780 research outputs found
Bounded Rational Decision-Making with Adaptive Neural Network Priors
Bounded rationality investigates utility-optimizing decision-makers with
limited information-processing power. In particular, information theoretic
bounded rationality models formalize resource constraints abstractly in terms
of relative Shannon information, namely the Kullback-Leibler Divergence between
the agents' prior and posterior policy. Between prior and posterior lies an
anytime deliberation process that can be instantiated by sample-based
evaluations of the utility function through Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC)
optimization. The most simple model assumes a fixed prior and can relate
abstract information-theoretic processing costs to the number of sample
evaluations. However, more advanced models would also address the question of
learning, that is how the prior is adapted over time such that generated prior
proposals become more efficient. In this work we investigate generative neural
networks as priors that are optimized concurrently with anytime sample-based
decision-making processes such as MCMC. We evaluate this approach on toy
examples.Comment: Published in ANNPR 2018: Artificial Neural Networks in Pattern
Recognitio
Ten-year survival of ART restorations in permanent posterior teeth
This study evaluated the 10-year clinical performance of high-viscosity glass-ionomer cement placed in posterior permanent teeth by means of the Atraumatic Restorative Treatment (ART) approach. One operator placed 167 single- and 107 multiple-surface restorations in 43 high-risk caries pregnant women (mean decayed teeth = 9.8 ± 5.5). Examinations were performed at 1-, 2-, and 10-year intervals according to ART criteria. In the last evaluation, the US Public Health Service (USPHS) criteria were also used. After 10 years, 129 restorations (47.1%) were evaluated and achieved a cumulative survival rate of 49.0% (SE 7.2%). The 10-year survival of single- and multiple-surface ART restorations assessed using the ART criteria were 65.2% (SE 7.3%) and 30.6% (SE 9.9%), respectively. This difference was significant (jackknife SE of difference; p < 0.05). Using the USPHS criteria, the 10-year survival of single- and multiple-surface ART restorations were 86.5% and 57.6%, respectively. The primary causes of failure were total loss (9.3%) and marginal defects (5.4%). The survival rates observed, especially for the single-surface restorations, confirm the potential of the ART approach for restoring and saving posterior permanent teeth
Comparative morpho-anatomical studies of the lesions caused by citrus leprosis virus on sweet orange
Paving (through) Amazonia: Neoliberal Urbanism and the Reperipheralization of Roraima
This paper examines the neoliberal reshaping of infrastructure provision in Brazil's extreme north since the mid-1990s, when roadway investments resulted in unprecedented regional connectivity. The BR-174 upgrade, the era's most important project, marked a transition from resource-based developmentalism to free-market transnationalism. Primarily concerned with urban competitiveness, the federal government funded the trunk roadway's paving to facilitate manufacturing exports from Manaus. While an effort was made to minimize deforestation, planners sidelined development implications in adjacent Roraima. The state's urban system has thus experienced reperipheralization and intensified primacy. Market-led growth now compounds the inheritance of hierarchical centralism and ongoing governmental neglect. Our study shows a vast territory dependent on primate cities for basic goods and services. Travelling with Roraimans from bypassed towns, we detected long-distance passenger transportation and surface logistics with selective routes. Heterogeneous Roraiman (im)mobilities comprise middle-class tourism and heightened consumerism as well as informal mobility tactics and transnational circulations of precarious labor. The paper exhorts neoliberal urbanism research to look beyond both Euro America's metropoles and their Global South counterparts. Urbanization dynamics in Brazil's extreme north demonstrate that market-disciplined investments to globalize cities produce far-reaching spatial effects. These are felt even by functionally-articulated-yet-marginalized peripheries in ostensibly remote locations
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