4,064 research outputs found
Topology-Guided Path Integral Approach for Stochastic Optimal Control in Cluttered Environment
This paper addresses planning and control of robot motion under uncertainty
that is formulated as a continuous-time, continuous-space stochastic optimal
control problem, by developing a topology-guided path integral control method.
The path integral control framework, which forms the backbone of the proposed
method, re-writes the Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman equation as a statistical
inference problem; the resulting inference problem is solved by a sampling
procedure that computes the distribution of controlled trajectories around the
trajectory by the passive dynamics. For motion control of robots in a highly
cluttered environment, however, this sampling can easily be trapped in a local
minimum unless the sample size is very large, since the global optimality of
local minima depends on the degree of uncertainty. Thus, a homology-embedded
sampling-based planner that identifies many (potentially) local-minimum
trajectories in different homology classes is developed to aid the sampling
process. In combination with a receding-horizon fashion of the optimal control
the proposed method produces a dynamically feasible and collision-free motion
plans without being trapped in a local minimum. Numerical examples on a
synthetic toy problem and on quadrotor control in a complex obstacle field
demonstrate the validity of the proposed method.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1510.0534
Two-Dimensional Dirac Fermions Protected by Space-Time Inversion Symmetry in Black Phosphorus
We report the realization of novel symmetry-protected Dirac fermions in a
surface-doped two-dimensional (2D) semiconductor, black phosphorus. The widely
tunable band gap of black phosphorus by the surface Stark effect is employed to
achieve a surprisingly large band inversion up to ~0.6 eV. High-resolution
angle-resolved photoemission spectra directly reveal the pair creation of Dirac
points and their moving along the axis of the glide-mirror symmetry. Unlike
graphene, the Dirac point of black phosphorus is stable, as protected by
spacetime inversion symmetry, even in the presence of spin-orbit coupling. Our
results establish black phosphorus in the inverted regime as a simple model
system of 2D symmetry-protected (topological) Dirac semimetals, offering an
unprecedented opportunity for the discovery of 2D Weyl semimetals
Study of the Top-quark Pair Production in Association with a Bottom-quark Pair from Fast Simulations at the LHC
A large number of top quarks will be produced at the Large Hadron Collider
(LHC) for Run II period. This will allow us to measure the rare processes from
the top sector in great details. We present the study of the top-quark pair
production in association with a bottom-quark pair (ttbb) from fast simulations
for the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment. The differential distributions
of ttbb are compared with the top-quark pair production with two additional
jets (ttjj) and with the production in association with the Higgs (ttH), where
the Higgs decays to a bottom-quark pair. The significances of ttbb process in
the dileptonic and semileptonic decay mode are calculated with the data
corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 10 fb-1, which is foreseen to be
collected in the early Run II period. This study will be an important input in
searching for new physics beyond the standard model as well as in searching for
ttH process where the Yukawa coupling with the top quark can be directly
measured.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure
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Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors Related to Shift Work among Korean Workers Aged from 30 to 49 Years
This study was to compare health behaviors between day workers (DW ) and shift workers (SW), and to investigate the cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors among 30-49 years Korean workers. SW showed higher prevalence of smoking than DW. The proportion of adequate sleep was lower in SW than in DW. DW showed high.er prevalence of impaired fasting glucose, however, there were no significant differences in hypertension, obesity, hypercholesterolemia, and metabolic syndrome between DW and SW. Further research is recommended to include mediating factors such as organizational culture or working time, etc., for scrutinizing the association between work type and CVD risk factors
Similarities and differences among Internet gaming disorder, gambling disorder and alcohol use disorder: A focus on impulsivity and compulsivity
Background and aims: The aim of the present study was to test the impulsivities and compulsivities of behavioral addictions, including Internet gaming disorder (IGD) and gambling disorder (GD), by directly comparing them with alcohol use disorder (AUD) and a healthy control (HC) group. Methods: We enrolled male patients who were diagnosed with IGD, GD or AUD, with 15 patients per group, as well as 15 HCs. Trait impulsivity was measured using the Barratt Impulsiveness Scale version 11 (BIS-11). The stop-signal test (SST) from the Cambridge Neuro-psychological Test Automated Battery (CANTAB) was used to assess the patients’ abilities to inhibit prepotent responses. Compulsivity was measured using the intra–extra dimensional set shift (IED) test from the CANTAB. The Trail Making Test (TMT) was also used in this study. Results: The IGD and AUD groups scored significantly higher on the BIS-11 as a whole than did the HC group (p = 0.001 and p = 0.001, respectively). The IGD and AUD groups also scored significantly higher on the BIS-11 as a whole than did the GD group (p = 0.006 and p = 0.001, respectively). In addition, the GD group made significantly more errors (p = 0.017 and p = 0.022, respectively) and more individuals failed to achieve criterion on the IED test compared with the IGD and HC groups (p = 0.018 and p = 0.017, respectively). Discussion: These findings may aid in the understanding of not only the differences in categorical aspects between individuals with IGD and GD but also in impulsivity–compulsivity dimensional domains. Conclusion: Additional studies are needed to elucidate the neurocognitive characteristics of behavioral addictive disorders in terms of impulsivity and compulsivity
A Distributed ADMM Approach to Non-Myopic Path Planning for Multi-Target Tracking
This paper investigates non-myopic path planning of mobile sensors for
multi-target tracking. Such problem has posed a high computational complexity
issue and/or the necessity of high-level decision making. Existing works tackle
these issues by heuristically assigning targets to each sensing agent and
solving the split problem for each agent. However, such heuristic methods
reduce the target estimation performance in the absence of considering the
changes of target state estimation along time. In this work, we detour the
task-assignment problem by reformulating the general non-myopic planning
problem to a distributed optimization problem with respect to targets. By
combining alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) and local
trajectory optimization method, we solve the problem and induce consensus
(i.e., high-level decisions) automatically among the targets. In addition, we
propose a modified receding-horizon control (RHC) scheme and edge-cutting
method for efficient real-time operation. The proposed algorithm is validated
through simulations in various scenarios.Comment: Copyright 2019 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted.
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