9,302 research outputs found
Improvising Linguistic Style: Social and Affective Bases for Agent Personality
This paper introduces Linguistic Style Improvisation, a theory and set of
algorithms for improvisation of spoken utterances by artificial agents, with
applications to interactive story and dialogue systems. We argue that
linguistic style is a key aspect of character, and show how speech act
representations common in AI can provide abstract representations from which
computer characters can improvise. We show that the mechanisms proposed
introduce the possibility of socially oriented agents, meet the requirements
that lifelike characters be believable, and satisfy particular criteria for
improvisation proposed by Hayes-Roth.Comment: 10 pages, uses aaai.sty, lingmacros.sty, psfig.st
A theoretical study of the aerodynamic characteristics of lifting-body entry vehicles Summary report, Mar. 1965 - Mar. 1966
Aerodynamic characteristics of lifting-body entry vehicle
Rotational apparent mass by electrical analogy
Electrical analogy technique for determining rotational apparent masses of body in two- dimensional fluid flo
Phase-ordering of conserved vectorial systems with field-dependent mobility
The dynamics of phase-separation in conserved systems with an O(N) continuous
symmetry is investigated in the presence of an order parameter dependent
mobility M(\phi)=1-a \phi^2. The model is studied analytically in the framework
of the large-N approximation and by numerical simulations of the N=2, N=3 and
N=4 cases in d=2, for both critical and off-critical quenches. We show the
existence of a new universality class for a=1 characterized by a growth law of
the typical length L(t) ~ t^{1/z} with dynamical exponent z=6 as opposed to the
usual value z=4 which is recovered for a<1.Comment: RevTeX, 8 pages, 13 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Metastable helium molecules as tracers in superfluid liquid He
Metastable helium molecules generated in a discharge near a sharp tungsten
tip operated in either pulsed mode or continuous field-emission mode in
superfluid liquid He are imaged using a laser-induced-fluorescence
technique. By pulsing the tip, a small cloud of He molecules is
produced. At 2.0 K, the molecules in the liquid follow the motion of the normal
fluid. We can determine the normal-fluid velocity in a heat-induced counterflow
by tracing the position of a single molecule cloud. As we run the tip in
continuous field-emission mode, a normal-fluid jet from the tip is generated
and molecules are entrained in the jet. A focused 910 nm pump laser pulse is
used to drive a small group of molecules to the vibrational state.
Subsequent imaging of the tagged molecules with an expanded 925 nm probe
laser pulse allows us to measure the velocity of the normal fluid. The
techniques we developed demonstrate for the first time the ability to trace the
normal-fluid component in superfluid helium using angstrom-sized particles.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Dynamics of Phase Transitions: The 3D 3-state Potts model
In studies of the QCD deconfining phase transition or cross-over by means of
heavy ion experiments, one ought to be concerned about non-equilibrium effects
due to heating and cooling of the system. In this paper we extend our previous
study of Glauber dynamics of 2D Potts models to the 3D 3-state Potts model,
which serves as an effective model for some QCD properties. We investigate the
linear theory of spinodal decomposition in some detail. It describes the early
time evolution of the 3D model under a quench from the disordered into the
ordered phase well, but fails in 2D. Further, the quench leads to competing
vacuum domains, which are difficult to equilibrate, even in the presence of a
small external magnetic field. From our hysteresis study we find, as before, a
dynamics dominated by spinodal decomposition. There is evidence that some
effects survive in the case of a cross-over. But the infinite volume
extrapolation is difficult to control, even with lattices as large as .Comment: 12 pages; added references, corrected typo
Azimuthal Correlation in Lepton-Hadron Scattering via Charged Weak-Current Processes
We consider the azimuthal correlation of the final-state particles in charged
weak-current processes. This correlation provides a test of perturbative
quantum chromodynamics. The azimuthal asymmetry is large in the semi-inclusive
processes in which we identify a final-state hadron, say, a charged pion
compared to that in the inclusive processes in which we do not identify
final-state particles and use only the calorimetric information. In
semi-inclusive processes the azimuthal asymmetry is more conspicuous when the
incident lepton is an antineutrino or a positron than when the incident lepton
is a neutrino or an electron. We analyze all the possible charged weak-current
processes and study the quantitative aspects of each process. We also compare
this result to the ep scattering with a photon exchange.Comment: 25 pages, 2 Postscript figures, uses RevTeX, fixes.st
- …
