4,161 research outputs found
Reaction Time of a Group of Physics Students
The reaction time of a group of students majoring in Physics is reported
here. Strong co-relation between fatigue, reaction time and performance have
been seen and may be useful for academicians and administrators responsible of
working out time-tables, course structures, students counsellings etc.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
'GR 7' Grape
'GR 7' is an early / mid-season red wine grape for use
primarily in red wine blends. It is distinguished from other red
wine grapes grown in cool climates by its high degree of winter
hardiness, adaptation to mechanized production systems, and
ability to survive in older plantings where other red wine grapes
are lost due to tomato and tobacco ringspot virus infections. ?GR
7? is a highly productive, easy to manage cultivar, and is the sixth
wine grape to be developed by the New York State Agricultural
Experiment Station of Cornell University
Extracting topological features from dynamical measures in networks of Kuramoto oscillators
The Kuramoto model for an ensemble of coupled oscillators provides a
paradigmatic example of non-equilibrium transitions between an incoherent and a
synchronized state. Here we analyze populations of almost identical oscillators
in arbitrary interaction networks. Our aim is to extract topological features
of the connectivity pattern from purely dynamical measures, based on the fact
that in a heterogeneous network the global dynamics is not only affected by the
distribution of the natural frequencies, but also by the location of the
different values. In order to perform a quantitative study we focused on a very
simple frequency distribution considering that all the frequencies are equal
but one, that of the pacemaker node. We then analyze the dynamical behavior of
the system at the transition point and slightly above it, as well as very far
from the critical point, when it is in a highly incoherent state. The gathered
topological information ranges from local features, such as the single node
connectivity, to the hierarchical structure of functional clusters, and even to
the entire adjacency matrix.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
Rational bidding using reinforcement learning: an application in automated resource allocation
The application of autonomous agents by the provisioning and usage of computational resources is an attractive research field. Various methods and technologies in the area of artificial intelligence, statistics and economics are playing together to achieve i) autonomic resource provisioning and usage of computational resources, to invent ii) competitive bidding strategies for widely used market mechanisms and to iii) incentivize consumers and providers to use such market-based systems.
The contributions of the paper are threefold. First, we present a framework for supporting consumers and providers in technical and economic preference elicitation and the generation of bids. Secondly, we introduce a consumer-side reinforcement learning bidding strategy which enables rational behavior by the generation and selection of bids. Thirdly, we evaluate and compare this bidding strategy against a truth-telling bidding strategy for two kinds of market mechanisms – one centralized and one decentralized
Response theory for time-resolved second-harmonic generation and two-photon photoemission
A unified response theory for the time-resolved nonlinear light generation
and two-photon photoemission (2PPE) from metal surfaces is presented. The
theory allows to describe the dependence of the nonlinear optical response and
the photoelectron yield, respectively, on the time dependence of the exciting
light field. Quantum-mechanical interference effects affect the results
significantly. Contributions to 2PPE due to the optical nonlinearity of the
surface region are derived and shown to be relevant close to a plasmon
resonance. The interplay between pulse shape, relaxation times of excited
electrons, and band structure is analyzed directly in the time domain. While
our theory works for arbitrary pulse shapes, we mainly focus on the case of two
pulses of the same mean frequency. Difficulties in extracting relaxation rates
from pump-probe experiments are discussed, for example due to the effect of
detuning of intermediate states on the interference. The theory also allows to
determine the range of validity of the optical Bloch equations and of
semiclassical rate equations, respectively. Finally, we discuss how collective
plasma excitations affect the nonlinear optical response and 2PPE.Comment: 27 pages, including 11 figures, version as publishe
On ordinal utility, cardinal utility, and random utility
Though the Random Utility Model (RUM) was conceived
entirely in terms of ordinal utility, the apparatus throughwhich it is widely practised exhibits properties of
cardinal utility. The adoption of cardinal utility as a
working operation of ordinal is perfectly valid, provided
interpretations drawn from that operation remain faithful
to ordinal utility. The paper considers whether the latterrequirement holds true for several measurements commonly
derived from RUM. In particular it is found that
measurements of consumer surplus change may depart from
ordinal utility, and exploit the cardinality inherent in
the practical apparatus.
The UN in the lab
We consider two alternatives to inaction for governments combating terrorism, which we term Defense and Prevention. Defense consists of investing in resources that reduce the impact of an attack, and generates a negative externality to other governments, making their countries a more attractive objective for terrorists. In contrast, Prevention, which consists of investing in resources that reduce the ability of the terrorist organization to mount an attack, creates a positive externality by reducing the overall threat of terrorism for all. This interaction is captured using a simple 3×3 “Nested Prisoner’s Dilemma” game, with a single Nash equilibrium where both countries choose Defense. Due to the structure of this interaction, countries can benefit from coordination of policy choices, and international institutions (such as the UN) can be utilized to facilitate coordination by implementing agreements to share the burden of Prevention. We introduce an institution that implements a burden-sharing policy for Prevention, and investigate experimentally whether subjects coordinate on a cooperative strategy more frequently under different levels of cost sharing. In all treatments, burden sharing leaves the Prisoner’s Dilemma structure and Nash equilibrium of the game unchanged. We compare three levels of burden sharing to a baseline in a between-subjects design, and find that burden sharing generates a non-linear effect on the choice of the efficient Prevention strategy and overall performance. Only an institution supporting a high level of mandatory burden sharing generates a significant improvement in the use of the Prevention strategy
Comparing cancer mortality and GDP health expenditure in England and Wales with other major developed countries from 1979 to 2006
The Convergence of Digital-Libraries and the Peer-Review Process
Pre-print repositories have seen a significant increase in use over the past
fifteen years across multiple research domains. Researchers are beginning to
develop applications capable of using these repositories to assist the
scientific community above and beyond the pure dissemination of information.
The contribution set forth by this paper emphasizes a deconstructed publication
model in which the peer-review process is mediated by an OAI-PMH peer-review
service. This peer-review service uses a social-network algorithm to determine
potential reviewers for a submitted manuscript and for weighting the relative
influence of each participating reviewer's evaluations. This paper also
suggests a set of peer-review specific metadata tags that can accompany a
pre-print's existing metadata record. The combinations of these contributions
provide a unique repository-centric peer-review model that fits within the
widely deployed OAI-PMH framework.Comment: Journal of Information Science [in press
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