16,056 research outputs found
L1-Regularized Distributed Optimization: A Communication-Efficient Primal-Dual Framework
Despite the importance of sparsity in many large-scale applications, there
are few methods for distributed optimization of sparsity-inducing objectives.
In this paper, we present a communication-efficient framework for
L1-regularized optimization in the distributed environment. By viewing
classical objectives in a more general primal-dual setting, we develop a new
class of methods that can be efficiently distributed and applied to common
sparsity-inducing models, such as Lasso, sparse logistic regression, and
elastic net-regularized problems. We provide theoretical convergence guarantees
for our framework, and demonstrate its efficiency and flexibility with a
thorough experimental comparison on Amazon EC2. Our proposed framework yields
speedups of up to 50x as compared to current state-of-the-art methods for
distributed L1-regularized optimization
Physical Therapy Management of a Patient with Post-Concussive Syndrome Following a mTBI: A Case Report
Background: Prolonged symptoms following a concussion, known as post-concussion syndrome (PCS) is beginning to gain relevance in recent literature. There is some evidence indicating the adverse effects of PCS on a patient’s life, the evaluation of PCS, and the treatment of PCS. Purpose: The purpose of this case study is to provide examples of interventions and progressions used to successfully treat a patient experiencing symptoms related to PCS following a mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). Case Description: A 55-year-old male referred to therapy 2-weeks after experiencing a diagnosed mTBI. His pertinent medical history included 4 diagnosed mTBI in the past. He was experiencing symptoms including a constant headache, increased cervical stiffness and pain, dizziness, increased frustration, difficulty sleeping, and impaired balance and lower extremity coordination. Interventions: He received 14 physical therapy sessions over an eight-week period, while also receiving speech therapy. The physical therapy interventions included manual therapy and postural strengthening, vestibular and oculomotor training, balance interventions, and work simulated tasks. Outcomes: The patient was evaluated using certain parts of the vestibular/ocular motor screening (VOMS) exam as well as the concussion balance test (COBALT). The patient returned to his previous level of employment indicating an improvement in overall function. His reported pain levels decreased from 6/10 upon evaluation to 0/10 on the final day of therapy. Discussion: Throughout his episode of care, he demonstrated improvements in cervical stiffness and pain, lower extremity coordination, balance, and a large reduction in his experienced headache and dizziness. This case report outlines the interventions used in a specific patient aimed to resolve the experienced symptoms presumably due to PCS
Enhancement of the helium resonance lines in the solar atmosphere by suprathermal electron excitation I: non-thermal transport of helium ions
Models of the solar transition region made from lines other than those of
helium cannot account for the strength of the helium lines. However, the
collisional excitation rates of the helium resonance lines are unusually
sensitive to the energy of the exciting electrons. Non-thermal motions in the
transition region could drive slowly-ionizing helium ions rapidly through the
steep temperature gradient, exposing them to excitation by electrons
characteristic of higher temperatures than those describing their ionization
state. We present the results of calculations which use a more physical
representation of the lifetimes of the ground states of He I and He II than was
adopted in earlier work on this process. New emission measure distributions are
used to calculate the temperature variation with height. The results show that
non-thermal motions can lead to enhancements of the He I and He II resonance
line intensities by factors that are comparable with those required. Excitation
by non-Maxwellian electron distributions would reduce the effects of
non-thermal transport. The effects of non-thermal motions are more consistent
with the observed spatial distribution of helium emission than are those of
excitation by non-Maxwellian electron distributions alone. In particular, they
account better for the observed line intensity ratio I(537.0 A)/I(584.3 A), and
its variation with location.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, accepted to appear in MNRAS, LaTeX uses mn.st
Lover\u27s Eyes (Artist as Art)
Jordan is a third-year English Literature & History double major. She includes digital art in her life’s “just for fun” category, along with embroidery and poetry. She does not welcome capitalism’s intrusion into hobbies and cheerfully, unabashedly makes mistakes often. Everything she does is a tiny celebration of herself and other sapphic women, and this piece is no exception
An Examination of the Need for Campaign Fianance Reform Through the Lens of the United States Treaty Clause and Environmental Protection Treaties
The United States’ federal election system is constantly the focus of debate, including components from voting mechanisms, to candidate selection, and to the candidates themselves. Unsurprisingly, campaign finance has also been the source of much debate. For decades, scholars, politicians, lawyers, and laypersons have debated the merits and shortcomings of the campaign finance system enumerated in the United States Code. The landmark Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (“FEC”) decision in 2010, in which the United States Supreme Court equated corporate speech to human speech, merely added fuel to the fire. The considerable volume of scholarship based upon campaign finance reform covers a wealth of topics, but one stone has been left unturned: the impact of unfettered campaign expenditures on the development of multilateral international treaties.
It may be quite difficult for one to imagine a scenario in which campaign finance could impede the adoption of a treaty under American law. However, consider the Paris Climate Accord (“PCA”). The PCA was developed in 2015 as a result of large-scale international consensus regarding the global need to reduce carbon emissions. The United States became a party to the PCA via an executive order signed by then-President Barack Obama. Debate soon arose as to whether the United States was bound to adhere to the provisions of the PCA, however, as the PCA was not adopted under the Treaty Clause of the United States Constitution. The Treaty Clause, in essence, provides that in order for the President to enter into a treaty, he must do so with the approval of two-thirds of the United States Senate. Under the executive order process, this approval did not happen; yet, the United States continued to adhere to the PCA’s provisions until early 2017, when the Trump Administration announced that it planned to withdraw the United States from the PCA.10 Note that as of this writing, the United States is still a party to the PCA.
The PCA reinvigorates an intriguing, oft-debated question: Is the Treaty Clause dormant? In the last century, the United States government has made considerably little use of the Treaty Clause, despite the increasingly international modern world. In many instances in which the Treaty Clause does arise (in fact, in the only instance in which many American law students study the Treaty Clause), the focus is upon environmental treaties. For example, Missouri v. Holland, the seminal constitutional law case on the subject, centered upon the enforcement of a wildlife protection treaty, the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. So one must wonder why international agreements like the PCA have bypassed the Treaty Clause in their adoption into United States law. There are a number of potential explanations for this, but this Note posits that one reason is the increasing difficulty individuals and environmental interest groups have in influencing politicians; this is a direct result of excessive corporate influence in campaign finance expenditures.
In the following discussion, I suggest that the Treaty Clause of the United States Constitution will lie dormant unless the American campaign finance system is reformed to regulate corporate influence. Major oil, gas, and energy companies will continue to utilize massive soft money expenditures to overshadow the political voices of environmental interest groups and individuals; as a result, no multinational environmental regulatory treaty will likely surpass the two-thirds majority senatorial threshold required to bring a treaty into full force in American law. To facilitate this discussion, I have broken this Note into four sections: (1) an overview of the Treaty Clause and its decline, (2) the basics of campaign finance law, (3) an empirical analysis of campaign contributions by the oil and gas industry and the voting patterns of a cross-section of United States Senators, and (4) a discussion connecting that data to the question of Treaty Clause dormancy. Along the way, I will also discuss possible legal rationales for reforming the campaign finance system and the future with or without such reform
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