2,914 research outputs found
Large Area Crop Inventory Experiment (LACIE). Bibliographic addenda, technical reports, papers, and memorandums published under supporting research and technology and other research, test, and evaluation contracts for the Earth observations division
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Consciousness
Consciousness is the last great frontier of science. Here we discuss what it is, how it differs fundamentally from other scientific phenomena, what adaptive function it serves, and the difficulties in trying to explain how it works. The emphasis is on the adaptive function.
When All is Said and Done, How Should You Play and What Should You Expect?
Modern game theory was born in 1928, when John von Neumann published his Minimax Theorem. This theorem ascribes to all two-person zero-sum games a value–what rational players may expect–and optimal strategies–how they should play to achieve that expectation. Seventyseven years later, strategic game theory has not gotten beyond that initial point, insofar as the basic questions of value and optimal strategies are concerned. Equilibrium theories do not tell players how to play and what to expect; even when there is a unique Nash equilibrium, it it is not at all clear that the players “should” play this equilibrium, nor that they should expect its payoff. Here, we return to square one: abandon all ideas of equilibrium and simply ask, how should rational players play, and what should they expect. We provide answers to both questions, for all n-person games in strategic form.
An Economic Index of Riskiness
Define the riskiness of a gamble as the reciprocal of the absolute risk aversion (ARA) of an individual with constant ARA who is indifferent between taking and not taking that gamble. We characterize this index by axioms, chief among them a "duality" axiom which, roughly speaking, asserts that less risk-averse individuals accept riskier gambles. The index is homogeneous of degree 1, monotonic with respect to first and second order stochastic dominance, and for gambles with normal distributions, is half of variance/mean. Examples are calculated, additional properties derived, and the index is compared with others in the literature.Riskiness; Risk Aversion; Expected Utility; Decision Making under Uncertainty; Portfolio Choice; Sharpe Ratio; Variance-Mean Ratio; Value at Risk
Quasi-free (p,2p) and (p,pn) reactions with unstable nuclei
We study (p,2p) and (p,pn) reactions at proton energies in the range of 100
MeV -- 1 GeV. Our purpose is to explore the most sensitive observables in
unpolarized reactions with inverse kinematics involving radioactive nuclei. We
formulate a model based on the eikonal theory to describe total cross sections
and momentum distributions of the recoiled residual nucleus. The model is
similar to the one adopted for knockout reactions with heavy ions. We show that
momentum distributions are sensitive to the angular momentum of the ejected
nucleon which can be used as an spectroscopic tool. The total cross sections
are sensitive to the nucleon separation energies and to multiple scattering
effects. Our calculations also indicate that a beam energy around 500
MeV/nucleon has a smaller dependence on the anisotropy of the nucleon-nucleon
elastic scattering.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, Accepted for publication in the Physical review
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