14,743 research outputs found
Analyzing the Performance of Multilayer Neural Networks for Object Recognition
In the last two years, convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have achieved an
impressive suite of results on standard recognition datasets and tasks.
CNN-based features seem poised to quickly replace engineered representations,
such as SIFT and HOG. However, compared to SIFT and HOG, we understand much
less about the nature of the features learned by large CNNs. In this paper, we
experimentally probe several aspects of CNN feature learning in an attempt to
help practitioners gain useful, evidence-backed intuitions about how to apply
CNNs to computer vision problems.Comment: Published in European Conference on Computer Vision 2014 (ECCV-2014
Exploring Deep Space: Learning Personalized Ranking in a Semantic Space
Recommender systems leverage both content and user interactions to generate
recommendations that fit users' preferences. The recent surge of interest in
deep learning presents new opportunities for exploiting these two sources of
information. To recommend items we propose to first learn a user-independent
high-dimensional semantic space in which items are positioned according to
their substitutability, and then learn a user-specific transformation function
to transform this space into a ranking according to the user's past
preferences. An advantage of the proposed architecture is that it can be used
to effectively recommend items using either content that describes the items or
user-item ratings. We show that this approach significantly outperforms
state-of-the-art recommender systems on the MovieLens 1M dataset.Comment: 6 pages, RecSys 2016 RSDL worksho
Some economic benefits of a synchronous earth observatory satellite
An analysis was made of the economic benefits which might be derived from reduced forecasting errors made possible by data obtained from a synchronous satellite system which can collect earth observation and meteorological data continuously and on demand. User costs directly associated with achieving benefits are included. In the analysis, benefits were evaluated which might be obtained as a result of improved thunderstorm forecasting, frost warning, and grain harvest forecasting capabilities. The anticipated system capabilities were used to arrive at realistic estimates of system performance on which to base the benefit analysis. Emphasis was placed on the benefits which result from system forecasting accuracies. Benefits from improved thunderstorm forecasts are indicated for the construction, air transportation, and agricultural industries. The effects of improved frost warning capability on the citrus crop are determined. The benefits from improved grain forecasting capability are evaluated in terms of both U.S. benefits resulting from domestic grain distribution and U.S. benefits from international grain distribution
Sovereign and pseudo-hosts: The politics of hospitality for negotiating culturally nourishing schools
Since contact, there has been a foundation of inhospitable interactions between the original sovereign peoples of the Australian continent and Eurpoean arrivals. Despite government policies appearing to shift from assimilative practices to reconciliation processes in the latter half of the 20th Century, ongoing interactions continue to be factious, caught up in discourses of power/knowledge, and, perhaps provocatively, couched primarily in misunderstandings. In the Australian schooling space, while there has been increased attention paid to the academic success of Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander students, and greater inclusion of their families, communities, and cultural practices, non-Indigenous led schools continue to be hamstrung by their epistemic inertia – the cognitive inability to move beyond the fear of getting it wrong, offending, or being labelled racist. In this paper, we argue that the major impediment to ongoing and unresolved discord is concealed in the onto-epistemological foundation of what it means to respect, accept, and work with. To address this, we take up Welcoming to Country practices and Derrida’s concept of hospitality to interrogate how more nuanced conceptualisations of reciprocity may be used to move beyond performative acts of reconciliation. The outcome of which may be a reimagining of practices that are relational and responsive for embracing and nourishing Indigenous cultures and languages
On Recognizing Transparent Objects in Domestic Environments Using Fusion of Multiple Sensor Modalities
Current object recognition methods fail on object sets that include both
diffuse, reflective and transparent materials, although they are very common in
domestic scenarios. We show that a combination of cues from multiple sensor
modalities, including specular reflectance and unavailable depth information,
allows us to capture a larger subset of household objects by extending a state
of the art object recognition method. This leads to a significant increase in
robustness of recognition over a larger set of commonly used objects.Comment: 12 page
Mapping and explaining the productivity of Pinus radiata in New Zealand
Mapping Pinus radiata productivity for New Zealand not only provides useful information for forest owners, industry stakeholders and policy managers, but also enables current and future plantations to be visualised, quantified, and planned. Using an extensive set of permanent sample plots, split into fitting (n = 1,146) and validation (n = 618) datasets, models of P. radiata 300 Index (an index of volume mean annual increment) and Site Index (an index of height growth) were developed using a regression kriging technique. Spatial predictions were accurate and accounted for 61% and 70% of the variance for 300 Index and Site Index, respectively. Productivity predicted from these surfaces for the entire plantation estate averaged 27.4 m³ ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹ for the 300 Index and 30.4 m for Site Index. Surfaces showed wide regional variation in this productivity, which was attributable mainly to variation in air temperature and root-zone water storage from site to site
Pluchea indica (L.) Less. Tea Ameliorates Hyperglycemia, Dyslipidemia, and Obesity in High Fat Diet-Fed Mice.
Pluchea indica (L.) Less. (P. indica) tea has been used for a health-promoting drink, especially in Southeast Asia. The effect of P. indica tea (PIT) on amelioration of hyperglycemia; dyslipidemia that was total cholesterol (TC), LDL-cholesterol (LDL-C), HDL-cholesterol (HDL-C), and triglyceride (TG); and obesity in high fat diet-induced (HFD) mice was investigated. Oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) displayed that PIT at 400 and 600 mg/kg orally ameliorated hyperglycemia with a dose-dependent manner compared to the untreated group. Moreover, PIT at these dosages exhibited significantly lower TC, LDL-C, TG, and perigonadal fat weight in HFD treated mice compared to HFD mice (P 0.05). The PIT chemical analysis results demonstrated that PIT contained total phenolic content (TPC), total flavonoid content (TFC), 4-O-caffeoylquinic acid (4-CQ), 5-O-caffeoylquinic acid (5-CQ), 3,4-O-dicaffeoylquinic acid (3,4-CQ), 3,5-O-dicaffeoylquinic acid (3,5-CQ), 4,5-O-dicaffeoylquinic acid (4,5-CQ), beta-caryophyllene, and gamma-gurjunene that may play an important role in inhibiting hyperlipidemia and hyperglycemia. Also, histological analysis expressed that the mean area and amount of perigonadal fat adipocytes of PIT treated groups were significantly lower and higher than the HFD group (P 0.05). These results suggest that PIT does not become toxic to the kidney, liver, and blood. In conclusion, PIT has the potential to develop into healthy food supplement or medicine for the prevention and treatment of hyperglycemic, hyperlipidemic, and obese patients
Comments on the black hole information problem
String theory provides numerous examples of duality between gravitational
theories and unitary gauge theories. To resolve the black hole information
paradox in this setting, it is necessary to better understand how unitarity is
implemented on the gravity side. We argue that unitarity is restored by
nonlocal effects whose initial magnitude is suppressed by the exponential of
the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy. Time-slicings for which effective field theory
is valid are obtained by demanding the mutual back-reaction of quanta be small.
The resulting bounds imply that nonlocal effects do not lead to observable
violations of causality or conflict with the equivalence principle for
infalling observers, yet implement information retrieval for observers who stay
outside the black hole.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figures, revtex, v2 figure added and some improvements to
presentatio
Nanoflows through disordered media: a joint Lattice Boltzmann and Molecular Dynamics investigation
We investigate nanoflows through dilute disordered media by means of joint
lattice Boltzmann (LB) and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations -- when the size
of the obstacles is comparable to the size of the flowing particles -- for
randomly located spheres and for a correlated particle-gel. In both cases at
sufficiently low solid fraction, , LB and MD provide similar values
of the permeability. However, for , MD shows that molecular size
effects lead to a decrease of the permeability, as compared to the
Navier-Stokes predictions. For gels, the simulations highlights a surplus of
permeability, which can be accommodated within a rescaling of the effective
radius of the gel monomers.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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