8,542 research outputs found
Crosslingual Document Embedding as Reduced-Rank Ridge Regression
There has recently been much interest in extending vector-based word
representations to multiple languages, such that words can be compared across
languages. In this paper, we shift the focus from words to documents and
introduce a method for embedding documents written in any language into a
single, language-independent vector space. For training, our approach leverages
a multilingual corpus where the same concept is covered in multiple languages
(but not necessarily via exact translations), such as Wikipedia. Our method,
Cr5 (Crosslingual reduced-rank ridge regression), starts by training a
ridge-regression-based classifier that uses language-specific bag-of-word
features in order to predict the concept that a given document is about. We
show that, when constraining the learned weight matrix to be of low rank, it
can be factored to obtain the desired mappings from language-specific
bags-of-words to language-independent embeddings. As opposed to most prior
methods, which use pretrained monolingual word vectors, postprocess them to
make them crosslingual, and finally average word vectors to obtain document
vectors, Cr5 is trained end-to-end and is thus natively crosslingual as well as
document-level. Moreover, since our algorithm uses the singular value
decomposition as its core operation, it is highly scalable. Experiments show
that our method achieves state-of-the-art performance on a crosslingual
document retrieval task. Finally, although not trained for embedding sentences
and words, it also achieves competitive performance on crosslingual sentence
and word retrieval tasks.Comment: In The Twelfth ACM International Conference on Web Search and Data
Mining (WSDM '19
The non-cognitive returns to class size.
We use nationally representative survey data and a research design that relies on contemporaneous within-student and within-teacher comparisons across two academic subjects to estimate how class size affects certain non-cognitive skills in middle school. Our results confirm that smaller 8th-grade classes are associated with improvements in several indicators of school engagement, with effect sizes ranging from 0.05 to 0.09 and smaller effects persisting two years later. Patterns of selection on observed traits and falsification exercises suggest that these results accurately identify (or possibly understate) the causal effects of smaller classes. Given the estimated earnings impact of these non-cognitive skills, the implied internal rate of return from an 8th-grade class-size reduction is 4.6 percent overall, but 7.9 percent in urban schools
The Pion Structure Function in a Constituent Model
Using the recent relatively precise experimental results on the pion
structure function, obtained from Drell--Yan processes, we quantitatively test
an old model where the structure function of any hadron is determined by that
of its constituent quarks. In this model the pion structure function can be
predicted from the known nucleon structure function. We find that the data
support the model, at least as a good first approximation.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Dietary nitrate increases arginine availability and protects mitochondrial complex I and energetics in the hypoxic rat heart
This is the final version. It was first published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1113/jphysiol.2014.275263/abstract.Hypoxic exposure is associated with impaired cardiac energetics in humans and altered mitochondrial function, with suppressed complex I-supported respiration, in rat heart. This response might limit reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, but at the cost of impaired electron transport chain (ETC) activity. Dietary nitrate supplementation improves mitochondrial efficiency and can promote tissue oxygenation by enhancing blood flow. We therefore hypothesised that ETC dysfunction, impaired energetics and oxidative damage in the hearts of rats exposed to chronic hypoxia could be alleviated by sustained administration of a moderate dose of dietary nitrate. Male Wistar rats (n=40) were given water supplemented with 0.7 mmol/L NaCl (as control) or 0.7 mmol/L NaNO3, elevating plasma nitrate levels by 80%, and were exposed to 13% O2 (hypoxia) or normoxia (n=10 per group) for 14 days. Respiration rates, ETC protein levels, mitochondrial density, ATP content and protein carbonylation were measured in cardiac muscle. Complex I respiration rates and protein levels were 33% lower in hypoxic/NaCl rats compared with normoxic/NaCl controls. Protein carbonylation was 65% higher in hearts of hypoxic rats compared with controls, indicating increased oxidative stress, whilst ATP levels were 62% lower. Respiration rates, complex I protein and activity, protein carbonylation and ATP levels were all fully protected in the hearts of nitrate-supplemented hypoxic rats. Both in normoxia and hypoxia, dietary nitrate suppressed cardiac arginase expression and activity and markedly elevated cardiac L-arginine concentrations, unmasking a novel mechanism of action by which nitrate enhances tissue NO bioavailability. Dietary nitrate therefore alleviates metabolic abnormalities in the hypoxic heart, improving myocardial energetics
Local Charge of the nu=5/2 Fractional Quantum Hall State
Electrons in two dimensions and strong magnetic fields effectively lose their
kinetic energy and display exotic behavior dominated by Coulomb forces. When
the ratio of electrons to magnetic flux quanta in the system is near 5/2, the
unique correlated phase that emerges is predicted to be gapped with
fractionally charged quasiparticles and a ground state degeneracy that grows
exponentially as these quasiparticles are introduced. Interestingly, the only
way to transform between the many ground states would be to braid the
fractional excitations around each other, a property with applications in
quantum information processing. Here we present the first observation of
localized quasiparticles at nu=5/2, confined to puddles by disorder. Using a
local electrometer to compare how quasiparticles at nu=5/2 and nu=7/3 charge
these puddles, we are able to extract the ratio of local charges for these
states. Averaged over several disorder configurations and samples, we find the
ratio to be 4/3, suggesting that the local charges are e/3 at seven thirds and
e/4 at five halves, in agreement with theoretical predictions. This
confirmation of localized e/4 quasiparticles is necessary for proposed
interferometry experiments to test statistics and computational ability of the
state at nu=5/2.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures corrected titl
Supersymmetric structure of electroweak Sudakov corrections
Electroweak radiative corrections can be evaluated in the Sudakov
approximation, a systematic high energy expansion known to be relevant for the
analysis of future collider experiments in the TeV energy range. In the Minimal
Supersymmetric Standard Model and at next-to-leading order, Sudakov electroweak
corrections satisfy remarkable relations at the one loop level. Explicit
computations in component fields are available for various different
processes relevant for Linear Collider or LHC physics. The Sudakov corrections
turn out to be equal or closely related in several classes of processes
differing by the replacement of certain final or initial states with their
superpartners. This fact suggests that supersymmetry is partially restored at
high-energy. We analyze the supersymmetric structure of such relations by
computing the Sudakov corrections in the framework of superfield perturbation
theory. As a simple application, we derive in full details an extended complete
set of supersymmetric relations among different processes related by
supersymmetry to the fundamental fermion pair production process .Comment: 22 pages, 7 eps figure
Prospective Validation of Eight Different Adherence Measures for Use with Administrative Claims Data among Patients with Schizophrenia
ABSTRACTObjectiveThe aim of this study was to compare the predictive validity of eight different adherence measures by studying the variability explained between each measure and hospitalization episodes among Medicaid-eligible persons diagnosed with schizophrenia on antipsychotic monotherapy.MethodsThis study was a retrospective analysis of the Arkansas Medicaid administrative claims data. Continuously eligible adult schizophrenia (ICD-9-CM = 295.**) patients on antipsychotic monotherapy were identified in the recruitment period from July 2000 through April 2004. Adherence rates to antipsychotic therapy in year 1 were calculated using eight different measures identified from the literature. Univariate and multivariable logistic regression models were used to prospectively predict all-cause and mental health-related hospitalizations in the follow-up year.ResultsAdherence rates were computed for 3395 schizophrenic patients with a mean age of 42.9 years, of which 52.5% (n = 1782) were females, and 52.8% (n = 1793) were white. The proportion of days covered (PDC) and continuous measure of medication gaps measures of adherence had equal C-statistics of 0.571 in predicting both all-cause and mental health-related hospitalizations. The medication possession ratio (MPR) continuous multiple interval measure of oversupply were the second best measures with equal C-statistics of 0.568 and 0.567 for any-cause and mental health-related hospitalizations. The multivariate adjusted models had higher C-statistics but provided the same rank order results.ConclusionsMPR and PDC were among the best predictors of any-cause and mental health-related hospitalization, and are recommended as the preferred adherence measures when a single measure is sought for use with administrative claims data for patients not on polypharmacy
General Practitioners' views on the provision of nicotine replacement therapy and bupropion.
BACKGROUND: Nicotine replacement therapies (NRT) and a new drug, bupropion, are licensed in several countries as aids to smoking cessation. General practitioners (GPs) play a crucial role in recommending or prescribing these medications. In the UK there has been discussion about whether the medications should be reimbursable by the National Health Service (NHS). This study assessed English GPs' attitudes towards reimbursement of NRT and bupropion. METHODS: Postal survey of a randomly selected national sample of GPs; 376 GPs completed the questionnaire after one reminder; effective response rate: 53%. There was no difference between the responses of GPs who responded to the initial request and those who responded only after a reminder suggesting minimal bias due to non-response. RESULTS: Attitudes of GPs were remarkably divided on most issues relating to the medications. Forty-three percent thought that bupropion should not be on NHS prescription while 42% thought that it should be (15% did not know); Fifty percent thought that NRT should not be on NHS prescription while 42% thought it should be (8% did not know). Requiring that smokers attend behavioural support programmes to be eligible to receive the medications on NHS prescription made no appreciable difference to the GPs' views. GPs were similarly divided on whether having the medications reimbursable would add unacceptably to their workload or offer a welcome opportunity to discuss smoking with their patients. A principal components analysis of responses to the individual questions on NRT and bupropion revealed that GPs' attitudes could be understood in terms of a single 'pro-con' dimension accounting for 53% of the total variance which made no distinction between the two medications. CONCLUSIONS: GPs in England appear to be divided in their attitudes to medications to aid smoking cessation and appear not to discriminate in their views between different types of medication or different aspects of their use. This suggests that their attitudes are generated by quite fundamental values. Addressing these values may be important in encouraging GPs to adhere more closely to national and international guidelines
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