15,539 research outputs found
A multiplicative potential approach to solutions for cooperative TU-games
Concerning the solution theory for cooperative games with transferable utility, it is well-known that the Shapley value is the most appealing representative of the family of (not necessarily efficient) game-theoretic solutions with an additive potential representation. This paper introduces a new solution concept, called Multiplicativily Proportional () value, that can be regarded as the counterpart of the Shapley value if the additive potential approach to the solution theory is replaced by a multiplicative potential approach in that the difference of two potential evaluations is replaced by its quotient. One out of two main equivalence theorems states that every solution with a multiplicative potential representation is equivalent to this specifically chosen efficient value in that the solution of the initial game coincides with the value of an auxiliary game. The associated potential function turns out to be of a multiplicative form (instead of an additive form) with reference to the worth of all the coalitions. The second equivalence theorem presents four additional characterizations of solutions that admit a multiplicative potential representation, e.g., preservation of discrete ratios or path independence
Earnings distribution, corporate governance and CEO pay
We investigate the relationship between earnings differentials and the pay of CEOs of 190 British companies between 1970 and 1990. We find that (i) changes in the differential between the 90th and 50th weekly earnings percentiles for non-manual adult male workers [90:50] explain changes in the level of real CEO salary and bonus in our sample of companies; (ii) changes in this differential also account for changes in the elasticity of CEO pay to firm size; (iii) a broader measure of earnings inequality does far worse than 90:50 at explaining changes in both the level and the firm size elasticity of CEO pay; (iv) fitting the model on data for 1970-1983 and predicting pay levels for the period starting with the widespread adoption of executive share option schemes in 1984, we find a structural break in the relationship between lower management pay differentials and the pay of the CEO. We conclude first that top executive pay prior to 1984 was a stable function of both firm size and earnings differentials lower on the administrative ladder, consistent with a hypothesis advanced by Herbert Simon in 1957; and second that the use of share options from 1984 onward represents not simply a change in the mode of top executive compensation, but a de -linking of the pay of top executives and that of their subordinates
Uniform non-stoichiometric titanium nitride thin films for improved kinetic inductance detector array
We describe the fabrication of homogeneous sub-stoichiometric titanium
nitride films for microwave kinetic inductance detector (mKID) arrays. Using a
6 inch sputtering target and a homogeneous nitrogen inlet, the variation of the
critical temperature over a 2 inch wafer was reduced to <25 %. Measurements of
a 132-pixel mKID array from these films reveal a sensitivity of 16 kHz/pW in
the 100 GHz band, comparable to the best aluminium mKIDs. We measured a noise
equivalent power of NEP = 3.6e-15 W/Hz^(1/2). Finally, we describe possible
routes to further improve the performance of these TiN mKID arrays.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Journal of low temperature physics,
Proceedings of LTD-1
A Train-on-Target Strategy for Multilingual Spoken Language Understanding
[EN] There are two main strategies to adapt a Spoken Language
Understanding system to deal with languages different from the original
(source) language: test-on-source and train-on-target. In the train-ontarget
approach, a new understanding model is trained in the target language,
which is the language in which the test utterances are pronounced.
To do this, a segmented and semantically labeled training set for each
new language is needed. In this work, we use several general-purpose
translators to obtain the translation of the training set and we apply an
alignment process to automatically segment the training sentences. We
have applied this train-on-target approach to estimate the understanding
module of a Spoken Dialog System for the DIHANA task, which consists
of an information system about train timetables and fares in Spanish.
We present an evaluation of our train-on-target multilingual approach
for two target languages, French and EnglishThis work has been partially funded by the project ASLP-MULAN: Audio, Speech and Language Processing for Multimedia Analytics (MEC TIN2014-54288-C4-3-R).García-Granada, F.; Segarra Soriano, E.; Millán, C.; Sanchís Arnal, E.; Hurtado Oliver, LF. (2016). A Train-on-Target Strategy for Multilingual Spoken Language Understanding. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. 10077:224-233. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-49169-1_22S22423310077Benedí, J.M., Lleida, E., Varona, A., Castro, M.J., Galiano, I., Justo, R., López de Letona, I., Miguel, A.: Design and acquisition of a telephone spontaneous speech dialogue corpus in Spanish: DIHANA. In: LREC 2006, pp. 1636–1639 (2006)Calvo, M., Hurtado, L.-F., García, F., Sanchís, E.: A Multilingual SLU system based on semantic decoding of graphs of words. In: Torre Toledano, D., Ortega Giménez, A., Teixeira, A., González Rodríguez, J., Hernández Gómez, L., San Segundo Hernández, R., Ramos Castro, D. (eds.) IberSPEECH 2012. CCIS, vol. 328, pp. 158–167. Springer, Heidelberg (2012). doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-35292-8_17Calvo, M., Hurtado, L.F., Garca, F., Sanchis, E., Segarra, E.: Multilingual spoken language understanding using graphs and multiple translations. Comput. Speech Lang. 38, 86–103 (2016)Dinarelli, M., Moschitti, A., Riccardi, G.: Concept segmentation and labeling for conversational speech. In: Interspeech, Brighton, UK (2009)Esteve, Y., Raymond, C., Bechet, F., Mori, R.D.: Conceptual decoding for spoken dialog systems. In: Proceedings of EuroSpeech 2003, pp. 617–620 (2003)García, F., Hurtado, L., Segarra, E., Sanchis, E., Riccardi, G.: Combining multiple translation systems for spoken language understanding portability. In: Proceedings of IEEE Workshop on Spoken Language Technology (SLT), pp. 282–289 (2012)Hahn, S., Dinarelli, M., Raymond, C., Lefèvre, F., Lehnen, P., De Mori, R., Moschitti, A., Ney, H., Riccardi, G.: Comparing stochastic approaches to spoken language understanding in multiple languages. IEEE Trans. Audio Speech Lang. Process. 6(99), 1569–1583 (2010)He, Y., Young, S.: A data-driven spoken language understanding system. In: Proceedings of ASRU 2003, pp. 583–588 (2003)Hurtado, L., Segarra, E., García, F., Sanchis, E.: Language understanding using n-multigram models. In: Vicedo, J.L., Martínez-Barco, P., Muńoz, R., Saiz Noeda, M. (eds.) EsTAL 2004. LNCS (LNAI), vol. 3230, pp. 207–219. Springer, Heidelberg (2004). doi: 10.1007/978-3-540-30228-5_19Jabaian, B., Besacier, L., Lefèvre, F.: Comparison and combination of lightly supervised approaches for language portability of a spoken language understanding system. IEEE Trans. Audio Speech Lang. Process. 21(3), 636–648 (2013)Koehn, P., et al.: Moses: open source toolkit for statistical machine translation. In: Proceedings of ACL Demonstration Session, pp. 177–180 (2007)Lafferty, J., McCallum, A., Pereira, F.: Conditional random fields: probabilistic models for segmenting and labeling sequence data. In: International Conference on Machine Learning, pp. 282–289. Citeseer (2001)Lefèvre, F.: Dynamic Bayesian networks and discriminative classifiers for multi-stage semantic interpretation. In: IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing, ICASSP 2007, vol. 4, pp. 13–16. IEEE (2007)Ortega, L., Galiano, I., Hurtado, L.F., Sanchis, E., Segarra, E.: A statistical segment-based approach for spoken language understanding. In: Proceedings of InterSpeech 2010, Makuhari, Chiba, Japan, pp. 1836–1839 (2010)Segarra, E., Sanchis, E., Galiano, M., García, F., Hurtado, L.: Extracting semantic information through automatic learning techniques. IJPRAI 16(3), 301–307 (2002)Servan, C., Camelin, N., Raymond, C., Bchet, F., Mori, R.D.: On the use of machine translation for spoken language understanding portability. In: Proceedings of ICASSP 2010, pp. 5330–5333 (2010)Tür, G., Mori, R.D.: Spoken Language Understanding: Systems for Extracting Semantic Information from Speech, 1st edn. Wiley, Hoboken (2011
A quasi-isodynamic configuration with good confinement of fast ions at low plasma
A new quasi-isodynamic stellarator configuration optimized for the
confinement of energetic ions at low plasma is obtained. The numerical
optimization is carried out using the STELLOPT suite of codes. New proxies to
measure closeness to quasi-isodynamicity and quality of fast ion confinement
have been included. The new configuration has poloidally closed contours of
magnetic field strength, low magnetic shear and a rotational transform profile
allowing an island divertor. It shows ideal and ballooning magnetohydrodynamic
stability up to , reduced effective ripple, with in the plasma core. Even at low , the configuration approximately
satisfies the maximum- property, and the confinement of fast ions is good at
and becomes excellent at reactor values, . An
evaluation of the neoclassical mono-energetic coefficient supports the
expectation of a reduced bootstrap current for plasmas confined in
quasi-isodynamic configurations. A set of filamentary coils that preserve the
good confinement of fast ions in the core is presented.Comment: 21 pages, 16 figure
Can the nile generate output, income, and employment in Egypt? A mixed multiplier analysis
Nile water availability is one of the major constraints for agricultural development in Egypt. This study conducts a mixed multiplier analysis, under water and land constraints, to identify the seasonal agricultural activities with high output and income multipliers. It uses a 2008/09 SAM for Egypt with a detailed rep-resentation of Nile-related production factors employed by agricultural activities across irrigation seasons. The results demonstrate the significance of addressing Nile water constraints, not only for agriculture, but also for the overall economy. Policies that enhance water productivity, particularly in the winter season, generate outstanding increases in output, income, and employment through sizable multiplier effects. © 2021, Bononia University Press. All rights reserved
A deep vein thrombosis caused by 20209C>T mutation in homozygosis of the prothrombin gene in a Caucasian patient
Introduction: Additional nucleotide substitutions in the 3 ´-untranslated region of prothrombin gene could explain some thrombotic events and also adverse pregnancy outcomes. We describe the first case of a homozygous 20209C>T mutation as the cause of deep vein thrombosis in a Spanish patient.
Case and methods: The 56-year-old male patient with a partial tear of the Achilles tendon developed calf (tibial) deep vein thrombosis after im- mobilization and was treated with an anticoagulant. To determine if the deep vein thrombosis was of genetic origin, a peripheral blood DNA sample was analysed for the presence of the three most frequent mutations associated with thrombotic events: factor V Leiden (1691G>A), prothrombin (20210G>A) and methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase (677C>T). The presence or absence of the normal allele of prothrombin could not be deter- mined using the PTH-FV-MTHFR StripAssay (Vienna Lab).
Results: Comprehensive analysis showed that the patient had a variant interfering with the polymerase chain reaction product, we sequenced the entire prothrombin gene and found that the patient had a homozygous C>T mutation at position 20209; this interfered with the polymerase chain reaction product, which needs a C at this position to be able to bind to the wild-type probe present in the test strip.
Conclusion: The homozygous 20209C>T mutation and the presence of the mutation 677C>T in heterozygosity explained the patient’s deep vein thrombosis because the combination of mutations would increase the risk of thrombosis. Suitable genetic counselling should be provided to the pa- tient and first-degree relatives as it important to detect prothrombin gene variants that could increase risk for thrombotic events
Unfolding the Hierarchy of Voids
We present a framework for the hierarchical identification and
characterization of voids based on the Watershed Void Finder. The Hierarchical
Void Finder is based on a generalization of the scale space of a density field
invoked in order to trace the hierarchical nature and structure of cosmological
voids. At each level of the hierarchy, the watershed transform is used to
identify the voids at that particular scale. By identifying the overlapping
regions between watershed basins in adjacent levels, the hierarchical void tree
is constructed. Applications on a hierarchical Voronoi model and on a set of
cosmological simulations illustrate its potential.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
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