4,075 research outputs found
Common assumption of rationality
In this paper, we provide an epistemic characterization of iterated admissibility (IA), i.e., iterated elimination of weakly dominated strategies. We show that rationality and common assumption of rationality (RCAR) in complete lexicographic type structures implies IA, and that there exist such structures in which RCAR can be satisfied. Our result is unexpected in light of a negative result in Brandenburger, Friedenberg, and Keisler (2008) (BFK) that shows the impossibility of RCAR in complete continuous structures. We also show that every complete structure with RCAR has the same types and beliefs as some complete continuous structure. This enables us to reconcile and interpret the difference between our results and BFK’s. Finally, we extend BFK’s framework to obtain a single structure that contains a complete structure with an RCAR state for every game. This gives a game-independent epistemic condition for IA.Epistemic game theory; rationality; admissibility; iterated weak dominance; assumption; completeness; Borel Isomorphism Theorem; o-minimality
Resonance Patterns in a Stadium-shaped Microcavity
We investigate resonance patterns in a stadium-shaped microcavity around
, where is the refractive index, the vacuum
wavenumber, and the radius of the circular part of the cavity. We find that
the patterns of high resonances can be classified, even though the
classical dynamics of the stadium system is chaotic. The patterns of the high
resonances are consistent with the ray dynamical consideration, and appears
as the stationary lasing modes with low pumping rate in the nonlinear dynamical
model. All resonance patterns are presented in a finite range of .Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
Instantonic approach to triple well potential
By using a usual instanton method we obtain the energy splitting due to
quantum tunneling through the triple well barrier. It is shown that the term
related to the midpoint of the energy splitting in propagator is quite
different from that of double well case, in that it is proportional to the
algebraic average of the frequencies of the left and central wells.Comment: Revtex, 11 pages, Included one eps figur
The Globular Cluster System of M60 (NGC 4649). I. CFHT MOS Spectroscopy and Database
We present the measurement of radial velocities for globular clusters in M60,
giant elliptical galaxy in the Virgo cluster. Target globular cluster
candidates were selected using the Washington photometry based on the deep
16\arcmin \times 16\arcmin images taken at the KPNO 4m and using the
photometry derived from the HST/WFPC2 archive images. The spectra of the target
objects were obtained using the Multi-Object Spectrograph (MOS) at the
Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT). We have measured the radial velocity for
111 objects in the field of M60: 93 globular clusters (72 blue globular
clusters with and 21 red globular clusters with
), 11 foreground stars, 6 small galaxies, and the nucleus of
M60. The measured velocities of the 93 globular clusters range from
km s to km s, with a mean value of
km s, which is in good agreement with the velocity of the nucleus of M60
( km s). Combining our results with data in the
literature, we present a master catalog of radial velocities for 121 globular
clusters in M60. The velocity dispersion of the globular clusters in the master
catalog is found to be km s for the entire sample,
km s for 83 blue globular clusters, and
km s for 38 red globular clusters.Comment: 29 pages, 8 figures. To appear in Ap
The Impact of Duty Cycle Workflow on Sign-Out Practices: A Qualitative Study of an Internal Medicine Residency Program in Maryland, USA
OBJECTIVES: Although JCAHO requires a standardised approach to handoffs, and while many standardised protocols have been tested, sign-out practices continue to vary. We believe this is due to the variability in workflow during inpatient duty cycle. We investigate the impact of such workflows on intern sign-out practices.
DESIGN: We employed a prospective, grounded theory mixed-method design.
SETTING: The study was conducted at a residency programme in the mid-Atlantic USA. Two observers randomly evaluated three types of daily sign-outs for 1 week every 3 months from September 2013 to March 2014. The compliance of each observed behaviour to JCAHO\u27s Handoff Communication Checklist was recorded.
PARTICIPANTS: Thirty one interns conducting 134 patient sign-outs were observed randomly among the 52 in the programme.
RESULTS: In the 06:00 to 07:00 sign-back, the night-cover focused on providing information on overnight events to the day interns. In the 11:00 to 12:00 sign-out, the night-cover focused on transferring task accountability to a day-cover intern before departure. In the 20:00 to 21:00 sign-out, the day interns focused on transferring responsibility of their patients to a night-cover.
CONCLUSION: Different sign-out periods had different emphases regarding information exchange, personal responsibility and task accountability. Sign-outs are context-specific, implying that across-the-board standardised sign-out protocols are likely to have limited efficacy and compliance. Standardisation may need to be relative to the specific type and purpose of each sign-out to be supported by interns
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