1,703 research outputs found
Has the Internet improved medical student information literacy skills? A retrospective case study: 1995-2005
Our goal in this investigation was to see if the popularity of the Internet has had an effect on searching skills and an increased awareness of where to search for appropriate medical information
Distortion-Rate Function of Sub-Nyquist Sampled Gaussian Sources
The amount of information lost in sub-Nyquist sampling of a continuous-time
Gaussian stationary process is quantified. We consider a combined source coding
and sub-Nyquist reconstruction problem in which the input to the encoder is a
noisy sub-Nyquist sampled version of the analog source. We first derive an
expression for the mean squared error in the reconstruction of the process from
a noisy and information rate-limited version of its samples. This expression is
a function of the sampling frequency and the average number of bits describing
each sample. It is given as the sum of two terms: Minimum mean square error in
estimating the source from its noisy but otherwise fully observed sub-Nyquist
samples, and a second term obtained by reverse waterfilling over an average of
spectral densities associated with the polyphase components of the source. We
extend this result to multi-branch uniform sampling, where the samples are
available through a set of parallel channels with a uniform sampler and a
pre-sampling filter in each branch. Further optimization to reduce distortion
is then performed over the pre-sampling filters, and an optimal set of
pre-sampling filters associated with the statistics of the input signal and the
sampling frequency is found. This results in an expression for the minimal
possible distortion achievable under any analog to digital conversion scheme
involving uniform sampling and linear filtering. These results thus unify the
Shannon-Whittaker-Kotelnikov sampling theorem and Shannon rate-distortion
theory for Gaussian sources.Comment: Accepted for publication at the IEEE transactions on information
theor
Hydrodynamic Limit for an Hamiltonian System with Boundary Conditions and Conservative Noise
We study the hyperbolic scaling limit for a chain of N coupled anharmonic
oscillators. The chain is attached to a point on the left and there is a force
(tension) acting on the right. In order to provide good ergodic
properties to the system, we perturb the Hamiltonian dynamics with random local
exchanges of velocities between the particles, so that momentum and energy are
locally conserved. We prove that in the macroscopic limit the distributions of
the elongation, momentum and energy, converge to the solution of the Euler
system of equations, in the smooth regime.Comment: New deeply revised version. 1 figure adde
Entropy and efficiency of a molecular motor model
In this paper we investigate the use of path-integral formalism and the
concepts of entropy and traffic in the context of molecular motors. We show
that together with time-reversal symmetry breaking arguments one can find
bounds on efficiencies of such motors. To clarify this techinque we use it on
one specific model to find both the thermodynamic and the Stokes efficiencies,
although the arguments themselves are more general and can be used on a wide
class of models. We also show that by considering the molecular motor as a
ratchet, one can find additional bounds on the thermodynamic efficiency
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