenosis - sAfety & effectiveneSS of drug-elUting stents & antiplatelet REgimen' (HOST-ASSURE) trial: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Second-generation drug-eluting stents (DES) have raised the bar of clinical performance. These stents are mostly made from cobalt chromium alloy. A newer generation DES has been developed from platinum chromium alloy, but clinical data regarding the efficacy and safety of the platinum chromium-based everolimus-eluting stent (PtCr-EES) is limited, with no comparison data against the cobalt chromium-based zotarolimus-eluting stent (CoCr-ZES). In addition, an antiplatelet regimen is an integral component of medical therapy after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). A 1-week duration of doubling the dose of clopidogrel (double-dose antiplatelet therapy (DDAT)) was shown to improve outcome at 1 month compared with conventional dose in acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients undergoing PCI. However in Asia, including Korea, the addition of cilostazol (triplet antiplatelet therapy (TAT)) is used more commonly than doubling the dose of clopidogrel in high-risk patients.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>In the 'Harmonizing Optimal Strategy for Treatment of coronary artery stenosis - sAfety & effectiveneSS of drug-elUting stents & antiplatelet REgimen' (HOST-ASSURE) trial, approximately 3,750 patients are being prospectively and randomly assigned in a 2 × 2 factorial design according to the type of stent (PtCr-EES vs CoCr-ZES) and antiplatelet regimen (TAT vs DDAT). The first primary endpoint is target lesion failure at 1 year for the stent comparison, and the second primary endpoint is net clinical outcome at 1 month for comparison of antiplatelet therapy regimen.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>The HOST-ASSURE trial is the largest study yet performed to directly compare the efficacy and safety of the PtCr-EES versus CoCr-ZES in an 'all-comers' population. In addition, this study will also compare the clinical outcome of TAT versus DDAT for 1-month post PCI.</p> <p>Trial registration</p> <p>ClincalTrials.gov number <a href="http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01267734">NCT01267734</a>.</p

    Graphene-based photovoltaic cells for near-field thermal energy conversion

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    Thermophotovoltaic devices are energy-conversion systems generating an electric current from the thermal photons radiated by a hot body. In far field, the efficiency of these systems is limited by the thermodynamic Schockley-Queisser limit corresponding to the case where the source is a black body. On the other hand, in near field, the heat flux which can be transferred to a photovoltaic cell can be several orders of magnitude larger because of the contribution of evanescent photons. This is particularly true when the source supports surface polaritons. Unfortunately, in the infrared where these systems operate, the mismatch between the surface-mode frequency and the semiconductor gap reduces drastically the potential of this technology. Here we show that graphene-based hybrid photovoltaic cells can significantly enhance the generated power paving the way to a promising technology for an intensive production of electricity from waste heat.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Off-shell superconformal nonlinear sigma-models in three dimensions

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    We develop superspace techniques to construct general off-shell N=1,2,3,4 superconformal sigma-models in three space-time dimensions. The most general N=3 and N=4 superconformal sigma-models are constructed in terms of N=2 chiral superfields. Several superspace proofs of the folklore statement that N=3 supersymmetry implies N=4 are presented both in the on-shell and off-shell settings. We also elaborate on (super)twistor realisations for (super)manifolds on which the three-dimensional N-extended superconformal groups act transitively and which include Minkowski space as a subspace.Comment: 67 pages; V2: typos corrected, one reference added, version to appear on JHE

    A Matrix Model for Baryons and Nuclear Forces

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    We propose a new matrix model describing multi-baryon systems. We derive the action from open string theory on the wrapped baryon vertex D-branes embedded in the D4-D8 model of large N holographic QCD. The positions of k baryons are unified into k x k matrices, with spin/isospin of the baryons encoded in a set of k-vectors. Holographic baryons are known to be very small in the large 't Hooft coupling limit, and our model offers a better systematic approach to dynamics of such baryons at short distances. We compute energetics and spectra (k=1), and also short-distance nuclear force (k=2). In particular, we obtain a new size of the holographic baryon and find a precise form of the repulsive core of nucleons. This matrix model complements the instanton soliton picture of holographic baryons, whose small size turned out to be well below the natural length scale of the approximation involved there. Our results show that, nevertheless, the basic properties of holographic baryons obtained there are robust under stringy corrections within a few percents.Comment: 30 pages. v3: more comments added, published versio

    Generalised massive gravity one-loop partition function and AdS/(L)CFT

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    The graviton 1-loop partition function is calculated for Euclidean generalised massive gravity (GMG) using AdS heat kernel techniques. We find that the results fit perfectly into the AdS/(L)CFT picture. Conformal Chern-Simons gravity, a singular limit of GMG, leads to an additional contribution in the 1-loop determinant from the conformal ghost. We show that this contribution has a nice interpretation on the conformal field theory side in terms of a semi-classical null vector at level two descending from a primary with conformal weights (3/2,-1/2).Comment: 25 p., 2 jpg figs, v2: added 6 lines of clarifying text after Eq. (2.38

    Worldvolume Superalgebra Of BLG Theory With Nambu-Poisson Structure

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    Recently it was proposed that the Bagger-Lambert-Gustavsson theory with Nambu-Poisson structure describes an M5-brane in a three-form flux background. In this paper we investigate the superalgebra associated with this theory. We derive the central charges corresponding to M5-brane solitons in 3-form backgrounds. We also show that double dimensional reduction of the superalgebra gives rise to the Poisson bracket terms of a non-commutative D4-brane superalgebra. We provide interpretations of the D4-brane charges in terms of spacetime intersections.Comment: 23 pages; references added, section 4 clarification
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