20,974 research outputs found
Incorporating GIS data into an agent-based model to support planning policy making for the development of creative industries
This paper presents an extension to the agent-based model “Creative Industries Development–Urban Spatial Structure Transformation” by incorporating GIS data. Three agent classes, creative firms, creative workers and urban government, are considered in the model, and the spatial environment represents a set of GIS data layers (i.e. road network, key housing areas, land use). With the goal to facilitate urban policy makers to draw up policies locally and optimise the land use assignment in order to support the development of creative industries, the improved model exhibited its capacity to assist the policy makers conducting experiments and simulating different policy scenarios to see the corresponding dynamics of the spatial distributions of creative firms and creative workers across time within a city/district. The spatiotemporal graphs and maps record the simulation results and can be used as a reference by the policy makers to adjust land use plans adaptively at different stages of the creative industries’ development process
Nonlinear Dynamics of Parity-Even Tricritical Gravity in Three and Four Dimensions
Recently proposed "multicritical" higher-derivative gravities in Anti de
Sitter space carry logarithmic representations of the Anti de Sitter isometry
group. While generically non-unitary already at the quadratic, free-theory
level, in special cases these theories admit a unitary subspace. The simplest
example of such behavior is "tricritical" gravity. In this paper, we extend the
study of parity-even tricritical gravity in d = 3, 4 to the first nonlinear
order. We show that the would-be unitary subspace suffers from a linearization
instability and is absent in the full non-linear theory.Comment: 22 pages; v2: references added, published versio
Building the Brazilian Academic Genealogy Tree
Along the history, many researchers provided remarkable contributions to
science, not only advancing knowledge but also in terms of mentoring new
scientists. Currently, identifying and studying the formation of researchers
over the years is a challenging task as current repositories of theses and
dissertations are cataloged in a decentralized way through many local digital
libraries. Following our previous work in which we created and analyzed a large
collection of genealogy trees extracted from NDLTD, in this paper we focus our
attention on building such trees for the Brazilian research community. For
this, we use data from the Lattes Platform, an internationally renowned
initiative from CNPq, the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and
Technological Development, for managing information about individual
researchers and research groups in Brazil
Extra gauge symmetries in BHT gravity
We study the canonical structure of the Bergshoeff-Hohm-Townsend massive
gravity, linearized around a maximally symmetric background. At the critical
point in the space of parameters, defined by , we discover an
extra gauge symmetry, which reflects the existence of the partially massless
mode. The number of the Lagrangian degrees of freedom is found to be 1. We show
that the canonical structure of the theory at the critical point is unstable
under linearization.Comment: LATEX, 12 page
Critical and Non-Critical Einstein-Weyl Supergravity
We construct N=1 supersymmetrisations of some recently-proposed theories of
critical gravity, conformal gravity, and extensions of critical gravity in four
dimensions. The total action consists of the sum of three separately off-shell
supersymmetric actions containing Einstein gravity, a cosmological term and the
square of the Weyl tensor. For generic choices of the coefficients for these
terms, the excitations of the resulting theory around an AdS_4 background
describe massive spin-2 and massless spin-2 modes coming from the metric;
massive spin-1 modes coming from a vector field in the theory; and massless and
massive spin-3/2 modes (with two unequal masses) coming from the gravitino.
These assemble into a massless and a massive N=1 spin-2 multiplet. In critical
supergravity, the coefficients are tuned so that the spin-2 mode in the massive
multiplet becomes massless. In the supersymmetrised extensions of critical
gravity, the coefficients are chosen so that the massive modes lie in a
"window" of lowest energies E_0 such that these ghostlike fields can be
truncated by imposing appropriate boundary conditions at infinity, thus leaving
just positive-norm massless supergravity modes.Comment: 29 page
History of early life adversity is associated with increased food addiction and sex-specific alterations in reward network connectivity in obesity.
Background:Neuroimaging studies have identified obesity-related differences in the brain's resting state activity. An imbalance between homeostatic and reward aspects of ingestive behaviour may contribute to obesity and food addiction. The interactions between early life adversity (ELA), the reward network and food addiction were investigated to identify obesity and sex-related differences, which may drive obesity and food addiction. Methods:Functional resting state magnetic resonance imaging was acquired in 186 participants (high body mass index [BMI]: ≥25: 53 women and 54 men; normal BMI: 18.50-24.99: 49 women and 30 men). Participants completed questionnaires to assess ELA (Early Traumatic Inventory) and food addiction (Yale Food Addiction Scale). A tripartite network analysis based on graph theory was used to investigate the interaction between ELA, brain connectivity and food addiction. Interactions were determined by computing Spearman rank correlations, thresholded at q < 0.05 corrected for multiple comparisons. Results:Participants with high BMI demonstrate an association between ELA and food addiction, with reward regions playing a role in this interaction. Among women with high BMI, increased ELA was associated with increased centrality of reward and emotion regulation regions. Men with high BMI showed associations between ELA and food addiction with somatosensory regions playing a role in this interaction. Conclusions:The findings suggest that ELA may alter brain networks, leading to increased vulnerability for food addiction and obesity later in life. These alterations are sex specific and involve brain regions influenced by dopaminergic or serotonergic signalling
On the new massive gravity and AdS/CFT
Demanding the existence of a simple holographic -theorem, it is shown that
a general (parity preserving) theory of gravity in 2+1 dimensions involving
upto four derivative curvature invariants reduces to the new massive gravity
theory. We consider extending the theory including upto six derivative
curvature invariants. Black hole solutions are presented and consistency with
1+1 CFTs is checked. We present evidence that bulk unitarity is still in
conflict with a positive CFT central charge for generic choice of parameters.
However, for a special choice of parameters appearing in the four and six
derivative terms reduces the linearized equations to be two derivative, thereby
ameliorating the unitarity problem.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures. v4: typo correcte
On unitary subsectors of polycritical gravities
We study higher-derivative gravity theories in arbitrary space-time dimension
d with a cosmological constant at their maximally critical points where the
masses of all linearized perturbations vanish. These theories have been
conjectured to be dual to logarithmic conformal field theories in the
(d-1)-dimensional boundary of an AdS solution. We determine the structure of
the linearized perturbations and their boundary fall-off behaviour. The
linearized modes exhibit the expected Jordan block structure and their inner
products are shown to be those of a non-unitary theory. We demonstrate the
existence of consistent unitary truncations of the polycritical gravity theory
at the linearized level for odd rank.Comment: 22 pages. Added references, rephrased introduction slightly.
Published versio
Hamiltonian analysis of BHT massive gravity
We study the Hamiltonian structure of the Bergshoeff-Hohm-Townsend (BHT)
massive gravity with a cosmological constant. In the space of coupling
constants , our canonical analysis reveals the special role of
the condition . In this sector, the dimension of the
physical phase space is found to be , which corresponds to two
Lagrangian degree of freedom. When applied to the AdS asymptotic region, the
canonical approach yields the conserved charges of the BTZ black hole, and
central charges of the asymptotic symmetry algebra.Comment: LATEX, 21 pages; v2: minor correction
- …