322 research outputs found
Protocol Requirements for Self-organizing Artifacts: Towards an Ambient Intelligence
We discuss which properties common-use artifacts should have to collaborate
without human intervention. We conceive how devices, such as mobile phones,
PDAs, and home appliances, could be seamlessly integrated to provide an
"ambient intelligence" that responds to the user's desires without requiring
explicit programming or commands. While the hardware and software technology to
build such systems already exists, as yet there is no standard protocol that
can learn new meanings. We propose the first steps in the development of such a
protocol, which would need to be adaptive, extensible, and open to the
community, while promoting self-organization. We argue that devices,
interacting through "game-like" moves, can learn to agree about how to
communicate, with whom to cooperate, and how to delegate and coordinate
specialized tasks. Thus, they may evolve a distributed cognition or collective
intelligence capable of tackling complex tasks.Comment: To be presented at 5th International Conference on Complex System
Efficient method for estimating the number of communities in a network
While there exist a wide range of effective methods for community detection
in networks, most of them require one to know in advance how many communities
one is looking for. Here we present a method for estimating the number of
communities in a network using a combination of Bayesian inference with a novel
prior and an efficient Monte Carlo sampling scheme. We test the method
extensively on both real and computer-generated networks, showing that it
performs accurately and consistently, even in cases where groups are widely
varying in size or structure.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
The Relationship between Knowing Sign Language and Quality of Life among Italian People Who Are Deaf: A Cross-Sectional Study
Deafness is a medical condition with important relational implications. This conditioncould affect well-being and self-esteem and cause social anxiety. Sign language is not only a simplemimic but can be considered as a different kind of communication that could be protective for thosewho have learned it. However, some people do not use sign language because they think it canbe marginalizing. The present study aimed to compare the quality of life (QoL) between peoplewho learned Italian sign language as their first language with those who had never learned it orlearned it later. This cross-sectional study involved 182 deaf Italian adults (70.3% females) who wererecruited from Ente Nazionale Sordi (ENS) and by the main online deafness groups. The presentresults suggest that the deaf condition does not seem to significantly affect the dimensions of QoLpertaining to satisfaction and self-esteem, while it could have an effect on preventing high levels of social anxiety and in particular, the group who learned Italian sign language showed significantlyless social anxiety than those who had never learned it
Characterization of alternaria species associated with heart rot of pomegranate fruit
This study was aimed at identifying Alternaria species associated with heart rot disease of pomegranate fruit in southern Italy and characterizing their mycotoxigenic profile. A total of 42 Alternaria isolates were characterized. They were obtained from pomegranate fruits with symptoms of heart rot sampled in Apulia and Sicily and grouped into six distinct morphotypes based on macro-and microscopic features. According to multigene phylogenetic analysis, including internal transcribed spacer (ITS), translation elongation factor 1-α (EF-1α), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and a SCAR marker (OPA10-2), 38 isolates of morphotypes 1 to 5 were identified as Alternaria alternata, while isolates of morphotype 6, all from Sicily, clustered within the Alternaria arborescens species complex. In particular, isolates of morphotype 1, the most numerous, clustered with the ex-type isolate of A. alternata, proving to belong to A. alternata. No difference in pathogenicity on pomegranate fruits was found between isolates of A. alternata and A. arborescens and among A. alternata isolates of different morphotypes. The toxigenic profile of isolates varied greatly: in vitro, all 42 isolates produced tenuazonic acid and most of them other mycotoxins, including alternariol, alternariol monomethyl ether, altenuene and tentoxin
Evolutionary game dynamics in phenotype space
Evolutionary dynamics can be studied in well-mixed or structured populations.
Population structure typically arises from the heterogeneous distribution of
individuals in physical space or on social networks. Here we introduce a new
type of space to evolutionary game dynamics: phenotype space. The population is
well-mixed in the sense that everyone is equally likely to interact with
everyone else, but the behavioral strategies depend on distance in phenotype
space. Individuals might behave differently towards those who look similar or
dissimilar. Individuals mutate to nearby phenotypes. We study the `phenotypic
space walk' of populations. We present analytic calculations that bring
together ideas from coalescence theory and evolutionary game dynamics. As a
particular example, we investigate the evolution of cooperation in phenotype
space. We obtain a precise condition for natural selection to favor cooperators
over defectors: for a one-dimensional phenotype space and large population size
the critical benefit-to-cost ratio is given by b/c=1+2/sqrt{3}. We derive the
fundamental condition for any evolutionary game and explore higher dimensional
phenotype spaces.Comment: version 2: minor changes; equivalent to final published versio
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