3,072 research outputs found
Gaussian entanglement induced by an extended thermal environment
We study stationary entanglement among three harmonic oscillators which are
dipole coupled to a one-dimensional or a three-dimensional bosonic environment.
The analysis of the open-system dynamics is performed with generalized quantum
Langevin equations which we solve exactly in Fourier representation. The focus
lies on Gaussian bipartite and tripartite entanglement induced by the highly
non-Markovian interaction mediated by the environment. This environment-induced
interaction represents an effective many-parties interaction with a spatial
long-range feature: a main finding is that the presence of a passive oscillator
is detrimental for the stationary two-mode entanglement. Furthermore, our
results strongly indicate that the environment-induced entanglement mechanism
corresponds to uncontrolled feedback which is predominantly coherent at low
temperatures and for moderate oscillator-environment coupling as compared to
the oscillator frequency.Comment: 15 page, 6 figure
The Evolution of Extortion in Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma Games
Iterated games are a fundamental component of economic and evolutionary game
theory. They describe situations where two players interact repeatedly and have
the possibility to use conditional strategies that depend on the outcome of
previous interactions. In the context of evolution of cooperation, repeated
games represent the mechanism of reciprocation. Recently a new class of
strategies has been proposed, so called 'zero determinant strategies'. These
strategies enforce a fixed linear relationship between one's own payoff and
that of the other player. A subset of those strategies are 'extortioners' which
ensure that any increase in the own payoff exceeds that of the other player by
a fixed percentage. Here we analyze the evolutionary performance of this new
class of strategies. We show that in reasonably large populations they can act
as catalysts for the evolution of cooperation, similar to tit-for-tat, but they
are not the stable outcome of natural selection. In very small populations,
however, relative payoff differences between two players in a contest matter,
and extortioners hold their ground. Extortion strategies do particularly well
in co-evolutionary arms races between two distinct populations: significantly,
they benefit the population which evolves at the slower rate - an instance of
the so-called Red King effect. This may affect the evolution of interactions
between host species and their endosymbionts.Comment: contains 4 figure
Criminal Records --A Comparative Approach
There is in the United States a need to balance the interest of the public in the apprehension and conviction of criminals with that of individuals arrested but not convicted of any wrongdoing. As has been shown, some of the leading civil law countries have approached this goal in two ways: first, by not requiring an arrest in a great number of criminal cases and thus not furthering in the mind of the public the idea that arrest and criminal wrongdoing are identical, and second, by confining entries in criminal records, at least on principle, to final convictions of criminal violations. The recent West German codification of the law of criminal records appears to be striving for the greatest perfection both through concentration of criminal records and limitation of their availability only to those public authorities in serious need of them as well as to the person to whom the record refers; this protects at the same time his right to privacy as to his criminal record and also his right to its accuracy. To use an arrest in itself as an item suitable for a criminal record is an anachronism that shifts to the accused the burden of proving his innocence; this ought to be changed to the more civilized method of recording convictions rather than arrests
Sigmund A. Cohn
1898-1997 Professor of Law, University of Georgia School of Law 1944-64
Artist: George Mandus (1924 - 2012)Donor: (1988) Location: Rusk Centerhttps://digitalcommons.law.uga.edu/portrait/1051/thumbnail.jp
A Statistical Analysis of Certain Data of Performance Achieved by Brockport State Teachers College Freshmen, 1949-57
This thesis project examines statistical data for incoming Brockport State Teachers College students from 1949-1957, including college entrance exam scores as well as other required testing. The researcher completed this project in an effort to organize and understand trends regarding incoming students and their academic performance during the first year of study. The study assists and advises admissions and curricula committees regarding the student population. It also examines the results of both the American Council on Education Psychological Examination and the Cooperative English Examination (Part 1, Reading Comprehension). The study group’s statistical information included any Brockport freshmen, 1949-1957, who possessed a high school average, ACE, SCAT, and other such college testing measurements. The project defines each measurement and includes an extensive appendices and table section to illustrate the study’s findings
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