648 research outputs found
Cosmological Perturbations in the Early Universe
One essence in capturing the history of primordial fluctuations that arise
during inflation and eventually lead to formation of large scale structures in
the universe, relies on quantizing general relativity coupled to a scalar
field. This is a system that respects diffeomorphism invariance, the freedom of
choosing the coordinate system to work with without changing the physics. Hence
the way to handle its quantization requires an understanding of how to quantize
diffeomorphisms.Deciding on suitable coordinate choices and making sure that
this gauge fixing, which is unavoidable in any calculation, does not effect the
end result, is tricky. In this thesis we make full use of the effects of
diffeomorphism invariance of the theory on the primordial fluctuations to
pursue two different approaches that focus on treating perturbations after
gauge fixing. On one hand we work towards developing our understanding of how
to handle quantization in terms of Dirac quantization and Becchi, Rouet, Stora,
Tyutin (BRST) quantization. On another, we focus on how to generalize the
allowed interactions and understand the scales they bring in the era of
preheating that follows inflation, with effective field theory (EFT) methods on
cosmological backgrounds.Comment: PhD Thesi
On the Additivity and Weak Baselines for Search Result Diversification Research
A recent study on the topic of additivity addresses the task of search result diversification and concludes that while weaker baselines are almost always significantly improved by the evaluated diversification methods, for stronger baselines, just the opposite happens, i.e., no significant improvement can be observed. Due to the importance of the issue in shaping future research directions and evaluation strategies in search results diversification, in this work, we first aim to reproduce the findings reported in the previous study, and then investigate its possible limitations. Our extensive experiments first reveal that under the same experimental setting with that previous study, we can reach similar results. Next, we hypothesize that for stronger baselines, tuning the parameters of some methods (i.e., the trade-off parameter between the relevance and diversity of the results in this particular scenario) should be done in a more fine-grained manner. With trade-off parameters that are specifically determined for each baseline run, we show that the percentage of significant improvements even over the strong baselines can be doubled. As a further issue, we discuss the possible impact of using the same strong baseline retrieval function for the diversity computations of the methods. Our takeaway message is that in the case of a strong baseline, it is more crucial to tune the parameters of the diversification methods to be evaluated; but once this is done, additivity is achievable
Scalar two-point functions at the late-time boundary of de Sitter
We calculate two-point functions of scalar fields of mass and their
conjugate momenta at the late-time boundary of de Sitter with Bunch-Davies
boundary conditions, in general spacetime dimensions. We perform the
calculation using the wavefunction picture and using canonical quantization.
With the latter one clearly sees how the late-time field and conjugate momentum
operators are linear combinations of the normalized late-time operators
\alphaN and \betaN that correspond to unitary irreducible representations
of the de Sitter group with well-defined inner products. The two-point
functions resulting from these two different methods are equal and we find that
both the autocorrelations of \alphaN and \betaN and their cross
correlations contribute to the late-time field and conjugate momentum two-point
functions. This happens both for light scalars (),
corresponding to complementary series representations, and heavy scalars
(), corresponding to principal series representations of the de
Sitter group, where is the Hubble scale of de Sitter. In the special case
, only the \betaN autocorrelation contributes to the conjugate momentum
two-point function in any dimensions and we gather hints that suggest \alphaN
to correspond to discrete series representations for this case at .Comment: The discussions on the massless scalar have been extended to include
exceptional and discrete series invariant subspaces and inner products. An
appendix with bulk calculations and confirmation that employing the late-time
limit at the end or from the beginning leads to the same results have been
included. This extended version is the version that will be submitted to a
journa
Static index pruning in web search engines: Combining term and document popularities with query views
Cataloged from PDF version of article.Static index pruning techniques permanently remove a presumably redundant part of an inverted file, to reduce the file size and query processing time. These techniques differ in deciding which parts of an index can be removed safely; that is, without changing the top-ranked query results. As defined in the literature, the query view of a document is the set of query terms that access to this particular document, that is, retrieves this document among its top results. In this paper, we first propose using query views to improve the quality of the top results compared against the original results. We incorporate query views in a number of static pruning strategies, namely term-centric, document-centric, term popularity based and document access popularity based approaches, and show that the new strategies considerably outperform their counterparts especially for the higher levels of pruning and for both disjunctive and conjunctive query processing. Additionally, we combine the notions of term and document access popularity to form new pruning strategies, and further extend these strategies with the query views. The new strategies improve the result quality especially for the conjunctive query processing, which is the default and most common search mode of a search engine
Cluster searching strategies for collaborative recommendation systems
Cataloged from PDF version of article.In-memory nearest neighbor computation is a typical collaborative filtering approach for high recommendation accuracy. However, this approach is not scalable given the huge number of customers and items in typical commercial applications. Cluster-based collaborative filtering techniques can be a remedy for the efficiency problem, but they usually provide relatively lower accuracy figures, since they may become over-generalized and produce less-personalized recommendations. Our research explores an individualistic strategy which initially clusters the users and then exploits the members within clusters, but not just the cluster representatives, during the recommendation generation stage. We provide an efficient implementation of this strategy by adapting a specifically tailored cluster- skipping inverted index structure. Experimental results reveal that the individualistic strategy with the cluster-skipping index is a good compromise that yields high accuracy and reasonable scalability figures. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Effect of short-term pre-hatch heat shock of incubating eggs on subsequent
The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of thermal conditioning of broiler chickens during embryonic development on subsequent performance under standard rearing conditions. During incubation eggs from 32-, 45- and 56-week old Ross 308 broiler parent stock were subjected to a 2 h heat shock of 39 °C on days 14 and 15 of incubation. Eggs in the control were incubated throughout incubation at 37 °C. Chicks were feather sexed and equal numbers of each sex were placed in each pen per treatment, and reared for 42 days. Live weight, mortality and feed conversion ratio (FCR) were used as measures of performance. The final (six-week) live weights of broilers from young, mid and older parents for the treatment and control groups were 2113 ± 13.8 vs. 2159 ± 20.0, 2084 ± 29.2 vs. 2139 ± 20.0 and 2096 ± 17.6 vs. 2131 ± 24.3 g, respectively. The six-week live weight of the heat-treated group (2098 ± 12.0 g) was significantly lower than that of the control (2143 ± 12.2 g). The 1-6 week mortality figure was significantly lower in the heat-treated group of chickens from the young (83) and mid parent (77) groups compared to their controls (130 and 119), respectively. However, in the treatment group the incidence of mortality in broilers from the older parent group was significantly higher (105) than that of the control (79). The overall mortality without considering the parent age group was significantly lower in the treatment group (265) than in the control group (328). Mean FCR (g feed/g gain) of the chickens of the three parent groups was 1.79 ± 0.02 vs. 1.75 ± 0.03, 1.85 ± 0.03 vs. 1.77 ± 0.02 and 1.80 ± 0.03 vs. 1.77 ± 0.03 for the treatment vs. control groups, respectively, but the difference was significant only in the mid age parent group. These results suggest that prenatal thermal conditioning is not detrimental to broiler growth under standard rearing conditions in the absence of thermal stress. However, survival rate was improved but live weight and FCR were in some cases significantly poorer. Keywords: Heat stress, incubation, parent age, live weight, mortalitySouth African Journal of Animal Science Vol. 38 (1) 2008: pp. 58-6
High Dk piggyback contact lens system for contact lens-intolerant keratoconus patients
Tomris Sengor, Sevda Aydin Kurna, Suat Aki, Yelda ÖzkurtFatih Sultan Mehmet Training and Research Hospital, Istanbul, TurkeyBackground: The aim of the study was to examine the clinical success of high Dk (oxygen permeability) piggyback contact lens (PBCL) systems for the correction of contact lens intolerant keratoconus patients.Methods: Sixteen patients (29 eyes) who were not able to wear gas-permeable rigid lenses were included in this study. Hyper Dk silicone hydrogel (oxygen transmissibility or Dk/t = 150 units) and fluorosilicone methacrylate copolymer (Dk/t = 100 units) lenses were chosen as the PBCL systems. The clinical examinations included visual acuity and corneal observation by biomicroscopy, keratometer reading, and fluorescein staining before and after fitting the PBCL system.Results: Indications for using PBCL system were: lens stabilization and comfort, improving comfort, and adding protection to the cone. Visual acuities increased significantly in all of the patients compared with spectacles (P = 0). Improvement in visual acuity compared with rigid lenses alone was recorded in 89.7% of eyes and no alteration of the visual acuity was observed in 10.3% of the eyes. Wearing time of PBCL systems for most of the patients was limited time (mean 6 months, range 3–12 months); thereafter they tolerated rigid lenses alone except for 2 patients.Conclusion: The PBCL system is a safe and effective method to provide centering and corneal protection against mechanical trauma by the rigid lenses for keratoconus patients and may increase contact lens tolerance.Keywords: piggyback contact lens, keratoconus, irregular astigmatis
Investigation of Nutritional Values, Sensorial, Flesh Productivity of Parapenaus longirostris (Lucas, 1846) Between Populations in the Sea of Marmara and in the Northern Aegean Sea
Abstract—The differences of Parapenaus longirostris caught from The North Aegean Sea and The Marmara Sea on proximate composition, sensorial analysis (for raw and cooked samples) and flesh productivity of the samples were investigated. Moisture, protein, lipid, ash, carbohydrate, energy contents of shrimp caught from The North Aegean Sea were 74.92 ± 0.1, 20.32 ± 0.16, 2.55 ± 0.1, 2.13 ± 0.08, 0.08 %, 110.1 kcal/100g, respectively. Moisture, protein, lipid, ash, carbohydrate, energy contents of shrimp caught from the Marmara Sea were 76.9 ± 0.02, 19.06 ± 0.03, 2.22 ± 0.08, 1.51 ± 0.04, 0.33, 102.77 kcal/100g, respectively. Protein, lipid, ash and energy values of the Northern Aegean Sea shrimp were higher that of than the Marmara Sea shrimp. On the other hand, moisture, carbohydrate values of the Northern Aegean Sea shrimp were lower than the other one. Sensorial analyses were done for raw and cooked samples. Among all properties for raw samples, flesh color, shrimp connective tissue, shrimp body parameters were found different each other according to the result of the panel. According to the result of the cooked shrimp samples among all properties, cooked odour, flavor, texture were found different each other as well. Especially, flavor and textural properties of cooked shrimps of the Northern Aegean Sea were higher than the Marmara Sea shrimp. Whereas flesh productivity of the Northern Aegean Sea shrimp was found 46.42 %, the Marmara Sea shrimp was found as 47.74 %
- …