2,445 research outputs found
An Evening Spent with Bill van Zwet
Willem Rutger van Zwet was born in Leiden, the Netherlands, on March 31,
1934. He received his high school education at the Gymnasium Haganum in The
Hague and obtained his Masters degree in Mathematics at the University of
Leiden in 1959. After serving in the army for almost two years, he obtained his
Ph.D. at the University of Amsterdam in 1964, with Jan Hemelrijk as advisor. In
1965, he was appointed Associate Professor of Statistics at the University of
Leiden and promoted to Full Professor in 1968. He remained in Leiden until his
retirement in 1999, while also serving as Associate Professor at the University
of Oregon (1965), William Newman Professor at the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill (1990--1996), frequent visitor and Miller Professor (1997) at
the University of California at Berkeley, director of the Thomas Stieltjes
Institute of Mathematics in the Netherlands (1992--1999), and founding director
of the European research institute EURANDOM (1997--2000). At Leiden, he was
Dean of the School of Mathematics and Natural Sciences (1982--1984). He served
as chair of the scientific council and member of the board of the Mathematics
Centre at Amsterdam (1983--1996) and the Leiden University Fund (1993--2005).Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/08-STS261 the Statistical
Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Demographic fluctuations in a population of anomalously diffusing individuals
The phenomenon of spatial clustering induced by death and reproduction in a
population of anomalously diffusing individuals is studied analytically. The
possibility of social behaviors affecting the migration strategies has been
taken into exam, in the case anomalous diffusion is produced by means of a
continuous time random walk (CTRW). In the case of independently diffusing
individuals, the dynamics appears to coincide with that of (dying and
reproducing) Brownian walkers. In the strongly social case, the dynamics
coincides with that of non-migrating individuals. In both limits, the growth
rate of the fluctuations becomes independent of the Hurst exponent of the CTRW.
The social behaviors that arise when transport in a population is induced by a
spatial distribution of random traps, have been analyzed.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Inverted and mirror repeats in model nucleotide sequences
We analytically and numerically study the probabilistic properties of
inverted and mirror repeats in model sequences of nucleic acids. We consider
both perfect and non-perfect repeats, i.e. repeats with mismatches and gaps.
The considered sequence models are independent identically distributed (i.i.d.)
sequences, Markov processes and long range sequences. We show that the number
of repeats in correlated sequences is significantly larger than in i.i.d.
sequences and that this discrepancy increases exponentially with the repeat
length for long range sequences.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Do Chimpanzees ave Expectations About Reward Presentation Following Correct Performance on Computerized Cognitive Testing?
To investigate whether 2 chimpanzees had expectations regarding the outcome of their responses on a computerized task, food reward that typically was given for correct responses was withheld on some correctly completed trials. There were two types of these probe trials: those which the chimpanzees performed correctly on their own, and those during which the chimpanzees needed the experimenter\u27s assistance to complete the trial correctly. For both chimpanzees, reward procurement behaviors directed toward the experimenter occurred significantly more often on correctly completed probe trials than on incorrectly completed trials. This indicated increased expectation of food reward on correct trials as compared to incorrect trials. For 1 of the 2 chimpanzees, reward procurement behaviors were significantly more likely to occur on probe trials on which the chimpanzee received no assistance from the experimenter than on trials in which the experimenter assisted the chimpanzee. This behavioral difference was not predicated on reinforcement history, as all correctly completed nonprobe trials were rewarded whether or not assistance was provided by the experimenter. These data indicate that this chimpanzee may have a rudimentary sense of equity regarding what outcome should accompany the successful completion of trials that is dependent on the level of assistance provided by an experimenter during the trial
The Evolutionary and Developmental Foundations of Mathematics
Recent behavioral and neuroimaging studies with humans and monkeys provide compelling evidence of shared numerical capacities across species. Our understanding of the emergence of human mathematical competence is well-served by these kinds of comparative assessments
Animal Memory: Rats Bind Event Details into Episodic Memories
SummaryA recent study shows that rats remember multiple details of an event in a way that suggests those details are bound into episodic memories that the rats use when faced with a foraging task
Fourth-grade teachers\u27 perceptions of Nebraska\u27s state standards process in elementary schools
The purpose of this study was to explore fourth-grade teachers\u27 perceptions of Nebraska\u27s state standards process. Specifically, research questions sought to determine fourth-grade teachers\u27 perceptions of the possible effects of state standards on schools, students, teachers, and administrators. The questions also explored any differences between subgroups based on teachers\u27 gender, teachers\u27 years of experience, schools\u27 socio-economic status, school enrollment, and percentage of students that have met the state standards
High fidelity sorting of remarkably similar components via metal-mediated assembly.
Subtle differences in ligand coordination angle and rigidity lead to high fidelity sorting between individual components displaying identical coordination motifs upon metal-mediated self-assembly. Narcissistic self-sorting can be achieved between highly similar ligands that vary minimally in rigidity and internal coordination angle upon combination with Fe(ii) ions and 2-formylpyridine. Selective, sequential cage formation can be precisely controlled in a single flask from a mix of three different core ligands (and 33 total components) differing only in the hybridization of one group that is uninvolved in the metal coordination process
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