18,455 research outputs found

    Automated Game Design Learning

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    While general game playing is an active field of research, the learning of game design has tended to be either a secondary goal of such research or it has been solely the domain of humans. We propose a field of research, Automated Game Design Learning (AGDL), with the direct purpose of learning game designs directly through interaction with games in the mode that most people experience games: via play. We detail existing work that touches the edges of this field, describe current successful projects in AGDL and the theoretical foundations that enable them, point to promising applications enabled by AGDL, and discuss next steps for this exciting area of study. The key moves of AGDL are to use game programs as the ultimate source of truth about their own design, and to make these design properties available to other systems and avenues of inquiry.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for CIG 201

    MARKET SEGMENTATION: IDENTIFYING THE HIGH-GROWTH EXPORT MARKETS FOR U.S. AGRICULTURE

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    A cluster analysis based on a five-year growth rate of agricultural imports from the United States was conducted on 86 countries and revealed two significant market segments for U.S. agriculture: the high-growth markets and the low-growth markets. Multiple discriminant analysis was then used to test the significance of the countries' trade-related and macroeconomic variables to their market growth classification. The discriminant function was used to predict the high-growth markets for U.S. agriculture in 1994. High-growth markets for U.S. agriculture exhibit faster GDP and agricultural import growth rates, are relatively agriculturally self-sufficient, and are near the United States. On the other hand, low-growth markets exhibit slower GDP and agricultural import growth rates, and are geographically distant from the United States.International Relations/Trade,

    S-wave scattering of strangeness -3 baryons

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    We explore the interactions of two strangeness -3 baryons in multiple spin channels with lattice QCD. This system provides an ideal laboratory for exploring the interactions of multi-baryon systems with minimal dependence on light quark masses. Model calculations of the two-Ω\Omega^- system in two previous works have obtained conflicting results, which can be resolved by lattice QCD. The lattice calculations are performed using two different volumes with L2.5L\sim2.5 and 3.9 fm on anisotropic clover lattices at mπ390m_\pi \sim 390 MeV with a lattice spacing of as0.123a_s \sim 0.123 fm in the spatial direction and atas/3.5a_t\sim{a}_s/3.5 in the temporal direction. Using multiple interpolating operators from a non-displaced source, we present scattering information for two ground state Ω\Omega^- baryons in both the S=0 and S=2 channels. For S=0, kcotδk\cot\delta is extracted at two volumes, which lead to an extrapolated scattering length of aS=0ΩΩ=0.16±0.22 fma^{\Omega\Omega}_{S=0}=0.16 \pm 0.22 \ \text{fm}, indicating a weakly repulsive interaction. Additionally, for S=2, two separate highly repulsive states are observed. We also present results on the interactions of the excited strangeness -3, spin-1/2 states with the ground spin-3/2 states for the spin-1 and spin-2 channels. Results for these interactions are consistent with attractive behavior.Comment: 21 pages, 10 fig

    Barriers to recovery and recommendations for change: the Pennsylvania Consensus Conference on psychiatry\u27s role.

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    OBJECTIVE: Recovery has emerged over the past decade as a dominant theme in public mental health care. METHODS: The 2006 Pennsylvania Consensus Conference brought together 24 community psychiatrists to explore the barriers they experienced in promoting recovery and their recommendations for change. RESULTS: Twelve barriers were identified and classified into one of three categories: psychiatry knowledge, roles, and training; the need to transform public mental health systems and services; and environmental barriers to opportunity. Participants made 22 recommendations to address these barriers through changes in policies, programs, and psychiatric knowledge and practice. CONCLUSIONS: The recommendations identify areas for change that can be accomplished through individual psychiatrist action and organized group efforts

    Investigating the impact of removing rabbit harbour on animal and vegetation dynamics Cottonvale Project Report 2007-2013

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    The field study reported here documented differences between sites that were either side of the Darling Downs Moreton Rabbit Board fence: one side had a long history of rabbit exclusion with few rabbits present whereas the other side had higher rabbit numbers over time. There were marked differences in the flora and fauna on either side of the fence, particularly rabbit abundance and pasture biomass. This difference reflected the long period of separation of the two areas by the DDMRB fence with differences in rabbit abundance as well as possible differences in general grazing management. The control of rabbit numbers on the infested side of the fence did not improve pasture condition to a state similar to that in the rabbit free area during the relatively short period of this study. Recent reviews and simulation studies of the pasture response to changes in grazing management (including changing in grazing pressure) have shown that pastures may takes many years to respond to even quite large reductions in grazing pressure (Hunt et al. 2014, Scanlan et al. 2014). Any positive impact of reduced rabbit density on the infested side will require a much longer time frame for any measureable improvement could be recorded and will depend on the general grazing management of the area. Small sample size precluded conclusively comparing rabbit survival on either side of the fence. This needs further investigation, particularly the effects on rabbit survival of those harbouring above ground compared with those living in warren systems. Similarly, reproductive output and recruitment appeared better where warrens were available, but this needs further testing in this environment with more data before more definitive conclusions can be made

    Generalized Ohm\u27s Law In A 3-D Reconnection Experiment

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    We report the measurement of non-ideal terms of the generalized Ohm\u27s law at a reconnection site of a weakly collisional laboratory magnetohydrodynamic plasma. Results show that the Hall term dominates the measured terms; resistive and electron inertia terms are small. We suggest that electron pressure (not measured) supports the observed quasistatic reconnection rate, and that anomalous resistivity, while not ruled out, is not required to account for the results

    Three-Dimensional Structure Of Magnetic Reconnection In A Laboratory Plasma

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    The local three-dimensional structure of magnetic reconnection has been measured for the first time in a magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) laboratory plasma at the Swarthmore Spheromak Experiment. An array of 600 magnetic probes which resolve ion inertial length and MHD time scale dynamics on a single shot basis measured the magnetic structure of partial spheromak merging events. Counter-helicity spheromaks merge rapidly, and reconnection activity clearly self-generates a local component of B which breaks the standard 2D symmetry at the ion inertial scale. Consistent with prior results, no reconnection is observed for co-helicity merging
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