1,976 research outputs found
The Evolution of Altruism in Spatially Structured Populations
The evolution of altruism in humans is still an unresolved puzzle. Helping other individuals is often kinship-based or reciprocal. Several examples show, however, that altruism goes beyond kinship and reciprocity and people are willing to support unrelated others even when this is at a cost and they receive nothing in exchange. Here we examine the evolution of this "pure" altruism with a focus on altruistic teaching. Teaching is modeled as a knowledge transfer which enhances the survival chances of the recipient, but reduces the reproductive efficiency of the provider. In an agent-based simulation we compare evolutionary success of genotypes that have willingness to teach with those who do not in two different scenarios: random matching of individuals and spatially structured populations. We show that if teaching ability is combined with an ability to learn and individuals encounter each other on a spatial proximity basis, altruistic teaching will attain evolutionary success in the population. Settlement of the population and accumulation of knowledge are emerging side-products of the evolution of altruism. In addition, in large populations our simple model also produces a counterintuitive result that increasing the value of knowledge keeps fewer altruists alive.Altruism, Teaching, Knowledge Transfer, Spatially Structured Social Dilemmas
Residual stress development and evolution in two-phase crystalline material: a discrete dislocation study
Crystalline materials undergo heterogeneous deformation upon the application of external load, which results in the development of incompatible elastic strains in the material as soon as the load is removed. The presence of heterogeneous distribution of elastic strains in the absence of any form of external load results in the building up of stresses referred to as residual stresses. The heterogeneity of strain is attributed either to the presence of multiple phases or to the orientation gradients across the sample volume. This paper is an endeavour to model the presence of second phase in a two-dimensional discrete dislocation dynamics framework, which already contains constitutive rules to include three-dimensional mechanisms, such as line tension and dynamic junction formation. The model is used to investigate residual stress development in single crystals subjected to plane strain loading and then subsequently unloaded to study residual stresses. The dislocation accumulation around the second phase and its effect on the mechanical properties is studied. The orientation dependence of residual stresses as a function of the underlying defect substructure has also been explored. A variety of results are obtained. In particular, the development of stresses as a function of underlying defect substructure is also presented and found to depend upon the orientation of the crystal
Series of divergence measures of type k, information inequalities and particular cases
Information and Divergence measures deals with the study of problems concerning information processing, information storage, information retrieval and decision making. The purpose of this paper is to find a new series of divergence measures and their applications, discuss the mathematical tools for finding convexity of the functions. Applications of convex functions in information theory, relationship between new and well-known divergence measures are discussed. Also some new bounds have been established for divergence measures using new f divergence measures and its properties
A short note on the joint entropy of n/2-wise independence
In this note, we prove a tight lower bound on the joint entropy of
unbiased Bernoulli random variables which are -wise independent. For
general -wise independence, we give new lower bounds by adapting Navon and
Samorodnitsky's Fourier proof of the `LP bound' on error correcting codes. This
counts as partial progress on a problem asked by Gavinsky and Pudl\'ak.Comment: 6 pages, some errors fixe
A Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing two Cognitive-Behavioral Programs for Adolescent Girls with Subclinical Depression: A School-Based Program (Op Volle Kracht) and a Computerized Program (SPARX)
Limited research has indicated the effectiveness of the school-based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) prevention program ‘Op Volle Kracht (OVK)’ and the computerized CBT program ‘SPARX’ in decreasing depressive symptoms. Therefore, a randomized controlled trial of the effectiveness of OVK and SPARX was conducted among Dutch female adolescents (n = 208, mean age = 13.35) with elevated depressive symptoms. Participants were randomly assigned to one of four conditions: OVK only (n = 50), SPARX only (n = 51), OVK and SPARX combined (n = 56) and a monitoring control condition (n = 51). Participants in the first three conditions received OVK lessons and/or the SPARX game. Depressive symptoms were assessed before interventions started, weekly during the interventions, and immediately after the interventions ended, with follow-up assessments at 3, 6 and 12 months. Intention to treat results showed that depressive symptoms decreased in all conditions (F(12, 1853.03) = 14.62, p < .001), with no difference in depressive symptoms between conditions. Thus, all conditions, including the monitoring control condition, were equally effective in reducing depressive symptoms. Possible explanations for the decrease of depressive symptoms in all conditions are discussed and suggestions for future research are provided. Dutch Trial Register: NTR3737
Studies on Microbiological Corrosion of Metals: Part I Isolation and Identification of Sulphate Reducing Bacteria from Jodhpur Soil
A strain of sulphate reducing bacteria present in Jodhpur soil has been isolate and identified as Desulphovibrio desulphuricans
Hong Kong Zhuhai Macao Link
AbstractThe Hong Kong Zhuhai Macao Link will be built across the mouth of the Pearl River Delta linking Hong Kong, Zhuhai and Macao in the south of China. The link will comprise of a dual 3-lane with hardshoulder motorway with a total length of approximately 42km, of which approximately 30km will be in mainland territory and approximately 12km will be within Hong Kong territory. The link will comprise of Border Crossing Facilities on reclaimed land in Zhuhai and Hong Kong, approximately 30km of sea-crossing bridges, approximately 5km of immersed tunnel, two artificial islands, approximately 2km of at-grade road and approximately 2km of cut and cover tunnel. The preliminary design of the link on the mainland side has been carried out by a joint venture of HPDI+ARUP+COWI+SHTDI+FHCL and on the Hong Kong side by ARUP alone. The division of work is as follows:•HPDI-Lead•ARUP-Bridges•COWI-Tunnel•SHTDI-Islands•FHCL-Electrical & MechanicalThis paper describes the design of the bridges on the link. The client for the link on the mainland side comprises the governments of the Guangdong Province PRC, Hong Kong SAR and Macao SAR. The client on the Hong Kong side is the Highways Department of the Hong Kong SAR
The Origin of Jovian Planets in Protostellar Disks: The Role of Dead Zones
The final masses of Jovian planets are attained when the tidal torques that
they exert on their surrounding protostellar disks are sufficient to open gaps
in the face of disk viscosity, thereby shutting off any further accretion. In
sufficiently well-ionized disks, the predominant form of disk viscosity
originates from the Magneto-Rotational Instability (MRI) that drives
hydromagnetic disk turbulence. In the region of sufficiently low ionization
rate -- the so-called dead zone -- turbulence is damped and we show that lower
mass planets will be formed. We considered three ionization sources (X-rays,
cosmic rays, and radioactive elements) and determined the size of a dead zone
for the total ionization rate by using a radiative, hydrostatic equilibrium
disk model developed by Chiang et al. (2001). We studied a range of surface
mass density (Sigma_{0}=10^3 - 10^5 g cm^{-2}) and X-ray energy (kT_{x}=1 - 10
keV). We also compared the ionization rate of such a disk by X-rays with cosmic
rays and find that the latter dominate X-rays in ionizing protostellar disks
unless the X-ray energy is very high (5 - 10 keV). Among our major conclusions
are that for typical conditions, dead zones encompass a region extending out to
several AU -- the region in which terrestrial planets are found in our solar
system. Our results suggest that the division between low and high mass planets
in exosolar planetary systems is a consequence of the presence of a dead zone
in their natal protoplanetary disks. We also find that the extent of a dead
zone is mainly dependent on the disk's surface mass density. Our results
provide further support for the idea that Jovian planets in exosolar systems
must have migrated substantially inwards from their points of origin.Comment: 28 pages, 10 figures, accepted by Ap
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