459 research outputs found
What exactly are the properties of scale-free and other networks?
The concept of scale-free networks has been widely applied across natural and
physical sciences. Many claims are made about the properties of these networks,
even though the concept of scale-free is often vaguely defined. We present
tools and procedures to analyse the statistical properties of networks defined
by arbitrary degree distributions and other constraints. Doing so reveals the
highly likely properties, and some unrecognised richness, of scale-free
networks, and casts doubt on some previously claimed properties being due to a
scale-free characteristic.Comment: Preprint - submitted, 6 pages, 3 figure
Background Summarization of Event Timelines
Generating concise summaries of news events is a challenging natural language
processing task. While journalists often curate timelines to highlight key
sub-events, newcomers to a news event face challenges in catching up on its
historical context. In this paper, we address this need by introducing the task
of background news summarization, which complements each timeline update with a
background summary of relevant preceding events. We construct a dataset by
merging existing timeline datasets and asking human annotators to write a
background summary for each timestep of each news event. We establish strong
baseline performance using state-of-the-art summarization systems and propose a
query-focused variant to generate background summaries. To evaluate background
summary quality, we present a question-answering-based evaluation metric,
Background Utility Score (BUS), which measures the percentage of questions
about a current event timestep that a background summary answers. Our
experiments show the effectiveness of instruction fine-tuned systems such as
Flan-T5, in addition to strong zero-shot performance using GPT-3.5.Comment: EMNLP 2023 camera-read
EEG Activity During Lucid Dreaming
We have been interested in the electrophysiological correlates of lucid dreaming (LD) since early work in this laboratory suggested a relationship between lucidity and alpha activity (Ogilvie, Hunt, Sawicki & McGowan, 1978; Ogilvie, Hunt, Tyson, Lucescu & Jeakins, 1982; Tyson, Ogilvie, & Hunt, 1984). Until now, this alphalucidity hypothesis had not been tested in our lab on high frequency lucid dreamers who signal while in the REM stage of sleep, and LaBerge (1980; 1981) had not observed any changes in alpha in signalled episodes of lucidity
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