2,675 research outputs found
Domain-general and Domain-specific Patterns of Activity Support Metacognition in Human Prefrontal Cortex
Metacognition is the capacity to evaluate the success of one's own cognitive processes in various domains; for example, memory and perception. It remains controversial whether metacognition relies on a domain-general resource that is applied to different tasks or if self-evaluative processes are domain specific. Here, we investigated this issue directly by examining the neural substrates engaged when metacognitive judgments were made by human participants of both sexes during perceptual and memory tasks matched for stimulus and performance characteristics. By comparing patterns of fMRI activity while subjects evaluated their performance, we revealed both domain-specific and domain-general metacognitive representations. Multivoxel activity patterns in anterior prefrontal cortex predicted levels of confidence in a domain-specific fashion, whereas domain-general signals predicting confidence and accuracy were found in a widespread network in the frontal and posterior midline. The demonstration of domain-specific metacognitive representations suggests the presence of a content-rich mechanism available to introspection and cognitive control
Chemical event tracking using a low-cost wireless chemical sensing network
A recently developed low-cost light emitting diode (LED) chemical sensing technique is integrated with a Mica2Dot wireless communications platform to form a deployable wireless chemical event indicator network. The operation of the colorimetric sensing node has been evaluated to determine its reproducibility and limit of detection for an acidic airborne contaminant. A test-scale network of five similar chemical sensing nodes is deployed in a star communication topology at fixed points within a custom built Environmental Sensing Chamber (ESC). Presented data sets collected from the deployed wireless chemical sensor network (WCSN) show that during an acidic event scenario it is possible to track the plume speed and direction, and estimate the concentration of chemical plume by examining the collective sensor data relative to individual sensor node location within the monitored environment
IMEX evolution of scalar fields on curved backgrounds
Inspiral of binary black holes occurs over a time-scale of many orbits, far
longer than the dynamical time-scale of the individual black holes. Explicit
evolutions of a binary system therefore require excessively many time steps to
capture interesting dynamics. We present a strategy to overcome the
Courant-Friedrichs-Lewy condition in such evolutions, one relying on modern
implicit-explicit ODE solvers and multidomain spectral methods for elliptic
equations. Our analysis considers the model problem of a forced scalar field
propagating on a generic curved background. Nevertheless, we encounter and
address a number of issues pertinent to the binary black hole problem in full
general relativity. Specializing to the Schwarzschild geometry in Kerr-Schild
coordinates, we document the results of several numerical experiments testing
our strategy.Comment: 28 pages, uses revtex4. Revised in response to referee's report. One
numerical experiment added which incorporates perturbed initial data and
adaptive time-steppin
Automatic reaction to a chemical event detected by a low-cost wireless chemical sensing network
A test-scale wireless chemical sensor network (WCSN) has been deployed within a controlled Environmental Chamber (EC). The combined signals from the WCSN were used to initiate a controllable response to the detected chemical event. When a particular sensor response pattern was obtained, a purging cycle was initiated. Sensor data were continuously checked against user-defined action limits, to determine if a chemical event had occurred. An acidic contaminant was used to demonstrate the response of the sensor network. Once the acid plume was simultaneously detected by a number of wireless chemical sensor nodes, an automatic response action, which was the purging of the EC with clean air, was initiated and maintained for a period of time until the WCSN indicated that normal status had been re-established
Rapid Evaluation of Radiation Boundary Kernels for Time-domain Wave Propagation on Blackholes
For scalar, electromagnetic, or gravitational wave propagation on a fixed
Schwarzschild blackhole background, we describe the exact nonlocal radiation
outer boundary conditions (ROBC) appropriate for a spherical outer boundary of
finite radius enclosing the blackhole. Derivation of the ROBC is based on
Laplace and spherical-harmonic transformation of the Regge-Wheeler equation,
the PDE governing the wave propagation, with the resulting radial ODE an
incarnation of the confluent Heun equation. For a given angular index l the
ROBC feature integral convolution between a time-domain radiation boundary
kernel (TDRK) and each of the corresponding 2l+1 spherical-harmonic modes of
the radiating wave. The TDRK is the inverse Laplace transform of a
frequency-domain radiation kernel (FDRK) which is essentially the logarithmic
derivative of the asymptotically outgoing solution to the radial ODE. We
numerically implement the ROBC via a rapid algorithm involving approximation of
the FDRK by a rational function. Such an approximation is tailored to have
relative error \epsilon uniformly along the axis of imaginary Laplace
frequency. Theoretically, \epsilon is also a long-time bound on the relative
convolution error. Via study of one-dimensional radial evolutions, we
demonstrate that the ROBC capture the phenomena of quasinormal ringing and
decay tails. Moreover, carrying out a numerical experiment in which a wave
packet strikes the boundary at an angle, we find that the ROBC yield accurate
results in a three-dimensional setting. Our work is a partial generalization to
Schwarzschild wave propagation and Heun functions of the methods developed for
flatspace wave propagation and Bessel functions by Alpert, Greengard, and
Hagstrom.Comment: AMS article, 105 pages, 45 figures. Version 3 has more minor
corrections as well as extra commentary added in response to reactions by
referees. Commentary added which compares and contrasts this work with work
of Leaver and work of Andersson. For publication, article has been cut in two
and appears as two separate articles in J. Comp. Phys. 199 (2004) 376-422 and
Class. Quantum Grav. 21 (2004) 4147-419
Real-time IP Detection To Dynamically Apply Concurrency Constraints On Streaming
Streaming content providers offer a variety of subscription plans that differ on the number of users that can be created within an account and the number of devices that can concurrently receive streaming content at the same time. Some content providers offer family plans that allow users to stream unlimited concurrent streams within their physical household. It is important to accurately define a household for the family for the successful implementation of such plans. This disclosure describes the use of real-time IP address detection to dynamically define a household for a subscription account. The techniques do not store any information such as MAC address, DMA code etc. and are also tolerant of IP address changes and household moves/changes
The optimisation of a paired emitter-detector diode optical pH sensing device
With recent improvements in wireless sensor network hardware there has been a concurrent push to develop sensors that are suitable in terms of price and performance. In this paper a low cost gas sensor is detailed, and significant improvements in sensor characteristics have been achieved compared to previously published results. A chemical sensor is presented based on the use of low cost LEDs as both the light source and photodetector, coupled with a sensor slide coated with a pH sensitive colorimetric dye to create a simple gas sensor. Similar setups have been successfully used to detect both acetic acid and ammonia. The goal of this work was to optimise the system performance by integration of the sensing technique into a purposely deigned flowcell platform that holds the colorimetric slide and optical detector in position. The reproducibility of the sensor has been improved through this arrangement and careful control of deposited film thickness. The enhanced reproducibility between sensors opens the potential of calibration-free measurement, in that calibration of one sensor can be used to model the characteristics of all sensors in a particular batch
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