6,128 research outputs found
Inflation as a Probe of Short Distance Physics
We show that a string-inspired Planck scale modification of general
relativity can have observable cosmological effects. Specifically, we present a
complete analysis of the inflationary perturbation spectrum produced by a
phenomenological Lagrangian that has a standard form on large scales but
incorporates a string-inspired short distance cutoff, and find a deviation from
the standard result. We use the de Sitter calculation as the basis of a
qualitative analysis of other inflationary backgrounds, arguing that in these
cases the cutoff could have a more pronounced effect, changing the shape of the
spectrum. Moreover, the computational approach developed here can be used to
provide unambiguous calculations of the perturbation spectrum in other
heuristic models that modify trans-Planckian physics and thereby determine
their impact on the inflationary perturbation spectrum. Finally, we argue that
this model may provide an exception to constraints, recently proposed by Tanaka
and Starobinsky, on the ability of Planck-scale physics to modify the
cosmological spectrum.Comment: revtex, 8 pages, eps figures included, references adde
Efficient Contextual Measures for Classification of Multispectral Image Data
The most common method for labeling multispectral image data classifies each pixel entirely on the basis of its own spectral signature. Such a method neither utilizes contextual information in the image nor does it incorporate secondary information related to the scene. This exclusion is generally due to the poor cost/performance efficiency of most contextual algorithms and a lack of knowledge concerning how to relate variables from different sources. In this research, several efficient spatial context measures are developed from different structural models for four-nearest-neighbor neighborhoods. Most of these measures rely on simple manipulations of label probabilities generated by a noncontextual classifier. They are efficient computationally and are effective in improving classification accuracy over the noncontextual result. Among other schemata, the measures include: average label probabilities in a neighborhood; label probabilities; combined as a function of a metric in the label probability space; and context through semantic constraints within a Bayesian framework. In addition, an efficient implementation of a contextual classifier based on compound decision theory is developed through a simplification of the structure of the contextual prior probability^ No accuracy is lost through the simplification, but computational speed is increased 15-fold. Finally, a procedure to combine label probabilities from independent data sources is proposed. A mechanism for combining the label probabilities from each of the sources as a function of their independent classification accuracies is created and evaluated
Race/Ethnicity and Retention in Traumatic Brain Injury Outcomes Research: A Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems National Database Study
Objective: To investigate the contribution of race/ethnicity to retention in traumatic brain injury (TBI) research at 1 to 2 years post-injury. Setting: Community. Participants: 5548 Whites, 1347 Blacks, and 790 Hispanics enrolled in the Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems National Database with dates of injury between October 1, 2002 and March 31, 2013. Design:
Retrospective database analysis. Main Measure: Retention, defined as completion of at least one question on the follow-up interview by the person with TBI or a proxy. Results: Retention rates 1-2 years post-TBI were significantly lower for Hispanic (85.2%) than for White (91.8%) or Black participants (90.5%) and depended significantly on history of problem drug or alcohol use. Other variables associated with low retention included older age, lower education, violent cause of injury, and discharge to an institution versus private residence. Conclusions: The findings emphasize the importance of investigating retention rates separately for Blacks and Hispanics rather than combining them or grouping either with other races or ethnicities. The results also suggest the need for implementing procedures to increase retention of Hispanics in longitudinal TBI researc
Imprints of Short Distance Physics On Inflationary Cosmology
We analyze the impact of certain modifications to short distance physics on
the inflationary perturbation spectrum. For the specific case of power-law
inflation, we find distinctive -- and possibly observable -- effects on the
spectrum of density perturbations.Comment: Revtex 4, 3 eps figs, 4 page
Warped Reheating in Multi-Throat Brane Inflation
We investigate in some quantitative details the viability of reheating in
multi-throat brane inflationary scenarios by estimating and comparing the time
scales for the various processes involved. We also calculate within
perturbative string theory the decay rate of excited closed strings into KK
modes and compare with that of their decay into gravitons; we find that in the
inflationary throat the former is preferred. We also find that over a small but
reasonable range of parameters of the background geometry, these KK modes will
preferably tunnel to another throat (possibly containing the Standard Model)
instead of decaying to gravitons due largely to their suppressed coupling to
the bulk gravitons. Once tunneled, the same suppressed coupling to the
gravitons again allows them to reheat the Standard Model efficiently. We also
consider the effects of adding more throats to the system and find that for
extra throats with small warping, reheating still seems viable.Comment: 29 pages, 4 figures, discussions on closed string decay expanded,
references adde
A generic estimate of trans-Planckian modifications to the primordial power spectrum in inflation
We derive a general expression for the power spectra of scalar and tensor
fluctuations generated during inflation given an arbitrary choice of boundary
condition for the mode function at a short distance. We assume that the
boundary condition is specified at a short-distance cutoff at a scale which
is independent of time. Using a particular prescription for the boundary
condition at momentum , we find that the modulation to the power spectra
of density and gravitational wave fluctuations is of order , where
is the Hubble parameter during inflation, and we argue that this behavior is
generic, although by no means inevitable. With fixed boundary condition, we
find that the shape of the modulation to the power spectra is determined
entirely by the deviation of the background spacetime from the de Sitter limit.Comment: 15 pages (RevTeX), 2 figure
Therapeutic alliance in telephone-administered cognitive–behavioral therapy for hematopoietic stem cell transplant survivors.
A strong therapeutic alliance has been found to predict psychotherapeutic treatment success across a variety of therapeutic modalities and patient populations. However, only a few studies have examined therapeutic alliance as a predictor of psychotherapy outcome among cancer survivors, and none have examined this relation in telephone administered cognitive behavioral therapy (T-CBT). This study evaluated the extent to which therapeutic alliance affected psychotherapy outcomes in survivors of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), a treatment for some cancers
Observational Signatures and Non-Gaussianities of General Single Field Inflation
We perform a general study of primordial scalar non-Gaussianities in single
field inflationary models in Einstein gravity. We consider models where the
inflaton Lagrangian is an arbitrary function of the scalar field and its first
derivative, and the sound speed is arbitrary. We find that under reasonable
assumptions, the non-Gaussianity is completely determined by 5 parameters. In
special limits of the parameter space, one finds distinctive ``shapes'' of the
non-Gaussianity. In models with a small sound speed, several of these shapes
would become potentially observable in the near future. Different limits of our
formulae recover various previously known results.Comment: 53 pages, 5 figures; v3, minor revision, JCAP version; v4, numerical
coefficients corrected in Appendix B, discussion on consistency condition
revise
The Local Environment of the FUor-like Objects AR 6A and 6B
We present new 12CO J=3-2 and HCN J=3-2 molecular line maps of the region
surrounding the young star AR 6 using the 15 metre James Clerk Maxwell
Telescope. AR 6 was previously found to be a double source with both components
exhibiting several characteristics of FU Orionis (FUor) eruptive variable
stars. Our data indicates that AR 6, like FU Orionis itself, does not possess a
CO outflow and likewise, does not show evidence for large amounts of molecular
g as in its circumstellar environment. We conclude that from the near-IR to the
sub-mm, AR 6 is similar to FU Orionis in several respects. We interpret the
lack of significant dust and molecular gas in the circumstellar environment of
AR 6, together with the large near-IR thermal excess, as evidence that the
sources have exhausted their natal envelopes, that they have at least small hot
circumstellar disks, and that they are more evolved than Class I protostars.
This, in itself, suggests that, since FUor eruptions have also been observed in
stars with large dust mass envelopes (e.g. V346 Nor) and with CO outflows (e.g.
L1551 IRS5), FUor events probably occur at many different stages in the early,
formative phase of a star's life, and lends support to the idea that FUor
outbursts are repetitive like their shorter-lived relatives occurring in EXor
eruptive variables. Finally, we show that, being part of the 'Spokes' young
stellar cluster, AR 6 is unlike many FUors which typically are located in more
sparsely populated regions.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal (October 2008
Observational Signatures and Non-Gaussianities of General Single Field Inflation
We perform a general study of primordial scalar non-Gaussianities in single
field inflationary models in Einstein gravity. We consider models where the
inflaton Lagrangian is an arbitrary function of the scalar field and its first
derivative, and the sound speed is arbitrary. We find that under reasonable
assumptions, the non-Gaussianity is completely determined by 5 parameters. In
special limits of the parameter space, one finds distinctive ``shapes'' of the
non-Gaussianity. In models with a small sound speed, several of these shapes
would become potentially observable in the near future. Different limits of our
formulae recover various previously known results.Comment: 53 pages, 5 figures; v3, minor revision, JCAP version; v4, numerical
coefficients corrected in Appendix B, discussion on consistency condition
revise
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