1,958 research outputs found
A Comparison Of Video Formats For Online Teaching
The use of video to deliver content to students online has become increasingly popular. However, educators are often plagued with the question of which format to use to deliver asynchronous video material. Whether it is a College or University committing to a common video format or an individual instructor selecting the method that works best for his or her course, this research presents a comparison of various video formats that can be applied to online education and provides guidance in which one to select
Quasi regular concentric waves in heterogeneous lattices of coupled oscillators
We study the pattern formation in a lattice of coupled phase oscillators with
quenched disorder. In the synchronized regime concentric waves can arise, which
are induced and increase in regularity by the disorder of the system. Maximal
regularity is found at the edge of the synchronization regime. The emergence of
the concentric waves is related to the symmetry breaking of the interaction
function. An explanation of the numerically observed phenomena is given in a
one-dimensional chain of coupled phase oscillators. Scaling properties,
describing the target patterns are obtained.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PR
An Integrated XRF/XRD Instrument for Mars Exobiology and Geology Experiments
By employing an integrated x-ray instrument on a future Mars mission, data obtained will greatly augment those returned by Viking; details characterizing the past and present environment on Mars and those relevant to the possibility of the origin and evolution of life will be acquired. A combined x-ray fluorescence/x-ray diffraction (XRF/XRD) instrument was breadboarded and demonstrated to accommodate important exobiology and geology experiment objectives outlined for MESUR and future Mars missions. Among others, primary objectives for the exploration of Mars include the intense study of local areas on Mars to establish the chemical, mineralogical, and petrological character of different components of the surface material; to determine the distribution, abundance, and sources and sinks of volatile materials, including an assessment of the biologic potential, now and during past epoches; and to establish the global chemical and physical characteristics of the Martian surface. The XRF/XRD breadboard instrument identifies and quantifies soil surface elemental, mineralogical, and petrological characteristics and acquires data necessary to address questions on volatile abundance and distribution. Additionally, the breadboard is able to characterize the biogenic element constituents of soil samples providing information on the biologic potential of the Mars environment. Preliminary breadboard experiments confirmed the fundamental instrument design approach and measurement performance
Signatures of chaos in animal search patterns
One key objective of the emerging discipline of movement ecology is to link animal movement patternsto underlying biological processes, including those operating at the neurobiological level. Nonetheless,little is known about the physiological basis of animal movement patterns, and the underlying searchbehaviour. Here we demonstrate the hallmarks of chaotic dynamics in the movement patterns ofmud snails (Hydrobia ulvae) moving in controlled experimental conditions, observed in the temporaldynamics of turning behaviour. Chaotic temporal dynamics are known to occur in pacemaker neuronsin molluscs, but there have been no studies reporting on whether chaotic properties are manifest in themovement patterns of molluscs. Our results suggest that complex search patterns, like the Lévy walksmade by mud snails, can have their mechanistic origins in chaotic neuronal processes. This possibilitycalls for new research on the coupling between neurobiology and motor properties
The enormous acidifying effect of the supersubstituent ᎐ ᎐ NSO 2 CF 3 on the acidity of derivatives of benzenesulfonamide and toluene-p- sulfonamide in the gas phase and in dimethyl sulfoxide
The effect of stepwise replacement of ᎐ ᎐ O oxygen atoms by ᎐ ᎐ NSO 2 CF 3 fragments in the sulfonyl group of toluenep-sulfonamide and benzenesulfonamide on their acidity has been studied in the gas phase and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). Incorporation of the first ᎐ ᎐ NSO 2 CF 3 group into 4-MeC 6 H 4 SO 2 NH 2 increases its gas-phase acidity by 23.6 kcal mol Ϫ1 . Substituting the second ᎐ ᎐ O by the ᎐ ᎐ NSO 2 CF 3 group leads to an additional acidity increase of 10.7 kcal mol Ϫ1 ; the total acidity increase is thus 34.3 kcal mol Ϫ1 (25 powers of ten!). In DMSO solution the total acidity increase is 13 pK a units (17.7 kcal mol Ϫ1 ). These findings are also supported by computational studies using DFT B3LYP at the 6-31ϩG* level and the semiempirical PM3 method. The results of this work have potentially important implications for the design of new strongly acidic catalytic materials
Algorithmic statistics: forty years later
Algorithmic statistics has two different (and almost orthogonal) motivations.
From the philosophical point of view, it tries to formalize how the statistics
works and why some statistical models are better than others. After this notion
of a "good model" is introduced, a natural question arises: it is possible that
for some piece of data there is no good model? If yes, how often these bad
("non-stochastic") data appear "in real life"?
Another, more technical motivation comes from algorithmic information theory.
In this theory a notion of complexity of a finite object (=amount of
information in this object) is introduced; it assigns to every object some
number, called its algorithmic complexity (or Kolmogorov complexity).
Algorithmic statistic provides a more fine-grained classification: for each
finite object some curve is defined that characterizes its behavior. It turns
out that several different definitions give (approximately) the same curve.
In this survey we try to provide an exposition of the main results in the
field (including full proofs for the most important ones), as well as some
historical comments. We assume that the reader is familiar with the main
notions of algorithmic information (Kolmogorov complexity) theory.Comment: Missing proofs adde
Algorithmic statistics revisited
The mission of statistics is to provide adequate statistical hypotheses
(models) for observed data. But what is an "adequate" model? To answer this
question, one needs to use the notions of algorithmic information theory. It
turns out that for every data string one can naturally define
"stochasticity profile", a curve that represents a trade-off between complexity
of a model and its adequacy. This curve has four different equivalent
definitions in terms of (1)~randomness deficiency, (2)~minimal description
length, (3)~position in the lists of simple strings and (4)~Kolmogorov
complexity with decompression time bounded by busy beaver function. We present
a survey of the corresponding definitions and results relating them to each
other
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