14,330 research outputs found

    Agroeca dentigera and Entelecara omissa (Araneae: Liocranidae, Linyphiidae) found in Sweden

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    The rare spider species Agroeca dentigera KulczyƄski, 1913 (Liocranidae) and Entelecara omissa O. P.-Cambridge, 1902 (Linyphiidae), have been found in a small coastal freshwater fen in Lomma (55°42'N 13°4'E), north of Malmö in Scania in southernmost Sweden. A. dentigera was also found on a salt water meadow south of Malmö. Both species have been found only in a few wet localities in Europe. Entelecara depilata Tullgren, 1955, is a junior synonym of Entelecara omissa O. P.-Cambridge, 1902, new synonymy

    The distribution and habitat of Pocadicnemis pumila and P. juncea (Araneae, Linyphiidae) in Sweden

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    Two species of the genus Pocadicnemis (Araneae, Linyphiidae), P. pumila (Blackwall) and P. juncea (Locket & Millidge) have been reported from Scandinavia. In order to find out the distribution and differences in the habitat, all specimens of Pocadicnemis from the author's collection, the collection of Sven Almquist, the Swedish Museum of Natural History (including the collection of Tullgren), and the Zoological Museum of Lund have been checked

    Avalanche size distribution in a random walk model

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    We introduce a simple model for the size distribution of avalanches based on the idea that the front of an avalanche can be described by a directed random walk. The model captures some of the qualitative features of earthquakes, avalanches and other self-organized critical phenomena in one dimension. We find scaling laws relating the frequency, size and width of avalanches and an exponent 4/34/3 in the size distribution law.Comment: 16 pages Latex, macros included, 3 postscript figure

    The phase diagram of an Ising model on a polymerized random surface

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    We construct a random surface model with a string susceptibility exponent one quarter by taking an Ising model on a random surface and introducing an additional degree of freedom which amounts to allowing certain outgrowths on the surfaces. Fine tuning the Ising temperature and the weight factor for outgrowths we find a triple point where the susceptibility exponent is one quarter. At this point magnetized and nonmagnetized gravity phases meet a branched polymer phase.Comment: Latex file, 10 pages, macros included. Two EPS figure

    A Solvable 2D Quantum Gravity Model with \GAMMA >0

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    We consider a model of discretized 2d gravity interacting with Ising spins where phase boundaries are restricted to have minimal length and show analytically that the critical exponent Îł=1/3\gamma= 1/3 at the spin transition point. The model captures the numerically observed behavior of standard multiple Ising spins coupled to 2d gravity.Comment: Latex, 9 pages, NBI-HE-94-0

    The inverse conjunction fallacy

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    If people believe that some property is true of all members of a class such as sofas, then they should also believe that the same property is true of all members of a conjunctively defined subset of that class such as uncomfortable handmade sofas. A series of experiments demonstrated a failure to observe this constraint, leading to what is termed the inverse conjunction fallacy. Not only did people often express a belief in the more general statement but not in the more specific, but also when they accepted both beliefs, they were inclined to give greater confidence to the more general. It is argued that this effect underlies a number of other demonstrations of fallacious reasoning, particularly in category-based induction. Alternative accounts of the phenomenon are evaluated, and it is concluded that the effect is best interpreted in terms of intensional reasoning [Tversky, A., & Kahneman, D. (1983). Extensional versus intuitive reasoning: the conjunction fallacy in probability judgment. Psychological Review, 90, 293–315.]
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