435 research outputs found
Similarity Between Actual and Possible Selves and Its Relationship to Self-esteem
Prior research has shown that people who hold negative beliefs about a group of people (e.g., that they’re untrustworthy) will tend to hold more negative mental images of members of that group (Dotsch et al., 2008; 2013). Additional research has extended this idea further, suggesting that beliefs about the self (self-esteem) relate to how attractive a person imagines their own face (a self-face representation; Epley & Whitchurch, 2008; Shorten et al., 2017). Within the current study, we sought to expand this research further by demonstrating a positive relationship between participants’ scores in self-esteem and the positivity of their self-face representations. Additionally, we attempted to replicate previous findings describing a positive relationship between participants’ self-esteem scores and their self-face representation’s attractiveness. However, observed relationships proved low in magnitude, providing little to no support for our hypotheses. Given the lack of support, we identify several alterations to the original method that may aid further research
Essentially Negative News About Positive Systems
In this paper the discretisation of switched and non-switched linear positive systems using
Padé approximations is considered. Padé approximations to the matrix exponential
are sometimes used by control engineers for discretising continuous time systems and
for control system design. We observe that this method of approximation is not suited
for the discretisation of positive dynamic systems, for two key reasons. First, certain
types of Lyapunov stability are not, in general, preserved. Secondly, and more seriously,
positivity need not be preserved, even when stability is. Finally we present an alternative
approximation to the matrix exponential which preserves positivity, and linear and
quadratic stability
The effects of shoe temperature on the kinetics and kinematics of running
The aim of the current investigation was to examine the effects of cooled footwear on the kinetics and kinematics of running in comparison to footwear at normal temperature. Twelve participants ran at 4.0 m/s ± 5% in both cooled and normal temperature footwear conditions over a force platform. Two identical footwear were worn, one of which was cooled for 30 min. Lower extremity kinematics were obtained using a motion capture system and tibial accelerations were measured using a triaxial accelerometer. Differences between cooled and normal footwear temperatures were contrasted using paired samples t-tests. The results showed that midsole temperature (cooled = 4.21 °C and normal = 23.25 °C) and maximal midsole deformation during stance (cooled = 12.85 mm and normal = 14.52 mm) were significantly reduced in the cooled footwear. In addition, instantaneous loading rate (cooled = 186.21 B.W/s and normal = 167.08 B W/s), peak tibial acceleration (cooled = 12.75 g and normal = 10.70 g) and tibial acceleration slope (cooled = 478.69 g/s and normal = 327.48 g/s) were significantly greater in the cooled footwear. Finally, peak eversion (cooled = −10.57 ° and normal = −7.83°) and tibial internal rotation (cooled = 10.67 ° and normal = 7.77°) were also shown to be significantly larger in the cooled footwear condition. This study indicates that running in cooled footwear may place runners at increased risk from the biomechanical parameters linked to the aetiology of injuries
Secure access control for DAG-based distributed ledgers
Access control is a fundamental component of the design of distributed ledgers, influencing many aspects of their functionality, such as fairness, efficiency, traditional notions of network security, and adversarial attacks such as Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacksAttackers attempt to put stress on the network by sending a large amount of transactions to other nodes.. In this work, we consider the security of a recently proposed access control protocol for Directed Acyclic Graph-based distributed ledgers. We present a number of attack scenarios and potential vulnerabilities of the protocol and introduce a number of additional features which enhance its resilience. Specifically, a blacklisting algorithm, which is based on a reputation-weighted threshold, is introduced to handle both spamming and multi-rate malicious attackers. A solidification request component is also introduced to ensure the fairness and consistency of the network in the presence of attacks. Finally, a timestamp component is also introduced to maintain the consistency of the network in the presence of multi-rate attackers. Simulations to illustrate the efficacy and robustness of the revised protocol are also presented
DeepCapture: Image Spam Detection Using Deep Learning and Data Augmentation
Image spam emails are often used to evade text-based spam filters that detect
spam emails with their frequently used keywords. In this paper, we propose a
new image spam email detection tool called DeepCapture using a convolutional
neural network (CNN) model. There have been many efforts to detect image spam
emails, but there is a significant performance degrade against entirely new and
unseen image spam emails due to overfitting during the training phase. To
address this challenging issue, we mainly focus on developing a more robust
model to address the overfitting problem. Our key idea is to build a
CNN-XGBoost framework consisting of eight layers only with a large number of
training samples using data augmentation techniques tailored towards the image
spam detection task. To show the feasibility of DeepCapture, we evaluate its
performance with publicly available datasets consisting of 6,000 spam and 2,313
non-spam image samples. The experimental results show that DeepCapture is
capable of achieving an F1-score of 88%, which has a 6% improvement over the
best existing spam detection model CNN-SVM with an F1-score of 82%. Moreover,
DeepCapture outperformed existing image spam detection solutions against new
and unseen image datasets.Comment: 15 pages, single column. ACISP 2020: Australasian Conference on
Information Security and Privac
The influence of barefoot and barefoot inspired footwear on the kinetics and kinematics of running in comparison to conventional running shoes.
Barefoot running has experienced a resurgence in footwear biomechanics literature, based on the supposition that it serves to reduce the occurrence of overuse injuries in comparison to conventional shoe models. This consensus has lead footwear manufacturers to develop shoes which aim to mimic the mechanics of barefoot locomotion.
This study compared the impact kinetics and 3-D joint angular kinematics observed whilst running: barefoot, in conventional cushioned running shoes and in shoes designed to integrate the perceived benefits of barefoot locomotion. The aim of the current investigation was therefore to determine whether differences in impact kinetics exist between the footwear conditions and whether shoes which aim to simulate barefoot movement patterns can closely mimic the 3-D kinematics of barefoot running.
Twelve participants ran at 4.0 m.s-1±5% in each footwear condition. Angular joint kinematics from the hip, knee and ankle in the sagittal, coronal and transverse planes were measured using an eight camera motion analysis system. In addition simultaneous tibial acceleration and ground reaction forces were obtained. Impact parameters and joint kinematics were subsequently compared using repeated measures ANOVAs.
The kinematic analysis indicates that in comparison to the conventional and barefoot inspired shoes that running barefoot was associated significantly greater plantar-flexion at footstrike and range of motion to peak dorsiflexion. Furthermore, the kinetic analysis revealed that compared to the conventional footwear impact parameters were significantly greater in the barefoot condition.
Therefore this study suggests that barefoot running is associated with impact kinetics linked to an increased risk of overuse injury, when compared to conventional shod running. Furthermore, the mechanics of the shoes which aim to simulate barefoot movement patterns do not appear to closely mimic the kinematics of barefoot locomotion
Tyre wear particles are toxic for us and the environment
This briefing paper discusses the current knowledge on the effects of tyre wear particles on our health and environment, highlights the need for an ambitious research agenda to build further understanding of the impacts on people and nature and develop solutions, and includes recommendations for policymakers
- …