1,445 research outputs found
Timed Soft Concurrent Constraint Programs: An Interleaved and a Parallel Approach
We propose a timed and soft extension of Concurrent Constraint Programming.
The time extension is based on the hypothesis of bounded asynchrony: the
computation takes a bounded period of time and is measured by a discrete global
clock. Action prefixing is then considered as the syntactic marker which
distinguishes a time instant from the next one. Supported by soft constraints
instead of crisp ones, tell and ask agents are now equipped with a preference
(or consistency) threshold which is used to determine their success or
suspension. In the paper we provide a language to describe the agents behavior,
together with its operational and denotational semantics, for which we also
prove the compositionality and correctness properties. After presenting a
semantics using maximal parallelism of actions, we also describe a version for
their interleaving on a single processor (with maximal parallelism for time
elapsing). Coordinating agents that need to take decisions both on preference
values and time events may benefit from this language. To appear in Theory and
Practice of Logic Programming (TPLP)
Superadiabatic driving of a three-level quantum system
We study superadiabatic quantum control of a three-level quantum system whose
energy spectrum exhibits multiple avoided crossings. In particular, we
investigate the possibility of treating the full control task in terms of
independent two-level Landau-Zener problems. We first show that the time
profiles of the elements of the full control Hamiltonian are characterized by
peaks centered around the crossing times. These peaks decay algebraically for
large times. In principle, such a power-law scaling invalidates the hypothesis
of perfect separability. Nonetheless, we address the problem from a pragmatic
point of view by studying the fidelity obtained through separate control as a
function of the intercrossing separation. This procedure may be a good approach
to achieve approximate adiabatic driving of a specific instantaneous eigenstate
in realistic implementations.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
A phylogenomic perspective on the radiation of ray-finned fishes based upon targeted sequencing of ultraconserved elements
Ray-finned fishes constitute the dominant radiation of vertebrates with over
30,000 species. Although molecular phylogenetics has begun to disentangle major
evolutionary relationships within this vast section of the Tree of Life, there
is no widely available approach for efficiently collecting phylogenomic data
within fishes, leaving much of the enormous potential of massively parallel
sequencing technologies for resolving major radiations in ray-finned fishes
unrealized. Here, we provide a genomic perspective on longstanding questions
regarding the diversification of major groups of ray-finned fishes through
targeted enrichment of ultraconserved nuclear DNA elements (UCEs) and their
flanking sequence. Our workflow efficiently and economically generates data
sets that are orders of magnitude larger than those produced by traditional
approaches and is well-suited to working with museum specimens. Analysis of the
UCE data set recovers a well-supported phylogeny at both shallow and deep
time-scales that supports a monophyletic relationship between Amia and
Lepisosteus (Holostei) and reveals elopomorphs and then osteoglossomorphs to be
the earliest diverging teleost lineages. Divergence time estimation based upon
14 fossil calibrations reveals that crown teleosts appeared ~270 Ma at the end
of the Permian and that elopomorphs, osteoglossomorphs, ostarioclupeomorphs,
and euteleosts diverged from one another by 205 Ma during the Triassic. Our
approach additionally reveals that sequence capture of UCE regions and their
flanking sequence offers enormous potential for resolving phylogenetic
relationships within ray-finned fishes
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