13,027 research outputs found
Experimental performance of a conical pressure probe at Mach numbers of 3.0, 4.5, and 6.0
Wind tunnel investigation of performance of conical pressure probe at hypersonic speed
Coping with speaker-related variation via abstract phonemic categories
Listeners can cope with considerable variation in the way that different speakers talk. We argue here that they can do so because of a process of phonological abstraction in the speech-recognition system. We review evidence that listeners adjust the bounds of phonemic categories after only very limited exposure to a deviant realisation of a given phoneme. This learning can be talker-specific and is stable over time; further, the learning generalizes to previously unheard words containing the deviant phoneme. Together these results suggest that the learning involves adjustment of prelexical phonemic representations which mediate between the speech signal and the mental lexicon during word recognition. We argue that such an abstraction process is inconsistent with claims made by some recent models of language processing that the mental lexicon consists solely of multiple detailed traces of acoustic episodes. Simulations with a purely episodic model without functional prelexical abstraction confirm that such a model cannot account for the evidence on lexical generalization of perceptual learning. We conclude that abstract phonemic categories form a necessary part of lexical access, and that the ability to store talker-specific knowledge about those categories provides listeners with the means to deal with cross-talker variation
Calibration of Tests for Time Dilation in GRB Pulse Structures
Two tests for cosmological time dilation in -ray bursts -- the peak
alignment and auto-correlation statistics -- involve averaging information near
the times of peak intensity. Both tests require width corrections, assuming
cosmological origin for bursts, since narrower temporal structure from higher
energy would be redshifted into the band of observation, and since intervals
between pulse structures are included in the averaging procedures. We analyze
long ( 2 s) BATSE bursts and estimate total width corrections for trial
time-dilation factors (TDF = [1+]/[1+]) by
time-dilating and redshifting bright bursts. Both tests reveal significant
trends of increasing TDF with decreasing peak flux, but neither provides
sufficient discriminatory power to distinguish between actual TDFs in the range
2--3.Comment: 5 pages in LATeX, REVTEX style, 2 embedded figures. To appear in
Third Huntsville GRB Workshop Proceeding
Elimination of cracks in self-assembled photonic band gap crystals
Thin colloidal crystals (or synthetic opals) composed of Stober silica
spheres typically develop cracks when they are utilized to obtain photonic band
gap crystals (or inverted opals). We find that by sintering the silica spheres
prior to assembly of the opal these cracks can be avoided. We report the
effects of temperature and duration of the heat treatment on 850 nm silica
spheres using electron microscopy, thermogravimetry, and light scattering. We
also find a large dependence of the refractive index of the silica on the
temperature of the heat treatment. This may allow tuning of the refractive
index of silica spheres.Comment: REvTex: 4 pages, 3 figure
Test for Time Dilation of Intervals Between Pulse Structures in GRBs
If -ray bursts are at cosmological distances, then not only their
constituent pulses but also the intervals between pulses should be
time-dilated. Unlike time-dilation measures of pulse emission, intervals would
appear to require negligible correction for redshift of narrower temporal
structure from higher energy into the band of observation. However, stretching
of pulse intervals is inherently difficult to measure without incurring a
timescale-dependent bias since, as time profiles are stretched, more structure
can appear near the limit of resolution. This problem is compounded in dimmer
bursts because identification of significant structures becomes more
problematic. We attempt to minimize brightness bias by equalizing
signal-to-noise (s/n) level of all bursts. We analyze wavelet-denoised burst
profiles binned to several resolutions, identifying significant fluctuations
between pulse structures and interjacent valleys. When bursts are ranked by
peak flux, an interval time-dilation signature is evident, but its magnitude
and significance are dependent upon temporal resolution and s/n level.Comment: 5 pages in LATeX, REVTEX style, 2 embedded figures. To appear in
Third Huntsville GRB Workshop Proceeding
Language-universal constraints on the segmentation of English
Two word-spotting experiments are reported that examine whether the Possible-Word Constraint (PWC) [1] is a language-specific or language-universal strategy for the segmentation of continuous speech. The PWC disfavours parses which leave an impossible residue between the end of a candidate word and a known boundary. The experiments examined cases where the residue was either a CV syllable with a lax vowel, or a CVC syllable with a schwa. Although neither syllable context is a possible word in English, word-spotting in both contexts was easier than with a context consisting of a single consonant. The PWC appears to be language-universal rather than language-specific
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