2,045 research outputs found
The weakening relationship between the Impact Factor and papers' citations in the digital age
Historically, papers have been physically bound to the journal in which they
were published but in the electronic age papers are available individually, no
longer tied to their respective journals. Hence, papers now can be read and
cited based on their own merits, independently of the journal's physical
availability, reputation, or Impact Factor. We compare the strength of the
relationship between journals' Impact Factors and the actual citations received
by their respective papers from 1902 to 2009. Throughout most of the 20th
century, papers' citation rates were increasingly linked to their respective
journals' Impact Factors. However, since 1990, the advent of the digital age,
the strength of the relation between Impact Factors and paper citations has
been decreasing. This decrease began sooner in physics, a field that was
quicker to make the transition into the electronic domain. Furthermore, since
1990, the proportion of highly cited papers coming from highly cited journals
has been decreasing, and accordingly, the proportion of highly cited papers not
coming from highly cited journals has also been increasing. Should this pattern
continue, it might bring an end to the use of the Impact Factor as a way to
evaluate the quality of journals, papers and researchers.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Resonating color state and emergent chromodynamics in the kagome antiferromagnet
We argue that the spin-wave breakdown in the Heisenberg kagome
antiferromagnet signals an instability of the ground state and leads, through
an emergent local constraint, to a quantum dynamics described by a gauge theory
similar to that of chromodynamics. For integer spins, we show that the quantum
fluctuations of the gauge modes select the sqrt(3)xsqrt(3) Neel state with an
on-site moment renormalized by color resonances. We find non-magnetic
low-energy excitations that may be responsible for a deconfinement "transition"
at experimentally accessible temperatures which we estimate.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, v2: printable figs, v3: publ. versio
Order-by-Disorder in the XY Pyrochlore Antiferromagnet Revisited
We investigate the properties of the XY pyrochlore antiferromagnet with local
planar anisotropy. We find the ground states and show that the
configurational ground state entropy is subextensive. By computing the free
energy due to harmonic fluctuations and by carrying out Monte Carlo
simulations, we confirm earlier work indicating that the model exhibits thermal
order-by-disorder leading to low temperature long-range order consisting of
discrete magnetic domains. We compute the spin wave spectrum and show that
thermal and quantum fluctuations select the same magnetic structure. Using
Monte Carlo simulations, we find that the state selected by thermal
fluctuations in this XY pyrochlore antiferromagnet can survive the addition of
sufficiently weak nearest-neighbor pseudo-dipolar interactions to the spin
Hamiltonian. We discuss our results in relation to the Er2Ti2O7 pyrochlore
antiferromagnet.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
Early life-history studies of nearshore rockfishes and lingcod off Central California, 1987-92
This study focused on the physical and biological processes that influence the distribution, abundance, growth, and survival of young-of-the-year (YOY) rockfishes and lingcod along the central California coast. The annual somatic and reproductive condition of adult female blue rockfish corresponded to annual upwelling. Resulting larval production may correspond to the reproductive potential of adults; however, ultimate recruitment success of YOY is also effected by oceanographic conditions during their planktonic stage. Within a year, each species of settled YOY was observed concurrently and in relatively similar abundances at all study dive sites along the central coast. Most species of YOY exhibited similar growth patterns among
stations and years. We found a high degree of interannual variability in the condition of adults and relative
abundances of YOY. We believe a large part of this variability is due to annual oceanographic conditions,
specifically upwelling.
Marine reserves, which would protect populations of reproductively mature rockfishes and lingcod and insure 1arval production, have been suggested as an alternative to present management strategies for these species. However, a crucial question is whether or not larvae from adult fish in reserves would significantly contribute to replenishing stocks in other areas. This study was undertaken to assist in determining the feasibility of reserves to enhance nearshore rockfish and lingcod populations. (78pp.
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The evolution of rhythmic cognition: New perspectives and technologies in comparative research
Music is a pervasive phenomenon in human culture, and musical rhythm is virtually present in all musical traditions. Research on the evolution and cognitive underpinnings of rhythm can benefit from a number of approaches. We outline key concepts and definitions, allowing fine-grained analysis of rhythmic cognition in experimental studies. We advocate comparative animal research as a useful approach to answer questions about human music cognition and review experimental evidence from different species. Finally, we suggest future directions for research on the cognitive basis of rhythm. Apart from research in semi-natural setups, possibly allowed by “drum set for chimpanzees” prototypes presented here for the first time, mathematical modeling and systematic use of circular statistics may allow promising advances
Is the Yb2Ti2O7 pyrochlore a quantum spin ice?
We use numerical linked cluster (NLC) expansions to compute the specific
heat, C(T), and entropy, S(T), of a quantum spin ice model of Yb2Ti2O7 using
anisotropic exchange interactions recently determined from inelastic neutron
scattering measurements and find good agreement with experimental calorimetric
data. In the perturbative weak quantum regime, this model has a ferrimagnetic
ordered ground state, with two peaks in C(T): a Schottky anomaly signalling the
paramagnetic to spin ice crossover followed at lower temperature by a sharp
peak accompanying a first order phase transition to the ferrimagnetic state. We
suggest that the two C(T) features observed in Yb2Ti2O7 are associated with the
same physics. Spin excitations in this regime consist of weakly confined
spinon-antispinon pairs. We suggest that conventional ground state with exotic
quantum dynamics will prove a prevalent characteristic of many real quantum
spin ice materials.Comment: 8 pages (two-column), 9 figure
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