5,548 research outputs found

    Towards a Spectroscopic Protocol for Unambiguous Detection of Quantum Coherence in Excitonic Energy Transport

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    The role of quantum effects in excitonic energy transport (EET) has been scrutinised intensely and with increasingly sophisticated experimental techniques. This increased complexity requires invoking correspondingly elaborate models to fit spectroscopic data before molecular parameters can be extracted. Possible quantum effects in EET can then be studied, but the conclusions are strongly contingent on the efficacy of the fitting and the accuracy of the model. To circumvent this challenge, we propose a witness for quantum coherence in EET that can be extracted directly from two-pulse pump-probe spectroscopy experimental data. We provide simulations to judge the feasibility of our approach. Somewhat counterintuitively, our protocol does not probe quantum coherence directly, but only indirectly through its implicit deletion. It allows for classical models with no quantum coherence to be decisively ruled out.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure

    Bayesian Inference in Estimation of Distribution Algorithms

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    Metaheuristics such as Estimation of Distribution Algorithms and the Cross-Entropy method use probabilistic modelling and inference to generate candidate solutions in optimization problems. The model fitting task in this class of algorithms has largely been carried out to date based on maximum likelihood. An alternative approach that is prevalent in statistics and machine learning is to use Bayesian inference. In this paper, we provide a framework for the application of Bayesian inference techniques in probabilistic model-based optimization. Based on this framework, a simple continuous Bayesian Estimation of Distribution Algorithm is described. We evaluate and compare this algorithm experimentally with its maximum likelihood equivalent, UMDAG c

    The adult concept of the scientist as compared to that of the scientist himself.

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    Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit

    Subtleties of witnessing quantum coherence in non-isolated systems

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    Identifying non-classicality unambiguously and inexpensively is a long-standing open challenge in physics. The No-Signalling-In-Time protocol was developed as an experimental test for macroscopic realism, and serves as a witness of quantum coherence in isolated quantum systems by comparing the quantum state to its completely dephased counterpart. We show that it provides a lower bound on a certain resource-theoretic coherence monotone. We go on to generalise the protocol to the case where the system of interest is coupled to an environment. Depending on the manner of the generalisation, the resulting witness either reports on system coherence alone, or on a disjunction of system coherence with either (i) the existence of non-classical system-environment correlations or (ii) non-negligible dynamics in the environment. These are distinct failure modes of the Born approximation in non-isolated systems.Comment: 16pp, 2 figs, 5 thms. v2: typos corrected, references added and small change to title to reflect that of published versio

    El o los fines de la etnografĂ­a: del desorden de lo experimental al desorden de lo barroco

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    Desde los pasados años ochenta, con la crĂ­tica a la representaciĂłn etnogrĂĄfica de Writing Culture, la escritura de textos etnogrĂĄficos en antropologĂ­a se ha distinguido por la apariciĂłn perenne de neĂłfitos de nuevos trabajos compuestos de tropos y estrategias estilĂ­sticas que reflejan las diversas influencias de un periodo de crĂ­tica. Estos textos “desordenados” eran, y son, valorados como experimentos. Este ensayo argumenta como crĂ­tica, que estas etnografĂ­as actuales no son tanto experimentales como barrocas, indicando quizĂĄ un lĂ­mite a la forma etnogrĂĄfica histĂłrica y la necesidad de empujar de nuevo el espĂ­ritu de lo experimental hacia las condiciones de producir etnografĂ­a en el trabajo de campo. Esta “refuncionalizaciĂłn” de la etnografĂ­a en su espĂ­ritu experimental reconocerĂ­a y abordarĂ­a el lĂ­mite presente de lo barroco, al que este periodo de crĂ­tica nos ha conducido de los Ășltimos años ochenta en adelante.Since the 1980s, and the Writing Culture critique of ethnographic representation, the writing of ethnographic texts in anthropology has been distinguished by the perennial appearance by neophytes of new works composed of tropes and stylistic strategies that reflect the diverse influences of the period of critique. These “messy” texts were, and are, valorizied as experiments. This essay argues as critique that current such ethnographies are not so much experimental as baroque. Indicating perhaps a limit of the historic ethnographic form, and the need to push the spirit of experiment back toward the conditions of producing ethnography in fieldwork. This “refunctioning” of ethnography in its experimental spirit would recognize and address the present limit of the baroque to which the 1980s period of critique and after has led

    The Ethnographic Subject as Ethnographer: A Neglected Dimension of Anthropological Research

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    Paper by George E. Marcu

    Observations on the serum potassium with special reference to myotonia

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    In two different branches of neurology there have been in recent years considerable advances in treatment.In the first group an outline has been given of the extension of our knowledge of the relation of disorders of nutrition to diseases of the nervous system, suggesting that further investigation along these lines may solve some of the problems of incur= able diseases of the nervous system.In the second group, composed of familial period is paralysis, myasthenia gravis and the myotonias, advances in our knowledge of treatment point the way to further investigations of neurological problems along quite another line. Reasons have been advances for considering these three diseases to have many features in common. Each of them has been known for about sixty years, and has remained during this time practically unamenable to treatment: but within the last two or three years a specific treatment has been found for all of them. The elucidation of the mode of action of these specific remedies and their relation to neuro-muscular conduction and muscular action emphasises the importance of a physiological rather than a morphological approach to problems in neurology.Familial periodic paralysis, myasthenia, gravis and the myotonias have been considered in relation to the potassium ion.The affect of insulin and glucose on the serum potassium has been investigated, and the findings have been discussed.On the analogy of deaths from cardiac failure in attacks periodic paralysis, a hypothesis that a very low serum potassium may cause death in diabetic coma has been presented.Some observations on the effect of quinine, beer, potassium, insulin and adrenal cortical extract on myotonia and on the level of the serum potassium in myotcnia have been recorded and discussed, with particular reference to the mode of action of quinine and alcohol in reducing myotonia.The relationship of migraine to familial periodi paralysis has been traced and the suggestion node that an investigation of migraine in the light of our knowledge of familial periodic paralysis is desirable.A short commentary has been presented on the points of interest in the three myotonic subjects who were the subject of the investigations.The following conclusions have been reached: -1. Oral quinine is a specific for myotonia but seer to act better in some people than in others. Quinine does not affect the weakness in dystrophia myotonica.2. Intravenous quinine is an undesirable and unnecessary method of treatment of myotonia.3. Beer improves some myotonics, but is without action on others.4. The administration of potassium makes myotonia worse.5. There is no direct relation between the level o the serum potassium and the degree of myotonia.6. Quinine has no direct effect on the level of the serum potassium, and the action of quinine in myotoni . cannot be explained by any action on the serum potassium.7. Insulin and glucose both depress the level of the serum potassium, and the combined effect is greater than the separate effect of either.8. The first symptoms of dystrophia myotonica may begin at an earlier age, and the patient may live to a greater age than has been hitherto thought possibl
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