36 research outputs found
Negative tunneling magneto-resistance in quantum wires with strong spin-orbit coupling
© 2015 IOP Publishing Ltd. We consider a two-dimensional magnetic tunnel junction of the FM/I/QW(FM+SO)/I/N structure, where FM, I and QW(FM+SO) stand for a ferromagnet, an insulator and a quantum wire with both magnetic ordering and Rashba spin-orbit (SOC), respectively. The tunneling magneto-resistance (TMR) exhibits strong anisotropy and switches sign as the polarization direction varies relative to the quantum-wire axis, due to interplay among the one-dimensionality, the magnetic ordering, and the strong SOC of the quantum wire.This work was supported by the BK21 Plus Project from the Korean Government and by MINECO (Spain) Grant FIS2011-23526.Peer Reviewe
CHAMPAGNE: Learning Real-world Conversation from Large-Scale Web Videos
Visual information is central to conversation: body gestures and physical
behaviour, for example, contribute to meaning that transcends words alone. To
date, however, most neural conversational models are limited to just text. We
introduce CHAMPAGNE, a generative model of conversations that can account for
visual contexts. To train CHAMPAGNE, we collect and release YTD-18M, a
large-scale corpus of 18M video-based dialogues. YTD-18M is constructed from
web videos: crucial to our data collection pipeline is a pretrained language
model that converts error-prone automatic transcripts to a cleaner dialogue
format while maintaining meaning. Human evaluation reveals that YTD-18M is more
sensible and specific than prior resources (MMDialog, 1M dialogues), while
maintaining visual-groundedness. Experiments demonstrate that 1) CHAMPAGNE
learns to conduct conversation from YTD-18M; and 2) when fine-tuned, it
achieves state-of-the-art results on four vision-language tasks focused on
real-world conversations. We release data, models, and code.Comment: ICCV 2023, Project page: https://seungjuhan.me/champagn
Reading Books is Great, But Not if You Are Driving! Visually Grounded Reasoning about Defeasible Commonsense Norms
Commonsense norms are defeasible by context: reading books is usually great,
but not when driving a car. While contexts can be explicitly described in
language, in embodied scenarios, contexts are often provided visually. This
type of visually grounded reasoning about defeasible commonsense norms is
generally easy for humans, but (as we show) poses a challenge for machines, as
it necessitates both visual understanding and reasoning about commonsense
norms. We construct a new multimodal benchmark for studying visual-grounded
commonsense norms: NORMLENS. NORMLENS consists of 10K human judgments
accompanied by free-form explanations covering 2K multimodal situations, and
serves as a probe to address two questions: (1) to what extent can models align
with average human judgment? and (2) how well can models explain their
predicted judgments? We find that state-of-the-art model judgments and
explanations are not well-aligned with human annotation. Additionally, we
present a new approach to better align models with humans by distilling social
commonsense knowledge from large language models. The data and code are
released at https://seungjuhan.me/normlens.Comment: Published as a conference paper at EMNLP 2023 (long
Polarity-tunable magnetic tunnel junctions based on ferromagnetism at oxide heterointerfaces
Complex oxide systems have attracted considerable attention because of their
fascinating properties, including the magnetic ordering at the conducting
interface between two band insulators, such as LaAlO3 (LAO) and SrTiO3 (STO).
However, the manipulation of the spin degree of freedom at the LAO/STO
heterointerface has remained elusive. Here, we have fabricated hybrid magnetic
tunnel junctions consisting of Co and LAO/STO ferromagnets with the insertion
of a Ti layer in between, which clearly exhibit magnetic switching and the
tunnelling magnetoresistance (TMR) effect below 10 K. The magnitude and the of
the TMR are strongly dependent on the direction of the rotational magnetic
field parallel to the LAO/STO plane, which is attributed to a strong
Rashba-type spin orbit coupling in the LAO/STO heterostructure. Our study
provides a further support for the existence of the macroscopic ferromagnetism
at LAO/STO heterointerfaces and opens a novel route to realize interfacial
spintronics devices.Comment: 25 pages, 5 figure