10,611 research outputs found
A GPU-based hyperbolic SVD algorithm
A one-sided Jacobi hyperbolic singular value decomposition (HSVD) algorithm,
using a massively parallel graphics processing unit (GPU), is developed. The
algorithm also serves as the final stage of solving a symmetric indefinite
eigenvalue problem. Numerical testing demonstrates the gains in speed and
accuracy over sequential and MPI-parallelized variants of similar Jacobi-type
HSVD algorithms. Finally, possibilities of hybrid CPU--GPU parallelism are
discussed.Comment: Accepted for publication in BIT Numerical Mathematic
Creation of collective many-body states and single photons from two-dimensional Rydberg lattice gases
The creation of collective many-body quantum states from a two-dimensional
lattice gas of atoms is studied. Our approach relies on the van-der-Waals
interaction that is present between alkali metal atoms when laser excited to
high-lying Rydberg s-states. We focus on a regime in which the laser driving is
strong compared to the interaction between Rydberg atoms. Here energetically
low-lying many-particle states can be calculated approximately from a quadratic
Hamiltonian. The potential usefulness of these states as a resource for the
creation of deterministic single-photon sources is illustrated. The properties
of these photon states are determined from the interplay between the particular
geometry of the lattice and the interatomic spacing.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
On the interactions of lipids and proteins in the red blood cell membrane
The effects of temperature and of the action of a purified phospholipase C enzyme preparation on human red blood cell membranes has been investigated by chemical analyses, circular dichroism, and proton magnetic resonance measurements. The results indicate that a substantial fraction of the phospholipids and the proteins of the membranes can change structure independently of one another, suggesting a mosaic pattern for the organization of the lipids and proteins in membranes
Inverse moment problem for elementary co-adjoint orbits
We give a solution to the inverse moment problem for a certain class of
Hessenberg and symmetric matrices related to integrable lattices of Toda type.Comment: 13 page
Trick or treat: the effect of placebo on the power of pharmacogenetic association studies
The genetic mapping of drug-response traits is often characterised by a poor signal-to-noise ratio that is placebo related and which distinguishes pharmacogenetic association studies from classical case-control studies for disease susceptibility. The goal of this study was to evaluate the statistical power of candidate gene association studies under different pharmacogenetic scenarios, with special emphasis on the placebo effect. Genotype/phenotype data were simulated, mimicking samples from clinical trials, and response to the drug was modelled as a binary trait. Association was evaluated by a logistic regression model. Statistical power was estimated as a function of the number of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) genotyped, the frequency of the placebo 'response', the genotype relative risk (GRR) of the response polymorphism, the strategy for selecting SNPs for genotyping, the number of individuals in the trial and the ratio of placebo-treated to drug-treated patients. We show that: (i) the placebo 'response' strongly affects the statistical power of association studies--even a highly penetrant drug-response allele requires at least a 500-patient trial in order to reach 80 per cent power, several-fold more than the value estimated by standard tools that are not calibrated to pharmacogenetics; (ii) the power of a pharmacogenetic association study depends primarily on the penetrance of the response genotype and, when this penetrance is fixed, power decreases for larger placebo effects; (iii) power is dramatically increased when adding markers; (iv) an optimal study design includes a similar number of placebo- and drug-treated patients; and (v) in this setting, straightforward haplotype analysis does not seem to have an advantage over single marker analysis
LâADAPTATION POSITIVE DES FAMILLES LATINOS AVEC UN ENFANT AYANT UNE DĂFICIENCE INTELLECTUELLE: UNE PREMIĂRE VUE DE LA THĂORIE DE LâADAPTATION POSITIVE
Historically, research on disability and family dynamics drew from Psychology and Medicine. Consequently, eugenics models, grief theory, and other largely decontextualized frameworks of stress and coping were used to explain families of children with disabilities. This is a report of an initial test of a set of ideas the Singer research team has combined in order to explore the cognitive and problem-solving approaches of families of children with disabilities. Our purpose is to propose a contextualized theory for explaining how cultural diversity has an impact on positive adaptation to a childâs disability. This theory addresses the following: 1) attachment; 2) internal and external cultural resistance to stigmas about disability; and 3) perceived informal (family/friends) and formal (professionals) sources of support for positive views about disability and parenting. Sampling Latino families demonstrated how cultural contexts demonstrate a different flavour from majority culture interpretations of these cognitive terms of our proposed theory. Transcripts of the interviews were coded using grounded theory analysis, specifically, the constant comparative method. We discuss the goodness of fit for themes emerging from the coding process with the proposed theory terms. Results confirm attachment, social supports, and cultural resistance as terms for future development of this proposed theory.
Keywords: Disability and parenting, positive adaptation, Latinos and disability, culture and disabilityĂ travers lâhistoire, la recherche sur les handicapĂ©s et les relations intrafamiliales utilisait comme sources la psychologie et la mĂ©dicine. Par consĂ©quent, les modĂšles de lâeugĂ©nisme, les thĂ©ories sur le deuil, et dâautres cadres analytiques sur le stress et les stratĂ©gies dâadaptation, plutĂŽt dĂ©contextualisĂ©s, Ă©taient utilisĂ©s afin dâexpliquer aux autres comment fonctionnaient les familles avec un enfant handicapĂ©. Ceci est un reportage sur un test initial dâun ensemble dâidĂ©es quâa combinĂ© lâĂ©quipe de recherche Singer afin dâaborder les approches cognitives et mĂ©thodes actives des familles des enfants handicapĂ©s. Nous proposons une thĂ©orie contextualisĂ©e afin dâexpliquer comment la diversitĂ© culturelle aurait un effet sur lâadaptation positive de la famille face Ă lâhandicap de leur enfant. Cette thĂ©orie aborde les idĂ©es suivantes : 1) lâattachement; 2) les rĂ©sistances culturelles internes et externes aux stigmates sur lâhandicap; et 3) les sources dâinformation sur lâhandicap et le parentage liĂ©es Ă lâadaptation positive perçues comme informelles (famille/amis) et formelles (les professionnels). En utilisant un Ă©chantillon de familles Latinos, nous dĂ©montrons comment les contextes culturels dĂ©montrent des interprĂ©tations diffĂ©rentes des termes cognitifs de notre thĂ©orie, et non lâinterprĂ©tation de la culture majoritaire. Les transcriptions des interviews Ă©taient codĂ©es selon la thĂ©orie ancrĂ©e, plus spĂ©cifiquement la mĂ©thode de la comparaison constante. Nous discutons la concordance des thĂšmes venus via le processus dâencodage avec les termes clĂ©s de la nouvelle thĂ©orie proposĂ©e. Les rĂ©sultats de cette recherche confirment que lâattachement, le soutien social, et la rĂ©sistance culturelle seront des termes clĂ©s dans le dĂ©veloppement de cette thĂ©orie proposĂ©e.
Mots clés : Handicap et parentage, Adaptation positive, Latinos et handicap, culture et handica
Rare charm meson decays D->Pl^+l^- and c->ul^+l^- in SM and MSSM
We study the nine possible rare charm meson decays D->Pl^+l^-
(P=pi,K,eta,eta') using the Heavy Meson Chiral Lagrangians and find them to be
dominated by the long distance contributions. The decay D^+ -> pi^+l^+l^- with
the branching ratio 1*10^(-6) is expected to have the best chances for an early
experimental discovery. The short distance contribution in the five Cabibbo
suppressed channels arises via the c->ul^+l^- transition; we find that this
contribution is detectable only in the D->pi l^+l^- decay, where it dominates
the differential spectrum at high-q^2. The general Minimal Supersymmetric
Standard Model can enhance the c->ul^+l^- rate by up to an order of magnitude;
its effect on the D->Pl^+l^- rates is small since the c->ul^+l^- enhancement is
sizable in low-q^2 region, which is inhibited in the hadronic decay.Comment: 17 page
Novel Modifications of Parallel Jacobi Algorithms
We describe two main classes of one-sided trigonometric and hyperbolic
Jacobi-type algorithms for computing eigenvalues and eigenvectors of Hermitian
matrices. These types of algorithms exhibit significant advantages over many
other eigenvalue algorithms. If the matrices permit, both types of algorithms
compute the eigenvalues and eigenvectors with high relative accuracy.
We present novel parallelization techniques for both trigonometric and
hyperbolic classes of algorithms, as well as some new ideas on how pivoting in
each cycle of the algorithm can improve the speed of the parallel one-sided
algorithms. These parallelization approaches are applicable to both
distributed-memory and shared-memory machines.
The numerical testing performed indicates that the hyperbolic algorithms may
be superior to the trigonometric ones, although, in theory, the latter seem
more natural.Comment: Accepted for publication in Numerical Algorithm
Storm time duskside equatorial current and its closure path
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/101862/1/jgra50512.pd
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