52,460 research outputs found
On the Benjamini--Hochberg method
We investigate the properties of the Benjamini--Hochberg method for multiple
testing and of a variant of Storey's generalization of it, extending and
complementing the asymptotic and exact results available in the literature.
Results are obtained under two different sets of assumptions and include
asymptotic and exact expressions and bounds for the proportion of rejections,
the proportion of incorrect rejections out of all rejections and two other
proportions used to quantify the efficacy of the method.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/009053606000000425 in the
Annals of Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Interpreting infrastructure: Defining user value for digital financial intermediaries.
The 3DaRoC project is exploring digital connectivity and peer-to-peer relationships in financial
services. In the light of the near collapse of the UK and world financial sector, understanding and
innovating new and more sustainable approaches to financial services is now a critical topic. At the
same time, the increasing penetration and take-up of robust high-speed networks, dependable peerto-
peer architectures and mobile multimedia technologies offer novel platforms for offering financial
services over the Internet. These new forms of digital connectivity give rise to opportunities in doing
financial transactions in different ways and with radically different business models that offer the
possibility of transforming the marketplace. One area in the digital economy that has had such an
effect is in the ways that users access and use digital banking and payment services.
The impact of the new economic models presented by these digital financial services is yet to be fully
determined, but they have huge potential as disruptive innovations, with a potentially transformative
effect on the way that services are offered to users. Little is understood about how technical
infrastructures impact on the ways that people make sense of the financial services that they use, or
on how these might be designed more effectively. 3DaRoC is exploring this space working with our
partners and end users to prototype and evaluate new online, mobile, ubiquitous and tangible
technologies, exploring how these services might be extended.Executive Summary: Drawing from Studies of Use - the value, use and interpretation of infrastructure in digital intermediaries to their users. The UK economy has a huge dependence on financial services, and this is increasingly based on digital platforms. Innovating new economic models around consumer financial services through the use of digital technologies is seen as increasingly important in developed economies. There are a number of drivers for this, ranging from national economic factors to the prosaic nature of enabling cheap, speedy and timely interactions for users. The potential for these new digital solutions is that they will allay an over-reliance on the traditional banking sector, which has proved itself to be unstable and risky, and we have seen a number of national policy moves to encourage growth in this sector. Partly as a result of the 2008 banking crisis, there has been an explosion in peer-to-peer financial services for non-professional consumers. These organisations act as intermediaries between users looking to trade goods or credit. However, building self-sustaining or profitable financial services within this novel space is itself fraught with commercial, regulatory, technical and social problems. This document reports on the value, use and interpretation of infrastructure in digital intermediaries to their users, describing analysis of contextual field studies carried out in two retail digital financial intermediary organisations: Zopa Limited and the Bristol Pound. It forms the second milestone document in the 3DaRoC project, developing patterns of use that have arisen on the back of the technical infrastructures in the two organisations that form cases for examination. Its purpose is to examine how the two different technical infrastructures that underpin the transactions that they support–composed of the back-office hardware and software, data structures, the networking and communications technologies used, supported consumer devices, and the user interfaces and interaction design–have provided opportunities for users to realise their financial and other needs. While we orient towards the issues of service use (and its problems), we also examine the activities and expectations of their various users. Our research has involved teams from Lancaster University examining Zopa and Brunel University focusing on the Bristol Pound over approximately a one-year period from October 2013 to October 2014. Extensive interviews, document analysis, observation of user interactions, and other methods have been employed to develop the process analyses of the firms presented here. This report comprises of three key sections: descriptions of the user demographics for Zopa and the Bristol Pound, a discussion about the user experience and its role in community, and an examination of the role of usage data in the development of these a products. We conclude with final analytical section drawing preliminary conclusions from the research presented.The 3DaRoC project is funded by the RCUK Digital Economy ‘Research in the Wild’ theme (grant no.
EP/K012304/1)
Putting the ‘digital’ in Digital Intermediaries: the role of technical infrastructure in building business models
Digital Technology Innovation and Financial Business Practices The UK economy has a huge dependence on financial services, and this is increasingly based on digital platforms. Innovating new economic models around consumer financial services through the use of digital technologies is seen as increasingly important in developed economies. There are a number of drivers for this, ranging from national economic factors to the prosaic nature of enabling cheap, speedy and timely interactions for users. The potential for these new digital solutions is that they will allay an over-reliance on the traditional banking sector, which has proved itself to be unstable and risky, and we have seen a number of national policy moves to encourage growth in this sector. Partly as a result of the 2008 banking crisis, there has been an explosion in peer-to-peer financial services for non-professional consumers. These organisations act as intermediaries between users looking to trade goods or credit. However, building self-sustaining or profitable financial services within this novel space is itself fraught with commercial, regulatory, technical and social problems. This report addresses the mutual shaping of business models and innovations in digital technical infrastructure – both client-facing and administrative back-end – in two retail financial products currently in use in the United Kingdom: peer-to-peer consumer lending and a local digital/paper hybrid currency system. The two products and their issuing firms, Zopa Limited (Zopa) and The Bristol Pound Community Interest Company (the Bristol Pound), respectively, are established leaders in their respective product areas: Zopa was established in 2005 and the Bristol Pound in 2010. Each of these firms seeks to disrupt an established financial market through the application of digital technologies and processes: consumer lending for Zopa and retail payment for the Bristol Pound. Our research has involved teams from Lancaster University examining Zopa and Brunel University focusing on the Bristol Pound over approximately a one-year period from October 2013 to October 2014. Extensive interviews, document analysis, observation of user interactions, and other methods have been employed to develop the process analyses of the firms presented here. This report is comprised of three primary sections: descriptions of the business and technological processes of each of Zopa and the Bristol Pound, and a final analytical section drawing preliminary conclusions from the research presented.3DaRoC is funded by the UK’s Digital Economy ‘Research in the Wild’ initiative. It has a substantial research budget of over £320K, with £35K of additional industrial support
Global-String and Vortex Superfluids in a Supersymmetric Scenario
The main goal of this work is to investigate the possibility of finding the
supersymmetric version of the U(1)-global string model which behaves as a
vortex-superfluid. To describe the superfluid phase, we introduce a
Lorentz-symmetry breaking background that, in an approach based on
supersymmetry, leads to a discussion on the relation between the violation of
Lorentz symmetry and explicit soft supersymmetry breakings. We also study the
relation between the string configuration and the vortex-superfluid phase. In
the framework we settle down in terms of superspace and superfields, we
actually establish a duality between the vortex degrees of freedom and the
component fields of the Kalb-Ramond superfield. We make also considerations
about the fermionic excitations that may appear in connection with the vortex
formation.Comment: 9 pages. This version presented the relation between Lorentz symmetry
violation by the background and the appearance of terms that explicitly break
SUS
Magnetic braking in young late-type stars: the effect of polar spots
The concentration of magnetic flux near the poles of rapidly rotating cool
stars has been recently proposed as an alternative mechanism to dynamo
saturation in order to explain the saturation of angular momentum loss. In this
work we study the effect of magnetic surface flux distribution on the coronal
field topology and angular momentum loss rate. We investigate if magnetic flux
concentration towards the pole is a reasonable alternative to dynamo
saturation. We construct a 1D wind model and also apply a 2-D self-similar
analytical model, to evaluate how the surface field distribution affects the
angular momentum loss of the rotating star. From the 1D model we find that, in
a magnetically dominated low corona, the concentrated polar surface field
rapidly expands to regions of low magnetic pressure resulting in a coronal
field with small latitudinal variation. We also find that the angular momentum
loss rate due to a uniform field or a concentrated field with equal total
magnetic flux is very similar. From the 2D wind model we show that there are
several relevant factors to take into account when studying the angular
momentum loss from a star. In particular, we show that the inclusion of force
balance across the field in a wind model is fundamental if realistic
conclusions are to be drawn from the effect of non-uniform surface field
distribution on magnetic braking. This model predicts that a magnetic field
concentrated at high latitudes leads to larger Alfven radii and larger braking
rates than a smoother field distribution. From the results obtained, we argue
that the magnetic surface field distribution towards the pole does not directly
limit the braking efficiency of the wind.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted in A&
Exact treatment of dispersion relations in pp and p\=p elastic scattering
Based on a study of the properties of the Lerch's transcendent, exact closed
forms of dispersion relations for amplitudes and for derivatives of amplitudes
in pp and p\=p scattering are introduced. Exact and complete expressions are
written for the real parts and for their derivatives at based on given
inputs for the energy dependence of the total cross sections and of the slopes
of the imaginary parts. The results are prepared for application in the
analysis of forward scattering data of the pp and p\=p systems at all energies,
where exact and precise representations can be written.Comment: 23 pages, 1 figur
Tau-functions and Dressing Transformations for Zero-Curvature Affine Integrable Equations
The solutions of a large class of hierarchies of zero-curvature equations
that includes Toda and KdV type hierarchies are investigated. All these
hierarchies are constructed from affine (twisted or untwisted) Kac-Moody
algebras~. Their common feature is that they have some special ``vacuum
solutions'' corresponding to Lax operators lying in some abelian (up to the
central term) subalgebra of~; in some interesting cases such subalgebras
are of the Heisenberg type. Using the dressing transformation method, the
solutions in the orbit of those vacuum solutions are constructed in a uniform
way. Then, the generalized tau-functions for those hierarchies are defined as
an alternative set of variables corresponding to certain matrix elements
evaluated in the integrable highest-weight representations of~. Such
definition of tau-functions applies for any level of the representation, and it
is independent of its realization (vertex operator or not). The particular
important cases of generalized mKdV and KdV hierarchies as well as the abelian
and non abelian affine Toda theories are discussed in detail.Comment: 27 pages, plain Te
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