254 research outputs found
Research project Mauretania: Satellites as development aids
A general discussion is presented of how satellite images and ground surveys are used to define land use. Specifically it deals with the Tagant region in Mauretania, West Africa
Going Forward with Radio
A magazine that provides a timeline of radio and technological evolutions. Sections include FM, radar, and radios for tomorrow. The latter portion of the magazine includes the WTAQ radio personalities and behind the scenes workers
WTAQ and the Green Bay Countree
A brochure that highlights the regions served by WTAQ. Each region has its own detailed section that includes history on its beginning. Throughout the brochure there are pictures and names of the WTAQ staff
The optimal sink and the best source in a Markov chain
It is well known that the distributions of hitting times in Markov chains are
quite irregular, unless the limit as time tends to infinity is considered. We
show that nevertheless for a typical finite irreducible Markov chain and for
nondegenerate initial distributions the tails of the distributions of the
hitting times for the states of a Markov chain can be ordered, i.e., they do
not overlap after a certain finite moment of time.
If one considers instead each state of a Markov chain as a source rather than
a sink then again the states can generically be ordered according to their
efficiency. The mechanisms underlying these two orderings are essentially
different though.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figur
Large-Scale Gaussian Processes via Alternating Projection
Gaussian process (GP) hyperparameter optimization requires repeatedly solving
linear systems with kernel matrices. To address the prohibitive
time complexity, recent work has employed fast iterative
numerical methods, like conjugate gradients (CG). However, as datasets increase
in magnitude, the corresponding kernel matrices become increasingly
ill-conditioned and still require space without
partitioning. Thus, while CG increases the size of datasets GPs can be trained
on, modern datasets reach scales beyond its applicability. In this work, we
propose an iterative method which only accesses subblocks of the kernel matrix,
effectively enabling \emph{mini-batching}. Our algorithm, based on alternating
projection, has per-iteration time and space complexity,
solving many of the practical challenges of scaling GPs to very large datasets.
Theoretically, we prove our method enjoys linear convergence and empirically we
demonstrate its robustness to ill-conditioning. On large-scale benchmark
datasets up to four million datapoints our approach accelerates training by a
factor of 2 to 27 compared to CG
Agouti C57BL/6N embryonic stem cells for mouse genetic resources.
We report the characterization of a highly germline competent C57BL/6N mouse embryonic stem cell line, JM8. To simplify breeding schemes, the dominant agouti coat color gene was restored in JM8 cells by targeted repair of the C57BL/6 nonagouti mutation. These cells provide a robust foundation for large-scale mouse knockout programs that aim to provide a public resource of targeted mutations in the C57BL/6 genetic background
Finite type approximations of Gibbs measures on sofic subshifts
Consider a H\"older continuous potential defined on the full shift
A^\nn, where is a finite alphabet. Let X\subset A^\nn be a specified
sofic subshift. It is well-known that there is a unique Gibbs measure
on associated to . Besides, there is a natural nested
sequence of subshifts of finite type converging to the sofic subshift
. To this sequence we can associate a sequence of Gibbs measures
. In this paper, we prove that these measures weakly converge
at exponential speed to (in the classical distance metrizing weak
topology). We also establish a strong mixing property (ensuring weak
Bernoullicity) of . Finally, we prove that the measure-theoretic
entropy of converges to the one of exponentially fast.
We indicate how to extend our results to more general subshifts and potentials.
We stress that we use basic algebraic tools (contractive properties of iterated
matrices) and symbolic dynamics.Comment: 18 pages, no figure
The compound Poisson limit ruling periodic extreme behaviour of non-uniformly hyperbolic dynamics
We prove that the distributional limit of the normalised number of returns to
small neighbourhoods of periodic points of non-uniformly hyperbolic dynamical
systems is compound Poisson. The returns to small balls around a fixed point in
the phase space correspond to the occurrence of rare events, or exceedances of
high thresholds, so that there is a connection between the laws of Return Times
Statistics and Extreme Value Laws. The fact that the fixed point in the phase
space is a repelling periodic point implies that there is a tendency for the
exceedances to appear in clusters whose average sizes is given by the Extremal
Index, which depends on the expansion of the system at the periodic point.
We recall that for generic points, the exceedances, in the limit, are
singular and occur at Poisson times. However, around periodic points, the
picture is different: the respective point processes of exceedances converge to
a compound Poisson process, so instead of single exceedances, we have entire
clusters of exceedances occurring at Poisson times with a geometric
distribution ruling its multiplicity.
The systems to which our results apply include: general piecewise expanding
maps of the interval (Rychlik maps), maps with indifferent fixed points
(Manneville-Pomeau maps) and Benedicks-Carleson quadratic maps.Comment: To appear in Communications in Mathematical Physic
To what extent is behaviour a problem in English schools?:Exploring the scale and prevalence of deficits in classroom climate
The working atmosphere in the classroom is an important variable in the process of education in schools, with several studies suggesting that classroom climate is an important influence on pupil attainment. There are wide differences in the extent to which classroom climate is considered to be a problem in English schools. Some ‘official’ reports suggest that behaviour in schools is ‘satisfactory or better’ in the vast majority of schools; other sources have pointed to behaviour being a serious and widespread problem. The paper details four studies conducted over the past decade which aimed to explore these disparities. The aim of the research was to gain a more accurate insight into the extent to which deficits in classroom climate limit educational attainment and equality of educational opportunity in English schools. The findings question the suggestion that behaviour is satisfactory or better in 99.7% of English schools and the concluding section suggests ways in which deficits in classroom climate might be addressed. Although the study is limited to classrooms in England, OECD studies suggest that deficits in the working atmosphere in classrooms occur in many countries. The study therefore has potential relevance for education systems in other countries
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