697 research outputs found
Finding Temporal Patterns in Noisy Longitudinal Data: A Study in Diabetic Retinopathy
This paper describes an approach to temporal pattern mining using the concept of user defined temporal prototypes to define the nature of the trends of interests. The temporal patterns are defined in terms of sequences of support values associated with identified frequent patterns. The prototypes are defined mathematically so that they can be mapped onto the temporal patterns. The focus for the advocated temporal pattern mining process is a large longitudinal patient database collected as part of a diabetic retinopathy screening programme, The data set is, in itself, also of interest as it is very noisy (in common with other similar medical datasets) and does not feature a clear association between specific time stamps and subsets of the data. The diabetic retinopathy application, the data warehousing and cleaning process, and the frequent pattern mining procedure (together with the application of the prototype concept) are all described in the paper. An evaluation of the frequent pattern mining process is also presented
Scattering phases in quantum dots: an analysis based on lattice models
The properties of scattering phases in quantum dots are analyzed with the
help of lattice models. We first derive the expressions relating the different
scattering phases and the dot Green functions. We analyze in detail the Friedel
sum rule and discuss the deviation of the phase of the transmission amplitude
from the Friedel phase at the zeroes of the transmission. The occurrence of
such zeroes is related to the parity of the isolated dot levels. A statistical
analysis of the isolated dot wave-functions reveals the absence of significant
correlations in the parity for large disorder and the appearance, for weak
disorder, of certain dot states which are strongly coupled to the leads. It is
shown that large differences in the coupling to the leads give rise to an
anomalous charging of the dot levels. A mechanism for the phase lapse observed
experimentally based on this property is discussed and illustrated with model
calculations.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures. to appear in Physical Review
Compressibility and Electronic Structure of MgB2 up to 8 GPa
The lattice parameters of MgB2 up to pressures of 8 GPa were determined using
high-resolution x-ray powder diffraction in a diamond anvil cell. The bulk
modulus, B0, was determined to be 151 +-5 GPa. Both experimental and
first-principles calculations indicate nearly isotropic mechanical behavior
under pressure. This small anisotropy is in contrast to the 2 dimensional
nature of the boron pi states. The pressure dependence of the density of states
at the Fermi level and a reasonable value for the average phonon frequency
account within the context of BCS theory for the reduction of Tc under
pressure.Comment: REVTeX file. 4 pages, 4 figure
Adhesion mechanics of graphene membranes
The interaction of graphene with neighboring materials and structures plays
an important role in its behavior, both scientifically and technologically. The
interactions are complicated due to the interplay between surface forces and
possibly nonlinear elastic behavior. Here we review recent experimental and
theoretical advances in the understanding of graphene adhesion. We organize our
discussion into experimental and theoretical efforts directed toward: graphene
conformation to a substrate, determination of adhesion energy, and applications
where graphene adhesion plays an important role. We conclude with a brief
prospectus outlining open issues.Comment: Review article to appear in special issue on graphene in Solid State
Communication
Runaway Events Dominate the Heavy Tail of Citation Distributions
Statistical distributions with heavy tails are ubiquitous in natural and
social phenomena. Since the entries in heavy tail have disproportional
significance, the knowledge of its exact shape is very important. Citations of
scientific papers form one of the best-known heavy tail distributions. Even in
this case there is a considerable debate whether citation distribution follows
the log-normal or power-law fit. The goal of our study is to solve this debate
by measuring citation distribution for a very large and homogeneous data. We
measured citation distribution for 418,438 Physics papers published in
1980-1989 and cited by 2008. While the log-normal fit deviates too strong from
the data, the discrete power-law function with the exponent does
better and fits 99.955% of the data. However, the extreme tail of the
distribution deviates upward even from the power-law fit and exhibits a
dramatic "runaway" behavior. The onset of the runaway regime is revealed
macroscopically as the paper garners 1000-1500 citations, however the
microscopic measurements of autocorrelation in citation rates are able to
predict this behavior in advance.Comment: 6 pages, 5 Figure
Time Evolution of Unstable Particle Decay Seen with Finite Resolution
Time evolution of the decay process of unstable particles is investigated in
field theory models. We first formulate how to renormalize the non-decay
amplitude beyond perturbation theory and then discuss short-time behavior of
very long-lived particles. Two different formalisms, one that does and one that
does not, assume existence of the asymptotic field of unstable particles are
considered. The non-decay amplitude is then calculated by introducing a finite
time resolution of measurement, which makes it possible to discuss both
renormalizable and non-renormalizable decay interaction including the nucleon
decay. In ordinary circumstances the onset of the exponential decay law starts
at times as early as at roughly the resolution time, but with an enhanced
amplitude which may be measurable. It is confirmed that the short-time formula
of the exponential decay law may be used to set limits on the
nucleon decay rate in underground experiments. On the other hand, an
exceptional example of S-wave decay of very small Q-value is found, which does
not have the exponential period at all.Comment: 26 pages, LATEX file with 8 PS figure
Analytic theory of ground-state properties of a three-dimensional electron gas at varying spin polarization
We present an analytic theory of the spin-resolved pair distribution
functions and the ground-state energy of an electron gas
with an arbitrary degree of spin polarization. We first use the Hohenberg-Kohn
variational principle and the von Weizs\"{a}cker-Herring ideal kinetic energy
functional to derive a zero-energy scattering Schr\"{o}dinger equation for
. The solution of this equation is implemented
within a Fermi-hypernetted-chain approximation which embodies the Hartree-Fock
limit and is shown to satisfy an important set of sum rules. We present
numerical results for the ground-state energy at selected values of the spin
polarization and for in both a paramagnetic and a fully
spin-polarized electron gas, in comparison with the available data from Quantum
Monte Carlo studies over a wide range of electron density.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Influence of a Uniform Current on Collective Magnetization Dynamics in a Ferromagnetic Metal
We discuss the influence of a uniform current, , on the
magnetization dynamics of a ferromagnetic metal. We find that the magnon energy
has a current-induced contribution proportional to
, where is the spin-current, and
predict that collective dynamics will be more strongly damped at finite . We obtain similar results for models with and without local moment
participation in the magnetic order. For transition metal ferromagnets, we
estimate that the uniform magnetic state will be destabilized for . We discuss the relationship of this effect to
the spin-torque effects that alter magnetization dynamics in inhomogeneous
magnetic systems.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
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