20,168 research outputs found
RGFGA: An efficient representation and crossover for grouping genetic algorithms
There is substantial research into genetic algorithms that are used to group large numbers of
objects into mutually exclusive subsets based upon some fitness function. However, nearly all
methods involve degeneracy to some degree.
We introduce a new representation for grouping genetic algorithms, the restricted growth function
genetic algorithm, that effectively removes all degeneracy, resulting in a more efficient search. A new crossover operator is also described that exploits a measure of similarity between chromosomes in a population. Using several synthetic datasets, we compare the performance of our representation and crossover with another well known state-of-the-art GA method, a strawman
optimisation method and a well-established statistical clustering algorithm, with encouraging results
Production of mullite fibers
Disclosed here is a process for making mullite fibers wherein a hydrolizable silicon compound and an aluminum compound in the form of a difunctional aluminum chelate are hydrolized to form sols using water and an alcohol with a catalytic amount of hydrochloric acid. The sols are mixed in a molar ratio of aluminum to silicon of 3 to 1 and, under polycondensation conditions, a fibrous gel is formed. From this gel the mullite fibers can be produced
ICARUS: Intelligent coupon allocation for retailers using search
Many retailers run loyalty card schemes for their customers offering incentives in the form of money off coupons. The total value of the coupons depends on how much the customer has spent. This paper deals with the problem of finding the smallest set of coupons such that each possible total can be represented as the sum of a pre-defined number of coupons. A mathematical analysis of the problem leads to the development of a genetic algorithm solution. The algorithm is applied to real world data using several crossover operators and compared to well known straw-person methods. Results are promising showing that considerable time can be saved by using this method, reducing a few days worth of consultancy time to a few minutes of computation
Voids in the LCRS versus CDM Models
We have analyzed the distribution of void sizes in the two-dimensional slices
of the Las Campanas Redshift Survey (LCRS). Fourteen volume-limited subsamples
were extracted from the six slices to cover a large part of the survey and to
test the robustness of the results against cosmic variance. Thirteen samples
were randomly culled to produce homogeneously selected samples. We then studied
the relationship between the cumulative area covered by voids and the void size
as a property of the void hierarchy. We find that the distribution of void
sizes scales with the mean galaxy separation, . In particular, we find
that the size of voids covering half of the area is given by D_{med} \approx
\lambda + (12\pm3) \h^{-2}Mpc. Next, by employing an environmental density
threshold criterion to identify mock galaxies, we were able to extend this
analysis to mock samples from dynamical -body simulations of Cold Dark
Matter (CDM) models. To reproduce the observed void statistics, overdensity
thresholds of are necessary. We have compared
standard (SCDM), open (OCDM), vacuum energy dominated (CDM), and
broken scale invariant CDM models (BCDM): we find that both the void coverage
distribution and the two-point correlation function provide important and
complementary information on the large-scale matter distribution. The
dependence of the void statistics on the threshold criterion for the mock
galaxy indentification shows that the galaxy biasing is more crucial for the
void size distribution than are differences between the cosmological models.Comment: 10 pages, 8 eps figures, submitted to MNRA
Using White Dish CMB Anisotropy Data to Probe Open and Flat-Lambda CDM Cosmogonies
We use data from the White Dish experiment to set limits on cosmic microwave
background radiation anisotropies in open and spatially-flat-Lambda cold dark
matter cosmogonies. We account for the White Dish calibration uncertainty, and
marginalize over the offset and gradient removed from the data. Our 2-sigma
upper limits are larger than those derived previously. These upper limits are
consistent with those derived from the -DMR data for all models tested.Comment: 17 pages of latex. Uses aasms4.sty. 4 figures included. Submitted to
ApJ
Screening analysis and selection of emission reduction concepts for intermittent combustion aircraft engines
An analysis was conducted to screen, evaluate, and select three engine exhaust emission reduction concepts from a group of 14 candidate alternatives. A comprehensive literature search was conducted to survey the emission reduction technology state-of-the-art and establish contact with firms working on intermittent combustion engine development and pollution reduction problems. Concept development, advantages, disadvantages, and expected emission reduction responses are stated. A set of cost effectiveness criteria was developed, appraised for relative importance, and traded off against each concept so that its merit could be determined. A decision model was used to aid the evaluators in managing the criteria, making consistent judgements, calculating merit scores, and ranking the concepts. An Improved Fuel Injection System, Improved Cooling Combustion Chamber, and a Variable Timing Ignition System were recommended to NASA for approval and further concept development. An alternate concept, Air Injection, was also recommended
Suppression of biodynamic interference in head-tracked teleoperation
The utility of helmet-tracked sights to provide pointing commands for teleoperation of cameras, lasers, or antennas in aircraft is degraded by the presence of uncommanded, involuntary heat motion, referred to as biodynamic interference. This interference limits the achievable precision required in pointing tasks. The noise contributions due to biodynamic interference consists of an additive component which is correlated with aircraft vibration and an uncorrelated, nonadditive component, referred to as remnant. An experimental simulation study is described which investigated the improvements achievable in pointing and tracking precision using dynamic display shifting in the helmet-mounted display. The experiment was conducted in a six degree of freedom motion base simulator with an emulated helmet-mounted display. Highly experienced pilot subjects performed precision head-pointing tasks while manually flying a visual flight-path tracking task. Four schemes using adaptive and low-pass filtering of the head motion were evaluated to determine their effects on task performance and pilot workload in the presence of whole-body vibration characteristic of helicopter flight. The results indicate that, for tracking tasks involving continuously moving targets, improvements of up to 70 percent can be achieved in percent on-target dwelling time and of up to 35 percent in rms tracking error, with the adaptive plus low-pass filter configuration. The results with the same filter configuration for the task of capturing randomly-positioned, stationary targets show an increase of up to 340 percent in the number of targets captured and an improvement of up to 24 percent in the average capture time. The adaptive plus low-pass filter combination was considered to exhibit the best overall display dynamics by each of the subjects
Understanding Rates of Marijuana Use and Consequences Among Adolescents in a Changing Legal Landscape.
Purpose of Review:There is not one answer to address whether marijuana use has increased, decreased, or stayed the same given changes in state legalization of medical and non-medical marijuana in the USA. Recent Findings:Evidence suggests some health benefits for medical marijuana; however, initiation of marijuana use is a risk factor for developing problem cannabis use. Though use rates have remained stable over recent years, about one in three 10th graders report marijuana use, most adolescents do not view the drug as harmful, and over 650,000 youth aged 12 to 17 struggle with cannabis use disorder. Summary:Although the health benefits of medical marijuana are becoming better understood, more research is needed. Intervention and prevention programs must better address effects of marijuana, acknowledging that while there may be some benefits medically, marijuana use can affect functioning during adolescence when the brain is still developing
Local u'g'r'i'z' Standard Stars in the Chandra Deep Field-South
Because several observing programs are underway in various spectral regimes
to explore the Chandra Deep Field South (CDF-S), the value of local photometric
standards is obvious. As part of an NOAO Surveys Program to establish
u'g'r'i'z' standard stars in the southern hemisphere, we have observed the
central region of the CDF-S to create local standards for use by other
investigators using these filters. As a courtesy, we present the CDF-S
standards to the public now, although the main program will not finish until
mid-2005.Comment: Accepted by AJ (scheduled for October 2003 issue). 26 pages, 5
tables, 5 figures. High resolution version of Figure 7 available at
http://home.fnal.gov/~dtucker/Southern_ugriz/index.htm
Observational evidence for stochastic biasing
We show that the galaxy density in the Las Campanas Redshift Survey (LCRS)
cannot be perfectly correlated with the underlying mass distribution since
various galaxy subpopulations are not perfectly correlated with each other,
even taking shot noise into account. This rules out the hypothesis of simple
linear biasing, and suggests that the recently proposed stochastic biasing
framework is necessary for modeling actual data.Comment: 4 pages, with 2 figures included. Minor revisions to match accepted
ApJL version. Links and color fig at
http://www.sns.ias.edu/~max/r_frames.html or from [email protected]
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