2,009 research outputs found
Nearest neighbor - A new non-parametric test used for classifying spectral data
Nonparametric statistical interference program for spectral data classificatio
Single Leptoquark Production at and Colliders
We consider single production of leptoquarks (LQ's) at and
colliders, for two values of the centre-of-mass energy,
GeV and 1 TeV. We find that LQ's which couple within the first
generation are observable for LQ masses almost up to the kinematic limit, both
at and colliders, for the LQ coupling strength equal to
. The cross sections for single production of - and
-generation LQ's at colliders are too small to be observable.
In collisions, on the other hand, -generation LQ's with
masses much larger than can be detected. However,
-generation LQ's can be seen at colliders only for
masses at most , making their observation more probable via the
pair production mechanism.Comment: plain TeX, 14 pages, 6 figures (not included but available on
request), some minor changes to the text, one reference added, figures and
conclusions unchanged, UdeM-LPN-TH-93-152, McGill-93/2
Rate of photon production from hot hadronic matter
Thermal photon emission rates from hot hadronic matter are studied to order
, where indicates a strong-interaction coupling constant.
Radiative decay of mesons, Compton and annihilation processes for hadrons, and
bremsstrahlung reactions are all considered. Compared to the standard rates
from the literature, one finds two orders of magnitude increase for low photon
energies stemming mainly from bremsstrahlung and then a modest increase (factor
of 2) for intermediate and high energy photons owing to radiative decays for a
variety of mesons and from other reactions involving strangeness. These results
could have important consequences for electromagnetic radiation studies at
RHIC.Comment: 5 pages LaTeX, 4 Postscript figure
Passive monitoring of anisotropy change associated with the Parkfield 2004 earthquake
International audienceWe investigate temporal variations in the polarization of surface waves determined using ambient seismic noise cross-correlations between station pairs at the time of the Mw 6.0 Parkfield earthquake of September 28, 2004. We use data recorded by the High Resolution Seismic Network's 3-component seismometers located along the San Andreas Fault. Our results show strong variations in azimuthal surface wave polarizations, Psi, for the paths containing station VARB, one of the closest stations to the San Andreas Fault, synchronous with the Parkfield earthquake. Concerning the other station pair, only smooth temporal variations of Y are observed. Two principal contributions to these changes in Y are identified and separated. They are: (1) slow and weak variations due to seasonal changes in the incident direction of seismic noise; and (2) strong and rapid rotations synchronous with the Parkfield earthquake for paths containing station VARB. Strong shifts in Y are interpreted in terms of changes in crack-induced anisotropy due to the co-seismic rotation of the stress field. Because these changes are only observed on paths containing station VARB, the anisotropic layer responsible for the changes is most likely localized around VARB in the shallow crust. These results suggest that the polarization of surface waves may be very sensitive to changes in the orientations of distributed cracks and that implementation of our technique on a routine basis may prove useful for monitoring stress changes deep within seismogenic zones. Citation: Durand, S., J. P. Montagner, P. Roux, F. Brenguier, R. M. Nadeau, and Y. Ricard (2011), Passive monitoring of anisotropy change associated with the Parkfield 2004 earthquake, Geophys. Res. Lett., 38, L13303, doi: 10.1029/2011GL047875
Word Embeddings for Entity-annotated Texts
Learned vector representations of words are useful tools for many information
retrieval and natural language processing tasks due to their ability to capture
lexical semantics. However, while many such tasks involve or even rely on named
entities as central components, popular word embedding models have so far
failed to include entities as first-class citizens. While it seems intuitive
that annotating named entities in the training corpus should result in more
intelligent word features for downstream tasks, performance issues arise when
popular embedding approaches are naively applied to entity annotated corpora.
Not only are the resulting entity embeddings less useful than expected, but one
also finds that the performance of the non-entity word embeddings degrades in
comparison to those trained on the raw, unannotated corpus. In this paper, we
investigate approaches to jointly train word and entity embeddings on a large
corpus with automatically annotated and linked entities. We discuss two
distinct approaches to the generation of such embeddings, namely the training
of state-of-the-art embeddings on raw-text and annotated versions of the
corpus, as well as node embeddings of a co-occurrence graph representation of
the annotated corpus. We compare the performance of annotated embeddings and
classical word embeddings on a variety of word similarity, analogy, and
clustering evaluation tasks, and investigate their performance in
entity-specific tasks. Our findings show that it takes more than training
popular word embedding models on an annotated corpus to create entity
embeddings with acceptable performance on common test cases. Based on these
results, we discuss how and when node embeddings of the co-occurrence graph
representation of the text can restore the performance.Comment: This paper is accepted in 41st European Conference on Information
Retrieva
Dietary history contributes to enterotype-like clustering and functional metagenomic content in the intestinal microbiome of wild mice
Understanding the origins of gut microbial community structure is critical for the identification and interpretation of potential fitnessrelated traits for the host. The presence of community clusters characterized by differences in the abundance of signature taxa, referred to as enterotypes, is a debated concept first reported in humans and later extended to other mammalian hosts. In this study, we provide a thorough assessment of their existence in wild house mice using a panel of evaluation criteria.We identify support for two clusters that are compositionally similar to clusters identified in humans, chimpanzees, and laboratory mice, characterized by differences in Bacteroides, Robinsoniella, and unclassified genera belonging to the family Lachnospiraceae. To further evaluate these clusters, we (i) monitored community changes associated with moving mice from the natural to a laboratory environment, (ii) performed functional metagenomic sequencing, and (iii) subjected wild-caught samples to stable isotope analysis to reconstruct dietary patterns. This process reveals differences in the proportions of genes involved in carbohydrate versus protein metabolism in the functional metagenome, as well as differences in plant- versus meat-derived food sources between clusters. In conjunction with wild-caught mice quickly changing their enterotype classification upon transfer to a standard laboratory chow diet, these results provide strong evidence that dietary history contributes to the presence of enterotype-like clustering in wild mice
The Exact Evolution Equation of the Curvature Perturbation for Closed Universe
As is well known, the exact evolution equation of the curvature perturbation
plays a very important role in investigation of the inflation power spectrum of
the flat universe. However, its corresponding exact extension for the non-flat
universes has not yet been given out clearly. The interest in the non-flat,
specially closed, universes is being aroused recently. The need of this
extension is pressing. We start with most elementary physical consideration and
obtain finally this exact evolution equation of the curvature perturbation for
the non-flat universes, as well as the evolutionary controlling parameter and
the exact expression of the variable mass in this equation. We approximately do
a primitive and immature analysis on the power spectrum of non-flat universes.
This analysis shows that this exact evolution equation of the curvature
perturbation for the non-flat universes is very complicated, and we need to do
a lot of numerical and analytic work for this new equation in future in order
to judge whether the universe is flat or closed by comparison between theories
and observations.Comment: 10 pages, no figures, Late
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