16,712 research outputs found
Reality-monitoring characteristics in confirmed and doubtful allegations of abuse
According to reality-monitoring theory, memories of experienced and imagined events are qualitatively different, and can be distinguished by children from the age of 3. Across three studies, a total of 119 allegations of sexual abuse by younger (aged 3-8) and older (aged 9-16) children were analyzed for developmental differences in the presence of reality-monitoring criteria, which should characterise descriptions of experienced events. Statements were deemed likely or unlikely to be descriptions of actual incidents using independent case information (e.g., medical evidence). Accounts by older children consistently contained more reality-monitoring criteria than those provided by younger children, and age differences were particularly strong when the cases were deemed doubtful (Studies 1 and 2)
Who Can Win a Single-Elimination Tournament?
A single-elimination (SE) tournament is a popular way to select a winner in
both sports competitions and in elections. A natural and well-studied question
is the tournament fixing problem (TFP): given the set of all pairwise match
outcomes, can a tournament organizer rig an SE tournament by adjusting the
initial seeding so that their favorite player wins? We prove new sufficient
conditions on the pairwise match outcome information and the favorite player,
under which there is guaranteed to be a seeding where the player wins the
tournament. Our results greatly generalize previous results. We also
investigate the relationship between the set of players that can win an SE
tournament under some seeding (so called SE winners) and other traditional
tournament solutions. In addition, we generalize and strengthen prior work on
probabilistic models for generating tournaments. For instance, we show that
\emph{every} player in an player tournament generated by the Condorcet
Random Model will be an SE winner even when the noise is as small as possible,
; prior work only had such results for . We also establish new results for significantly more
general generative models.Comment: A preliminary version appeared in Proceedings of the 30th AAAI
Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AAAI), 201
The Effects Of Rapport-Building Style on Children’s Reports of a Staged Event
Three- to 9-year-old children (N = 144) interacted with a photographer and were interviewed about the event either a week or a month later. The informativeness and accuracy of information provided following either open-ended or direct rapport building were compared. Children in the open-ended rapport-building condition provided more accurate reports than children in the direct rapport-building condition after both short and long delays. Open-ended rapport-building led the 3- to 4-year-olds to report more errors in response to the first recall question about the event, but they went on to provide more accurate reports in the rest of the interview than counterparts in the direct rapport-building condition. These results suggest that forensic interviewers should attempt to establish rapport with children using an open-ended style
Double point contact in Quantum Hall Line Junctions
We show that multiple point contacts on a barrier separating two laterally
coupled quantum Hall fluids induce Aharonov-Bohm (AB) oscillations in the
tunneling conductance. These quantum coherence effects provide new evidence for
the Luttinger liquid behavior of the edge states of quantum Hall fluids. For a
two point contact, we identify coherent and incoherent regimes determined by
the relative magnitude of their separation and the temperature. We analyze both
regimes in the strong and weak tunneling amplitude limits as well as their
temperature dependence. We find that the tunneling conductance should exhibit
AB oscillations in the coherent regime, both at strong and weak tunneling
amplitude with the same period but with different functional form.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; new version, edited text, 2 new references;
figure 2 has been edited; new paragraph in page 1 and minor typos have been
correcte
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