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New Women And New Negroes: Archetypal Womanhood In The 'Living Is Easy'
Englis
Evaluating two methods for Treebank grammar compaction
Treebanks, such as the Penn Treebank, provide a basis for the automatic creation of broad coverage grammars. In the simplest case, rules can simply be âread offâ the parse-annotations of the corpus, producing either a simple or probabilistic context-free grammar. Such grammars, however, can be very large, presenting problems for the subsequent computational costs of parsing under the grammar.
In this paper, we explore ways by which a treebank grammar can be reduced in size or âcompactedâ, which involve the use of two kinds of technique: (i) thresholding of rules by their number of occurrences; and (ii) a method of rule-parsing, which has both probabilistic and non-probabilistic variants. Our results show that by a combined use of these two techniques, a probabilistic context-free grammar can be reduced in size by 62% without any loss in parsing performance, and by 71% to give a gain in recall, but some loss in precision
Dipole Oscillations of a Bose-Einstein Condensate in Presence of Defects and Disorder
We consider dipole oscillations of a trapped dilute Bose-Einstein condensate
in the presence of a scattering potential consisting either in a localized
defect or in an extended disordered potential. In both cases the breaking of
superfluidity and the damping of the oscillations are shown to be related to
the appearance of a nonlinear dissipative flow. At supersonic velocities the
flow becomes asymptotically dissipationless.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
âBlack Mattersâ: Race and Literary History in Mat Johnsonâs Pym
After being denied tenure for expanding his teaching of race and literary history beyond exclusively African American texts, Chris Jaynes, the protagonist of Mat Johnsonâs novel Pym (2011), sets out to retrace the voyage from Edgar Allan Poeâs 1838 novel The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket. This essay examines how Johnson uses Jaynesâ own shipwreckâhe and his crew are stranded in Antarcticaâto posit the history of race in the United States as a national disaster that overdetermines contemporary social dynamics. Using intertextuality and satire, Johnson follows Toni Morrisonâs precedent in depicting blackness and whiteness as constructs that are inextricably bound and that cannot be understood one without the other. Central to this claim are Johnsonâs mirroring of the progressive, 21st-century African American Jaynes with his narrative foil: the pickled, ancient Anglo American Arthur Gordon Pym. I contend that Johnson not only revisits Morrisonâs argument but also expands upon it; for, as Jaynes and his fellow characters confront the thorny legacy of race and racism in the United States, they must also face a future in which the countryâs changing demographics will render questions of identity more, rather than less, complicated
The overlap parameter across an inverse first order phase transition in a 3D spin-glass
We investigate the thermodynamic phase transition taking place in the
Blume-Capel model in presence of quenched disorder in three dimensions (3D). In
particular, performing Exchange Montecarlo simulations, we study the behavior
of the order parameters accross the first order phase transition and its
related coexistence region. This transition is an Inverse Freezing.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, Contribution to the XII International Workshop on
Complex System
Mass flow through solid 4He induced by the fountain effect
Using an apparatus that allows superfluid liquid 4He to be in contact with
hcp solid \4he at pressures greater than the bulk melting pressure of the
solid, we have performed experiments that show evidence for 4He mass flux
through the solid and the likely presence of superfluid inside the solid. We
present results that show that a thermomechanical equilibrium in quantitative
agreement with the fountain effect exists between two liquid reservoirs
connected to each other through two superfluid-filled Vycor rods in series with
a chamber filled with solid 4He. We use the thermomechanical effect to induce
flow through the solid and measure the flow rate. On cooling, mass flux appears
near T = 600 mK and rises smoothly as the temperature is lowered. Near T = 75
mK a sharp drop in the flux is present. The flux increases as the temperature
is reduced below 75 mK. We comment on possible causes of this flux minimum.Comment: 20 pages, 22 figures, 7 table
Numerical Computation of p-values with myFitter
Likelihood ratio tests are a widely used method in global analyses in
particle physics. The computation of the statistical significance (p-value) of
these tests is usually done with a simple formula that relies on Wilks'
theorem. There are, however, many realistic situations where Wilks' theorem
does not apply. In particular, no simple formula exists for the comparison of
models that are not nested, in the sense that one model can be obtained from
the other by fixing some of its parameters. In this paper I present methods for
efficient numerical computations of p-values, which work for both nested and
non-nested models and do not rely on additional approximations. These methods
have been implemented in a publicly available C++ framework for maximum
likelihood fits called myFitter and have recently been applied in a global
analysis of the Standard Model with a fourth generation of fermions
Microscopic mechanism for mechanical polishing of diamond (110) surfaces
Mechanically induced degradation of diamond, as occurs during polishing, is
studied using total--energy pseudopotential calculations. The strong asymmetry
in the rate of polishing between different directions on the diamond (110)
surface is explained in terms of an atomistic mechanism for nano--groove
formation. The post--polishing surface morphology and the nature of the
polishing residue predicted by this mechanism are consistent with experimental
evidence.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Persistent currents in a bosonic mixture in the ring geometry
In this paper we analyze the possibility of persistent currents of a
two-species bosonic mixture in the one-dimensional ring geometry. We extend the
arguments used by Bloch to obtain a criterion for the stability of persistent
currents for the two-species system. If the mass ratio of the two species is a
rational number, persistent currents can be stable at multiples of a certain
total angular momenta. We show that the Bloch criterion can also be viewed as a
Landau criterion involving the elementary excitations of the system. Our
analysis reveals that persistent currents at higher angular momenta are more
stable for the two-species system than previously thought.Comment: 20 pages and 7 figure
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