814 research outputs found
The Self-Force of a Charged Particle in Classical Electrodynamics with a Cut-off
We discuss, in the context of classical electrodynamics with a Lorentz
invariant cut-off at short distances, the self-force acting on a point charged
particle. It follows that the electromagnetic mass of the point charge occurs
in the equation of motion in a form consistent with special relativity. We find
that the exact equation of motion does not exhibit runaway solutions or
non-causal behavior, when the cut-off is larger than half of the classical
radius of the electron.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figur
Gravitational Collapse of a Homogeneous Scalar Field in Deformed Phase Space
We study the gravitational collapse of a homogeneous scalar field, minimally
coupled to gravity, in the presence of a particular type of dynamical
deformation between the canonical momenta of the scale factor and of the scalar
field. In the absence of such a deformation, a class of solutions can be found
in the literature [R. Goswami and P. S. Joshi, arXiv:gr-qc/0410144],
%\cite{JG04}, whereby a curvature singularity occurs at the collapse end state,
which can be either hidden behind a horizon or be visible to external
observers. However, when the phase-space is deformed, as implemented herein
this paper, we find that the singularity may be either removed or instead,
attained faster. More precisely, for negative values of the deformation
parameter, we identify the emergence of a negative pressure term, which slows
down the collapse so that the singularity is replaced with a bounce. In this
respect, the formation of a dynamical horizon can be avoided depending on the
suitable choice of the boundary surface of the star. Whereas for positive
values, the pressure that originates from the deformation effects assists the
collapse toward the singularity formation. In this case, since the collapse
speed is unbounded, the condition on the horizon formation is always satisfied
and furthermore the dynamical horizon develops earlier than when the
phase-space deformations are absent. These results are obtained by means of a
thoroughly numerical discussion.Comment: 17 pages, 17 figure
A Unified Approach to Attractor Reconstruction
In the analysis of complex, nonlinear time series, scientists in a variety of
disciplines have relied on a time delayed embedding of their data, i.e.
attractor reconstruction. The process has focused primarily on heuristic and
empirical arguments for selection of the key embedding parameters, delay and
embedding dimension. This approach has left several long-standing, but common
problems unresolved in which the standard approaches produce inferior results
or give no guidance at all. We view the current reconstruction process as
unnecessarily broken into separate problems. We propose an alternative approach
that views the problem of choosing all embedding parameters as being one and
the same problem addressable using a single statistical test formulated
directly from the reconstruction theorems. This allows for varying time delays
appropriate to the data and simultaneously helps decide on embedding dimension.
A second new statistic, undersampling, acts as a check against overly long time
delays and overly large embedding dimension. Our approach is more flexible than
those currently used, but is more directly connected with the mathematical
requirements of embedding. In addition, the statistics developed guide the user
by allowing optimization and warning when embedding parameters are chosen
beyond what the data can support. We demonstrate our approach on uni- and
multivariate data, data possessing multiple time scales, and chaotic data. This
unified approach resolves all the main issues in attractor reconstruction.Comment: 22 pages, revised version as submitted to CHAOS. Manuscript is
currently under review. 4 Figures, 31 reference
Loop quantum effect and the fate of tachyon field collapse
We study the fate of gravitational collapse of a tachyon field matter. In
presence of an inverse square potential a black hole forms. Loop quantum
corrections lead to the avoidance of classical singularities, which is followed
by an outward flux of energy.Comment: Contribution to the conference of Loops'11, Madri
Comparing phrase-final patterns across speech styles and groups in European Portuguese
Le présent travail se propose d’étudier les effets phonétiquesphonologiques et les types de tons présents à la frontière d’unités intonatives majeures et mineures (indices de rupture 4 et 3 du système ToBI), en comparant la parole spontanée et la parole préparée (non lue) produites par des adolescents et par des adultes à l’école. Le corpus analysé est constitué d’un relevé de 1041 unités intonatives extraites de 18 présentations orales faites par 6 élèves (14-15 ans) et 3 professeurs (un sous-ensemble du corpus CPE-FACES). Les résultats montrent que les indices phonétiques et prosodiques en fin d’unités intonatives varient en fonction (i) du style de parole et (ii) de l’âge/statut des locuteurs
Managing Access to Biobanks:How Can We Reconcile Privacy and Public Interests in Genetic Research?
This article is concerned with the ultimate objectives of genetic biobanks set up to promote the public interest—being the sharing of samples and data for medical research—and the consequences for personal privacy of realising them. Our aim is to chart the values, interests and principles in play, to consider the challenges of realizing biobanking objectives on a global scale, and to propose viable ways forward that ensure, as far as possible, that access provisions remain fit for purpose throughout the entire life of a biobank, while adequately protecting the privacy interests at stake. It is argued that key features in any robust access model must include mechanisms to (a) maintain participant trust in management of the resource and to measure and respond to participants’ expectations, (b) facilitate and promote the sharing of benefits, and (c) respond timeously and effectively to new challenges
Comparing different machine learning approaches for disfluency structure detection in a corpus of university lectures
This paper presents a number of experiments focusing on assessing the performance of different machine learning methods on the identification of disfluencies and their distinct structural regions over speech data. Several machine learning methods have been applied, namely Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Classification and Regression Trees (CARTs), J48 and Multilayer Perceptron.
Our experiments show that CARTs outperform the other methods on the identification of the distinct structural disfluent regions. Reported experiments are based on audio segmentation and prosodic features, calculated from a corpus of university lectures in European Portuguese, containing about 32h of speech and about 7.7% of disfluencies. The set of features automatically extracted from the forced alignment corpus proved to be discriminant of the regions contained in the production of a disfluency. This work shows that using fully automatic prosodic features, disfluency structural regions can be reliably identified using CARTs, where the best results achieved correspond to 81.5% precision, 27.6% recall, and 41.2% F-measure. The best results concern the detection of the interregnum, followed by the detection of the interruption point.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Prosodic exercises for children with ASD via virtual therapy
which means that there is a wide degree of variation in the way it affects people. It is known that, even though it has a huge spectrum, the characterization of the speech of autistic children has been consensual in the literature as devoid of wealth prosodic parameters manifested by healthy children, such as the emotional aspects that are reflected in communicative interaction. The use of technology as a teaching tool has been growing and the presentation of educational exercises through electronic devices reveals itself as more attractive and captivating for children when compared with traditional methods. In this project, we developed prosodic exercises for intonation assessment in an imitation task, where the main focus is the development and enrichment of prosodic abilities of children with autism spectrum disorders, as a complement to therapy sessions.We evaluated the intonation assessment method, achieving accuracy values between 70%and 83.3%, depending on the feature set adapted (pitch, energy, Mel-Frequency Cepstral features, and pseudo-syllable information), and also by making a fusion of all features. Although the original intention was to integrate these exercises in an existing platform for children diagnosed with ASD, the current implementation is a stand-alone mobile application.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Teenage and adult speech in school context: building and processing a corpus of European Portuguese
We present a corpus of European Portuguese spoken by teenagers and adults in school context, CPE-FACES, with an overview of the differential characteristics of high school oral presentations and the challenges this data poses to automatic speech processing. The CPE-FACES corpus has been created with two main goals: to provide a resource for the study of prosodic patterns in both spontaneous and prepared unscripted speech, and to capture inter-speaker and speaking style variations common at school, for research on oral presentations. Research on speaking styles is still largely based on adult speech. References to teenagers are sparse and cross-analyses of speech types comparing teenagers and adults are rare. We expect CPE-FACES, currently a unique resource in this domain, will contribute to filling this gap in European Portuguese. Focusing on disfluencies and phrase-final phonetic-phonological processes we show the impact of teenage speech on the automatic segmentation of oral presentations. Analyzing fluent final intonation contours in declarative utterances, we also show that communicative situation specificities, speaker status and cross-gender differences are key factors in speaking style variation at school.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
Correlation Effects in Nuclear Transparency
The Glauber approximation is used to calculate the contribution of nucleon
correlations in high-energy reactions. When the excitation energy of
the residual nucleus is small, the increase of the nuclear transparency due to
correlations between the struck nucleon and the other nucleons is mostly
compensated by a decrease of the transparency due to the correlations between
non detected nucleons. We derive Glauber model predictions for nuclear
transparency for the differential cross section when nuclear shell level
excitations are measured. The role of correlations in color transparency is
briefly discussed.Comment: 24 pages revtex, 4 uuencoded PostScript Figures as separate fil
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