36,957 research outputs found
The capacity and attractor basins of associative memory models
The original publication is available at www.springerlink.com . Copyright SpringerThe performance characteristics of five variants of the Hopfield network are examined. Two performance metrics are used: memory capacity, and a measure of the size of basins of attraction. We find that the posttraining adjustment of processor thresholds has, at best, little or no effect on performance, and at worst a significant negative effect. The adoption of a local learning rule can, however, give rise to significant performance gains.Peer reviewe
Just forget it - The semantics and enforcement of information erasure
Abstract. There are many settings in which sensitive information is made available to a system or organisation for a specific purpose, on the understanding that it will be erased once that purpose has been fulfilled. A familiar example is that of online credit card transactions: a customer typically provides credit card details to a payment system on the understanding that the following promises are kept: (i) Noninterference (NI): the card details may flow to the bank (in order that the payment can be authorised) but not to other users of the system; (ii) Erasure: the payment system will not retain any record of the card details once the transaction is complete. This example shows that we need to reason about NI and erasure in combination, and that we need to consider interactive systems: the card details are used in the interaction between the principals, and then erased; without the interaction, the card details could be dispensed with altogether and erasure would be unnecessary. The contributions of this paper are as follows. (i) We show that an end-to-end erasure property can be encoded as a “flow sensitive ” noninterference property. (ii) By a judicious choice of language construct to support erasur
Polarized light scattering by aerosols in the marine atmospheric boundary layer
The intensity and polarization of light scattered from marine aerosols affect visibility and contrast in the marine atmospheric boundary layer (MABL). The polarization properties of scattered light in the MABL vary with size, refractive index, number distributions, and environmental conditions. Laboratory measurements were used to determine the characteristics and variability of the polarization of light scattered by aerosols similar to those in the MABL. Scattering from laboratory-generated sea-salt-containing (SSC) [NaCl, (NH4)2SO4, and seawater] components of marine aerosols was measured with a scanning polarization-modulated nephelometer. Mie theory with Gaussian and log normal size distributions of spheres was used to calculate the polarized light scattering from various aerosol composition models and from experimentally determined distributions of aerosols in the marine boundary layer. The modeling was verified by comparison with scattering from distilled water aerosols. The study suggests that polarimetric techniques can be used to enhance techniques for improving visibility and remote imaging for various aerosol types, Sun angles, and viewing conditions
Managing multiple morbidity in mid-life: a qualitative study of attitudes to drug use
OBJECTIVE: To examine attitudes towards drug use among middle aged respondents with high levels of chronic morbidity. DESIGN: Qualitative study with detailed interviews. SETTING: West of Scotland. PARTICIPANTS: 23 men and women aged about 50 years with four or more chronic illnesses. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Participants' feelings about long term use of drugs to manage chronic multiple morbidity. RESULTS: Drugs occupied a central place in the way people managed their comorbidities. Respondents expressed an aversion to taking drugs, despite acknowledging that they depended on drugs to live as "normal" a life as possible. Respondents expressed ambivalence to their drugs in various ways. Firstly, they adopted both regular and more flexible regimens and might adhere to a regular regimen in treating one condition (such as hypertension) while adopting a flexible regimen in relation to others, in response to their experience of symptoms or varying demands of their daily life. Secondly, they expressed reluctance to take drugs, but an inability to be free of them. Thirdly, drugs both facilitated performance of social roles and served as evidence of an inability to perform such roles. CONCLUSIONS: Insight into the considerable tension experienced by people managing complex drug regimens to manage multiple chronic illness may help medical carers to support self care practices among patients and to optimise concordance in their use of prescribed drugs
M2M modelling of the Galactic disc via PRIMAL: Fitting to Gaia Error Added Data
We have adapted our made-to-measure (M2M) algorithm PRIMAL to use mock Milky
Way like data constructed from an N-body barred galaxy with a boxy bulge in a
known dark matter potential. We use M0 giant stars as tracers, with the
expected error of the ESA space astrometry mission Gaia. We demonstrate the
process of constructing mock Gaia data from an N-body model, including the
conversion of a galactocentric Cartesian coordinate N-body model into
equatorial coordinates and how to add error to it for a single stellar type. We
then describe the modifications made to PRIMAL to work with observational
error. This paper demonstrates that PRIMAL can recover the radial profiles of
the surface density, radial velocity dispersion, vertical velocity dispersion
and mean rotational velocity of the target disc, along with the pattern speed
of the bar, to a reasonable degree of accuracy despite the lack of accurate
target data. We also construct mock data which take into account dust
extinction and show that PRIMAL recovers the structure and kinematics of the
disc reasonably well. In other words, the expected accuracy of the Gaia data is
good enough for PRIMAL to recover these global properties of the disc, at least
in a simplified condition, as used in this paper.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, submitted to MNRAS 17th Dec 2013, accepted 30th
June 201
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