57,902 research outputs found

    Clustering U.S. 2016 presidential candidates through linguistic appraisals

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    Producción CientíficaThe main purpose of this paper is to cluster the United States (U.S.) 2016 presidential candidates taking the linguistic appraisals made by a random representative sample of adults living in the U.S. as our starting point. To do this, we have used the concept of ordinal proximity measure (see García-Lapresta and Pérez-Román), which allows to determine the degree of consensus in a group of agents when a set of alternatives is evaluated through non-necessarily qualitative scales.Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad (project ECO2016-77900-P

    Kahler Independence of the G2-MSSM

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    The G2-MSSM is a model of particle physics coupled to moduli fields with interesting phenomenology both for colliders and astrophysical experiments. In this paper we consider a more general model - whose moduli Kahler potential is a completely arbitrary G2-holonomy Kahler potential and whose matter Kahler potential is also more general. We prove that the vacuum structure and spectrum of BSM particles is largely unchanged in this much more general class of theories. In particular, gaugino masses are still supressed relative to the gravitino mass and moduli masses. We also consider the effects of higher order corrections to the matter Kahler potential and find a connection between the nature of the LSP and flavor effects.Comment: Final version, matches the version published in JHE

    The spillover effects of monitoring:A field experiment

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    Published Online: March 13, 2015We provide field experimental evidence of the effects of monitoring in a context where productivity is multidimensional and only one dimension is monitored and incentivized. We hire students to do a job for us. The job consists of identifying euro coins. We study the direct effects of monitoring and penalizing mistakes on work quality and evaluate spillovers on unmonitored dimensions of productivity (punctuality and theft). We find that monitoring improves work quality only if incentives are harsh, but substantially reduces punctuality irrespectively of the associated incentives. Monitoring does not affect theft, with 10% of participants stealing overall. Our findings are supportive of a reciprocity mechanism, whereby workers retaliate for being distrusted

    DeWitt-Virasoro construction

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    We study a particular approach for analyzing worldsheet conformal invariance for bosonic string propagating in a curved background using hamiltonian formalism. We work in the Schrodinger picture of a single particle description of the problem where the particle moves in an infinite-dimensional space. Background independence is maintained in this approach by adopting DeWitt's (Phys.Rev.85:653-661,1952) coordinate independent formulation of quantum mechanics. This enables us to construct certain background independent notion of Virasoro generators, called DeWitt-Virasoro (DWV) generators, and invariant matrix elements of an arbitrary operator constructed out of them in spin-zero representation. We show that the DWV algebra is given by the Witt algebra with additional anomalous terms that vanish for Ricci-flat backgrounds. The actual quantum Virasoro generators should be obtained by first introducing the vacuum state and then normal ordering the DWV generators with respect to that. We demonstrate the procedure in the simple cases of flat and pp-wave backgrounds. This is a shorter version of arXiv:0912.3987 [hep-th] with many technical derivations omitted.Comment: 18 pages, shorter version of arXiv:0912.3987 [hep-th] accepted for publication in Pramana - Journal of Physic

    Breakdown and recovery in traffic flow models

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    Most car-following models show a transition from laminar to ``congested'' flow and vice versa. Deterministic models often have a density range where a disturbance needs a sufficiently large critical amplitude to move the flow from the laminar into the congested phase. In stochastic models, it may be assumed that the size of this amplitude gets translated into a waiting time, i.e.\ until fluctuations sufficiently add up to trigger the transition. A recently introduced model of traffic flow however does not show this behavior: in the density regime where the jam solution co-exists with the high-flow state, the intrinsic stochasticity of the model is not sufficient to cause a transition into the jammed regime, at least not within relevant time scales. In addition, models can be differentiated by the stability of the outflow interface. We demonstrate that this additional criterion is not related to the stability of the flow. The combination of these criteria makes it possible to characterize commonalities and differences between many existing models for traffic in a new way

    Ontogeny influences sensitivity to climate change stressors in an endangered fish.

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    Coastal ecosystems are among the most human-impacted habitats globally, and their management is often critically linked to recovery of declining native species. In the San Francisco Estuary, the Delta Smelt (Hypomesus transpacificus) is an endemic, endangered fish strongly tied to Californian conservation planning. The complex life history of Delta Smelt combined with dynamic seasonal and spatial abiotic conditions result in dissimilar environments experienced among ontogenetic stages, which may yield stage-specific susceptibility to abiotic stressors. Climate change is forecasted to increase San Francisco Estuary water temperature and salinity; therefore, understanding the influences of ontogeny and phenotypic plasticity on tolerance to these critical environmental parameters is particularly important for Delta Smelt and other San Francisco Estuary fishes. We assessed thermal and salinity limits in several ontogenetic stages and acclimation states of Delta Smelt, and paired these data with environmental data to evaluate sensitivity to climate-change stressors. Thermal tolerance decreased among successive stages, with larval fish exhibiting the highest tolerance and post-spawning adults having the lowest. Delta Smelt had limited capacity to increase tolerance through thermal acclimation, and comparisons with field temperature data revealed that juvenile tolerance limits are the closest to current environmental conditions, which may make this stage especially susceptible to future climate warming. Maximal water temperatures observed in situ exceeded tolerance limits of juveniles and adults. Although these temperature events are currently rare, if they increase in frequency as predicted, it could result in habitat loss at these locations despite other favourable conditions for Delta Smelt. In contrast, Delta Smelt tolerated salinities spanning the range of expected environmental conditions for each ontogenetic stage, but salinity did impact survival in juvenile and adult stages in exposures over acute time scales. Our results underscore the importance of considering ontogeny and phenotypic plasticity in assessing the impacts of climate change, particularly for species adapted to spatially and temporally heterogeneous environments

    Quantitative Stability of Linear Infinite Inequality Systems under Block Perturbations with Applications to Convex Systems

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    The original motivation for this paper was to provide an efficient quantitative analysis of convex infinite (or semi-infinite) inequality systems whose decision variables run over general infinite-dimensional (resp. finite-dimensional) Banach spaces and that are indexed by an arbitrary fixed set JJ. Parameter perturbations on the right-hand side of the inequalities are required to be merely bounded, and thus the natural parameter space is l(J)l_{\infty}(J). Our basic strategy consists of linearizing the parameterized convex system via splitting convex inequalities into linear ones by using the Fenchel-Legendre conjugate. This approach yields that arbitrary bounded right-hand side perturbations of the convex system turn on constant-by-blocks perturbations in the linearized system. Based on advanced variational analysis, we derive a precise formula for computing the exact Lipschitzian bound of the feasible solution map of block-perturbed linear systems, which involves only the system's data, and then show that this exact bound agrees with the coderivative norm of the aforementioned mapping. In this way we extend to the convex setting the results of [3] developed for arbitrary perturbations with no block structure in the linear framework under the boundedness assumption on the system's coefficients. The latter boundedness assumption is removed in this paper when the decision space is reflexive. The last section provides the aimed application to the convex case

    Ayurvedic and modern review on types of Sugar

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    Sugar is a natural ingredient that has been part of our diet, medicine since ancient times. Sugar made from sugar cane is consumed mostly and said to have health benefits. There are some Sharkara’s (sugar) told in Ayurvedic classics which are not in use now days. The functional quality and medicinal quality differ according to form and origin of sugar. In Ayurveda specific description of different types of Sharkara method of processing and their properties can be seen. Now industrializations keep sugar to undergo several chemical processing steps to make it into the refined sugar. This results into decline in health benefits of sugar. This article reviews Sharkara in Ayurveda classics and different forms of sugar used in present days. Information collected from various classics and published information on recent research articles in PubMed, Dhara online data bases and other allied databases were taken into consideration for the review

    Effects of Inter and Intra Row Spacing on Growth Characteristics and Fodder Yield of Cowpea (Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp. Var. Kanannado) in the Semi-Arid North-Western Nigeria

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    A field trial was conducted during the 2009/2010 cropping season at the Usmanu Danfodiyo University Teaching and Research Farm at Dabagi to investigate the effects of inter and intra row spacing on the growth and fodder yield of Cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L. Walp Variety Kanannado). The treatments consisted of factorial combinations of three each of inter and intra spacing of 50, 75 and 100cm and 25, 50 and 75cm respectively. The treatments were laid in a Randomized Complete Block Design replicated three times. The result of the study showed that inter-row spacing influenced (P<0.05) stand establishment count and plant height while intra row spacing affected (P<0.05) stand establishment count, plant height, leaf width, number of leaves and canopy spread. Dry matter yield did not differ (P> 0.05) across the different spacing and the highest yield of 1020 and 970 kg ha-1 were recorded for the widest inter-row and intra-row spacing of 100 and 75 cm respectively. It was therefore concluded that wider inter-row spacing of 100 cm and intra-row spacing of 75cm produced the highest dry matter yield with Vigna unguiculata L. Walp Variety Kanannado in the semi-arid region of north-western Nigeria

    Including a phase in the Bethe equations of the Hubbard model

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    We compute the Bethe equations of generalized Hubbard models, and study their thermodynamical limit. We argue how they can be connected to the ones found in the context of AdS/CFT correspondence, in particular with the so-called dressing phase problem. We also show how the models can be interpreted, in condensed matter physics, as integrable multi-leg Hubbard models.Comment: 30 page
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