5,069 research outputs found
Adapting Visual Question Answering Models for Enhancing Multimodal Community Q&A Platforms
Question categorization and expert retrieval methods have been crucial for
information organization and accessibility in community question & answering
(CQA) platforms. Research in this area, however, has dealt with only the text
modality. With the increasing multimodal nature of web content, we focus on
extending these methods for CQA questions accompanied by images. Specifically,
we leverage the success of representation learning for text and images in the
visual question answering (VQA) domain, and adapt the underlying concept and
architecture for automated category classification and expert retrieval on
image-based questions posted on Yahoo! Chiebukuro, the Japanese counterpart of
Yahoo! Answers.
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to tackle the
multimodality challenge in CQA, and to adapt VQA models for tasks on a more
ecologically valid source of visual questions. Our analysis of the differences
between visual QA and community QA data drives our proposal of novel
augmentations of an attention method tailored for CQA, and use of auxiliary
tasks for learning better grounding features. Our final model markedly
outperforms the text-only and VQA model baselines for both tasks of
classification and expert retrieval on real-world multimodal CQA data.Comment: Submitted for review at CIKM 201
Degeneracy Relations in QCD and the Equivalence of Two Systematic All-Orders Methods for Setting the Renormalization Scale
The Principle of Maximum Conformality (PMC) eliminates QCD renormalization
scale-setting uncertainties using fundamental renormalization group methods.
The resulting scale-fixed pQCD predictions are independent of the choice of
renormalization scheme and show rapid convergence. The coefficients of the
scale-fixed couplings are identical to the corresponding conformal series with
zero -function. Two all-orders methods for systematically implementing
the PMC-scale setting procedure for existing high order calculations are
discussed in this article. One implementation is based on the PMC-BLM
correspondence \mbox{(PMC-I)}; the other, more recent, method \mbox{(PMC-II)}
uses the -scheme, a systematic generalization of the minimal
subtraction renormalization scheme. Both approaches satisfy all of the
principles of the renormalization group and lead to scale-fixed and
scheme-independent predictions at each finite order. In this work, we show that
PMC-I and PMC-II scale-setting methods are in practice equivalent to each
other. We illustrate this equivalence for the four-loop calculations of the
annihilation ratio and the Higgs partial width . Both methods lead to the same resummed (`conformal') series up to
all orders. The small scale differences between the two approaches are reduced
as additional renormalization group -terms in the pQCD expansion
are taken into account. We also show that {\it special degeneracy relations},
which underly the equivalence of the two PMC approaches and the resulting
conformal features of the pQCD series, are in fact general properties of
non-Abelian gauge theory.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
The Quark/Antiquark Asymmetry of the Nucleon Sea
Although the distributions of sea quarks and antiquarks generated by
leading-twist QCD evolution through gluon splitting
are necessarily CP symmetric, the distributions of nonvalence quarks and
antiquarks which are intrinsic to the nucleon's bound state wavefunction need
not be identical. In this paper we investigate the sea quark/antiquark
asymmetries in the nucleon wavefunction which are generated by a light-cone
model of energetically-favored meson-baryon fluctuations. The model predicts
striking quark/antiquark asymmetries in the momentum and helicity distributions
for the down and strange contributions to the proton structure function: the
intrinsic and quarks in the proton sea are predicted to be negatively
polarized, whereas the intrinsic and antiquarks give zero
contributions to the proton spin. Such a picture is supported by experimental
phenomena related to the proton spin problem and the violation of the
Ellis-Jaffe sum rule. The light-cone meson-baryon fluctuation model also
suggests a structured momentum distribution asymmetry for strange quarks and
antiquarks which could be relevant to an outstanding conflict between two
different determinations of the strange quark sea in the nucleon. The model
predicts an excess of intrinsic pairs over pairs, as
supported by the Gottfried sum rule violation. We also predict that the
intrinsic charm and anticharm helicity and momentum distributions are not
identical.Comment: LaTex 18 pages, 4 figures. To obtain a copy, send e-mail to
[email protected]
Dynamic critical phenomena in the AdS/CFT duality
In critical phenomena, singular behaviors arise not only for thermodynamic
quantities but also for transport coefficients. We study this dynamic critical
phenomenon in the AdS/CFT duality. We consider black holes with a single
R-charge in various dimensions and compute the R-charge diffusion in the linear
perturbations. In this case, the black holes belong to model B according to the
classification of Hohenberg and Halperin.Comment: 17 pages, ReVTeX4; v2: added references and discussio
Hypothalamic actions of neuromedin U.
The central nervous system and gut peptide neuromedin U (NMU) inhibits feeding after intracerebroventricular injection. This study explored the hypothalamic actions of NMU on feeding and the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis. Intraparaventricular nucleus (intra-PVN) NMU dose-dependently inhibited food intake, with a minimum effective dose of 0.1 nmol and a robust effect at 0.3 nmol. Feeding inhibition was mapped by NMU injection into eight hypothalamic areas. NMU (0.3 nmol) inhibited food intake in the PVN (0-1 h, 59 ± 6.9% of the control value; P < 0.001) and arcuate nucleus (0-1 h, 76 ± 10.4% of the control value; P < 0.05). Intra-PVN NMU markedly increased grooming and locomotor behavior and dose-dependently increased plasma ACTH (0.3 nmol NMU, 24.8 ± 1.9 pg/ml; saline, 11.4 ± 1.0; P < 0.001) and corticosterone (0.3 nmol NMU, 275.4 ± 40.5 ng/ml; saline, 129.4 ± 25.0; P < 0.01). Using hypothalamic explants in vitro, NMU stimulated CRH (100 nM NMU, 5.9 ± 0.95 pmol/explant; basal, 3.8 ± 0.39; P < 0.01) and arginine vasopressin release (100 nM NMU, 124.5 ± 21.8 fmol/explant; basal, 74.5 ± 7.6; P < 0.01). Leptin stimulated NMU release (141.9 ± 20.4 fmol/explant; basal, 92.9 ± 9.4; P < 0.01). Thus, we describe a novel role for NMU in the PVN to stimulate the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis and locomotor and grooming behavior and to inhibit feeding
Light-Cone Representation of the Spin and Orbital Angular Momentum of Relativistic Composite Systems
The matrix elements of local operators such as the electromagnetic current,
the energy momentum tensor, angular momentum, and the moments of structure
functions have exact representations in terms of light-cone Fock state
wavefunctions of bound states such as hadrons. We illustrate all of these
properties by giving explicit light-cone wavefunctions for the two-particle
Fock state of the electron in QED, thus connecting the Schwinger anomalous
magnetic moment to the spin and orbital momentum carried by its Fock state
constituents. We also compute the QED one-loop radiative corrections for the
form factors for the graviton coupling to the electron and photon. Although the
underlying model is derived from elementary QED perturbative couplings, it in
fact can be used to simulate much more general bound state systems by applying
spectral integration over the constituent masses while preserving all of the
Lorentz properties, giving explicit realization of the spin sum rules and other
local matrix elements. The role of orbital angular momentum in understanding
the "spin crisis" problem for relativistic systems is clarified. We also prove
that the anomalous gravitomagnetic moment B(0) vanishes for any composite
system. This property is shown to follow directly from the Lorentz boost
properties of the light-cone Fock representation and holds separately for each
Fock state component. We show how the QED perturbative structure can be used to
model bound state systems while preserving all Lorentz properties. We thus
obtain a theoretical laboratory to test the consistency of formulae which have
been proposed to probe the spin structure of hadrons.Comment: Version to be published in Nuclear Physics B. Includes illustrations
of graviton-lepton form factors at one loop in QE
Wavefunction-Independent Relations between the Nucleon Axial-Coupling g_A and the Nucleon Magnetic Moments
We calculate the proton's magnetic moment and its axial-vector
coupling as a function of its Dirac radius using a relativisitic
three-quark model formulated on the light-cone. The relationship between
and is found to be independent of the assumed form of the
light-cone wavefunction. At the physical radius fm, one obtains the
experimental values for both and , and the helicity carried by the
valence and quarks are each reduced by a factor relative
to their non-relativistic values. At large proton radius, and are
given by the usual non-relativistic formulae. At small radius, becomes
equal to the Dirac moment, as demanded by the Drell-Hearn-Gerasimov sum rule.
In addition, as the constituent quark helicities become completely
disoriented and .Comment: 17 pages, RevTeX, 4 uuencoded figures, SLAC-PUB-643
trans-Complementation of an NS2 Defect in a Late Step in Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Particle Assembly and Maturation
Recent studies using cell culture infection systems that recapitulate the entire life cycle of hepatitis C virus (HCV) indicate that several nonstructural viral proteins, including NS2, NS3, and NS5A, are involved in the process of viral assembly and release. Other recent work suggests that Ser-168 of NS2 is a target of CK2 kinase–mediated phosphorylation, and that this controls the stability of the genotype 1a NS2 protein. Here, we show that Ser-168 is a critical determinant in the production of infectious virus particles. Substitution of Ser-168 with Ala (or Gly) ablated production of infectious virus by cells transfected with a chimeric viral RNA (HJ3-5) containing core-NS2 sequences from the genotype 1a H77 virus within the background of genotype 2a JFH1 virus. An S168A substitution also impaired production of virus by cells transfected with JFH1 RNA. This mutation did not alter polyprotein processing or genome replication. This defect in virus production could be rescued by expression of wt NS2 in trans from an alphavirus replicon. The trans-complementing activities of NS2 from genotypes 1a and 2a demonstrated strong preferences for rescue of the homologous genotype. Importantly, the S168A mutation did not alter the association of core or NS5A proteins with host cell lipid droplets, nor prevent the assembly of core into particles with sedimentation and buoyant density properties similar to infectious virus, indicating that NS2 acts subsequent to the involvement of core, NS5A, and NS3 in particle assembly. Second-site mutations in NS2 as well as in NS5A can rescue the defect in virus production imposed by the S168G mutation. In aggregate, these results indicate that NS2 functions in trans, in a late-post assembly maturation step, perhaps in concert with NS5A, to confer infectivity to the HCV particle
- …