34,886 research outputs found
Gender Quotas and Womenâs Political Participation in Slovenia and Croatia: When Similar Historical Developments and Homogeneity of Design Yield Different Outcomes
This paper aims at summarizing the knowledge surrounding gender quotas â which are a quick gate-way to womenâs political participation â and at assessing the efficacy of their different means of implementation. Through the cross-national study of Slovenia and Croatia (two countries similar on almost every political, social, and historical development except for womenâs political representation) and in tandem with an extensive review of previous works in the literature, this paper sheds some light on the techniques the civil society and feminist/womenâs movements could use to maximize their political impact and overall gender-quota effectiveness. Indeed, this paper finds that by appealing to the voters and the public during the election period, raising its awareness on key issues, such as gender-equality, informal barriers of entry for women, âthe secret garden of nominationâ and most importantly party male-dominated âtraditionalismâ, womenâs movements will elicit maximum party response. By attacking directly the nexus of the partiesâ survival, namely the votes, at an inopportune moment, namely during the elections, instead of using legislative and lobbying means, womenâs movements will maximize their chances of overcoming the innate limitations of an inefficient gender-quota
Bayesian inference of Gaussian mixture models with noninformative priors
This paper deals with Bayesian inference of a mixture of Gaussian
distributions. A novel formulation of the mixture model is introduced, which
includes the prior constraint that each Gaussian component is always assigned a
minimal number of data points. This enables noninformative improper priors such
as the Jeffreys prior to be placed on the component parameters. We demonstrate
difficulties involved in specifying a prior for the standard Gaussian mixture
model, and show how the new model can be used to overcome these. MCMC methods
are given for efficient sampling from the posterior of this model.Comment: 26 pages 10 figure
Paul Bert
This biographical article on Paul Bert highlights his studies on the physiology of respiration and barometric pressure and, in particular his contributions to the understanding of hypoxia, hyperoxia and anesthesia
Crossed Andreev reflection as a probe for the pairing symmetry of Ferromagnetic Superconductors
The coexistence of superconductivity and ferromagnetism has brought about the
phenomena of ferromagnetic superconductors. The theory needed to understand the
compatibility of such antagonistic phenomena cannot be built until the pairing
symmetry of such superconductors is correctly identified. The proper and
unambiguous identification of the pairing symmetry of such superconductors is
the subject of this paper. This work shows that crossed Andreev reflection can
be a very effective tool in order to identify the pairing symmetry of these
superconductors.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, 1 table. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
B(Rapid Communication
Gamma-ray Timing of Redback PSR J2339-0533: Hints for Gravitational Quadrupole Moment Changes
We present the results of precision gamma-ray timing measurements of the
binary millisecond pulsar PSR J23390533, an irradiating system of "redback"
type, using data from the Fermi Large Area Telescope. We describe an optimized
analysis method to determine a long-term phase-coherent timing solution
spanning more than six years, including a measured eccentricity of the binary
orbit and constraints on the proper motion of the system. A major result of
this timing analysis is the discovery of an extreme variation of the nominal
4.6-hour orbital period over time, showing alternating epochs of
decrease and increase. We inferred a cyclic modulation of with an
approximate cycle duration of 4.2 years and a modulation amplitude of . Considering different possible
physical causes, the observed orbital-period modulation most likely results
from a variable gravitational quadrupole moment of the companion star due to
cyclic magnetic activity in its convective zone.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
Optimized Blind Gamma-ray Pulsar Searches at Fixed Computing Budget
The sensitivity of blind gamma-ray pulsar searches in multiple years worth of
photon data, as from the Fermi LAT, is primarily limited by the finite
computational resources available. Addressing this "needle in a haystack"
problem, we here present methods for optimizing blind searches to achieve the
highest sensitivity at fixed computing cost. For both coherent and semicoherent
methods, we consider their statistical properties and study their search
sensitivity under computational constraints. The results validate a multistage
strategy, where the first stage scans the entire parameter space using an
efficient semicoherent method and promising candidates are then refined through
a fully coherent analysis. We also find that for the first stage of a blind
search incoherent harmonic summing of powers is not worthwhile at fixed
computing cost for typical gamma-ray pulsars. Further enhancing sensitivity, we
present efficiency-improved interpolation techniques for the semicoherent
search stage. Via realistic simulations we demonstrate that overall these
optimizations can significantly lower the minimum detectable pulsed fraction by
almost 50% at the same computational expense.Comment: 22 pages, 13 figures; includes ApJ proof correction
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