4,711 research outputs found

    Coordination in games with incomplete information: experimental results

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    We use experiments to study coordination in games with incomplete information and ask whether an informed player can use cheap talk strategically. Two players decide whether to enter a market where stage game payoffs either form a prisoner’s dilemma or a stag-hunt. One player knows which stage game is played while the other knows only the associated probabilities. When players engage in a prisoner’s dilemma each player prefers unilateral entry. When payoffs form a stag-hunt game, the outcome where neither enters Pareto dominates the outcome where both enter. We ask whether cheap talk aids coordination on the Pareto dominant outcome and whether the informed player can use cheap talk to engineer her preferred outcome. Consistent with previous literature, the benefit of cheap talk depends on the relationship between payoffs and risks. We find that cheap talk benefits informed players only when payoff risks are low. Key Words: cheap talk, coordination, experiments, incomplete information, risk dominance, payoff domiance

    Delayed Slater determinant update algorithms for high efficiency quantum Monte Carlo

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    Within ab initio Quantum Monte Carlo simulations, the leading numerical cost for large systems is the computation of the values of the Slater determinants in the trial wavefunction. Each Monte Carlo step requires finding the determinant of a dense matrix. This is most commonly iteratively evaluated using a rank-1 Sherman-Morrison updating scheme to avoid repeated explicit calculation of the inverse. The overall computational cost is therefore formally cubic in the number of electrons or matrix size. To improve the numerical efficiency of this procedure, we propose a novel multiple rank delayed update scheme. This strategy enables probability evaluation with application of accepted moves to the matrices delayed until after a predetermined number of moves, K. The accepted events are then applied to the matrices en bloc with enhanced arithmetic intensity and computational efficiency via matrix-matrix operations instead of matrix-vector operations. This procedure does not change the underlying Monte Carlo sampling or its statistical efficiency. For calculations on large systems and algorithms such as diffusion Monte Carlo where the acceptance ratio is high, order of magnitude improvements in the update time can be obtained on both multi-core CPUs and GPUs

    SpxA1 and SpxA2 act coordinately to fine-tune stress responses and virulence in Streptococcus pyogenes

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    SpxA is a unique transcriptional regulator highly conserved among members of the phylum Firmicutes that binds RNA polymerase and can act as an antiactivator. Why some Firmicutes members have two highly similar SpxA paralogs is not understood. Here, we show that the SpxA paralogs of the pathogen Streptococcus pyogenes, SpxA1 and SpxA2, act coordinately to regulate virulence by fine-tuning toxin expression and stress resistance. Construction and analysis of mutants revealed that SpxA1− mutants were defective for growth under aerobic conditions, while SpxA2− mutants had severely attenuated responses to multiple stresses, including thermal and oxidative stresses. SpxA1− mutants had enhanced resistance to the cationic antimicrobial molecule polymyxin B, while SpxA2− mutants were more sensitive. In a murine model of soft tissue infection, a SpxA1− mutant was highly attenuated. In contrast, the highly stress-sensitive SpxA2− mutant was hypervirulent, exhibiting more extensive tissue damage and a greater bacterial burden than the wild-type strain. SpxA1− attenuation was associated with reduced expression of several toxins, including the SpeB cysteine protease. In contrast, SpxA2− hypervirulence correlated with toxin overexpression and could be suppressed to wild-type levels by deletion of speB. These data show that SpxA1 and SpxA2 have opposing roles in virulence and stress resistance, suggesting that they act coordinately to fine-tune toxin expression in response to stress. SpxA2− hypervirulence also shows that stress resistance is not always essential for S. pyogenes pathogenesis in soft tissue

    Fuel cycles in nuclear reactors

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    Series numbering from publisher's list"61"--stamped on cover"Unclassified. NYO-2131."Originally issued by the first author as an Sc. D. thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Nuclear Engineering, 1959Contract AT(30-1)-207

    Quadrupole collectivity beyond N=28: Intermediate-energy Coulomb excitation of 47,48Ar

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    We report on the first experimental study of quadrupole collectivity in the very neutron-rich nuclei \nuc{47,48}{Ar} using intermediate-energy Coulomb excitation. These nuclei are located along the path from doubly-magic Ca to collective S and Si isotopes, a critical region of shell evolution and structural change. The deduced B(E2)B(E2) transition strengths are confronted with large-scale shell-model calculations in the sdpfsdpf shell using the state-of-the-art SDPF-U and EPQQM effective interactions. The comparison between experiment and theory indicates that a shell-model description of Ar isotopes around N=28 remains a challenge.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letters, typos fixed in resubmission on April 1

    Re-entrant ferroelectricity in liquid crystals

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    The ferroelectric (Sm C^*) -- antiferroelectric (Sm CA^*_A) -- reentrant ferroelectric (re Sm C^*) phase temperature sequence was observed for system with competing synclinic - anticlinic interactions. The basic properties of this system are as follows (1) the Sm C^* phase is metastable in temperature range of the Sm CA^*_A stability (2) the double inversions of the helix handedness at Sm C^* -- Sm CA^*_A and Sm CA^*_A% -- re-Sm C^* phase transitions were found (3) the threshold electric field that is necessary to induce synclinic ordering in the Sm CA^*_A phase decreases near both Sm CA^*_A -- Sm C^* and Sm CA^*_A -- re-Sm C^* phase boundaries, and it has maximum in the middle of the Sm CA^*_A stability region. All these properties are properly described by simple Landau model that accounts for nearest neighboring layer steric interactions and quadrupolar ordering only.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PR

    Temperature dependence of binary and ternary recombination of H3+ ions with electron

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    We study binary and the recently discovered process of ternary He-assisted recombination of H3+ ions with electrons in a low temperature afterglow plasma. The experiments are carried out over a broad range of pressures and temperatures of an afterglow plasma in a helium buffer gas. Binary and He-assisted ternary recombination are observed and the corresponding recombination rate coefficients are extracted for temperatures from 77 K to 330 K. We describe the observed ternary recombination as a two-step mechanism: First, a rotationally-excited long-lived neutral molecule H3* is formed in electron-H3+ collisions. Second, the H3* molecule collides with a helium atom that leads to the formation of a very long-lived Rydberg state with high orbital momentum. We present calculations of the lifetimes of H3* and of the ternary recombination rate coefficients for para and ortho-H3+. The calculations show a large difference between the ternary recombination rate coefficients of ortho- and para-H3+ at temperatures below 300 K. The measured binary and ternary rate coefficients are in reasonable agreement with the calculated values.Comment: 15 page

    Observation of mutually enhanced collectivity in self-conjugate 3876^{76}_{38}Sr38_{38}

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    The lifetimes of the first 2+^{+} states in the neutron-deficient 76,78^{76,78}Sr isotopes were measured using a unique combination of the γ\gamma-ray line-shape method and two-step nucleon exchange reactions at intermediate energies. The transition rates for the 2+^{+} states were determined to be BB(E2;2+^{+}0+\to 0^{+}) = 2220(270) e2^{2}fm4^{4} for 76^{76}Sr and 1800(250) e2^{2}fm4^{4} for 78^{78}Sr, corresponding to large deformation of β2\beta_2 = 0.45(3) for 76^{76}Sr and 0.40(3) for 78^{78}Sr. The present data provide experimental evidence for mutually enhanced collectivity that occurs at NN = ZZ = 38. The systematic behavior of the excitation energies and BB(E2) values indicates a signature of shape coexistence in 76^{76}Sr, characterizing 76^{76}Sr as one of most deformed nuclei with an unusually reduced EE(4+^{+})/EE(2+^{+}) ratio.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review C Rapid Communicatio

    Multi-Layer Cyber-Physical Security and Resilience for Smart Grid

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    The smart grid is a large-scale complex system that integrates communication technologies with the physical layer operation of the energy systems. Security and resilience mechanisms by design are important to provide guarantee operations for the system. This chapter provides a layered perspective of the smart grid security and discusses game and decision theory as a tool to model the interactions among system components and the interaction between attackers and the system. We discuss game-theoretic applications and challenges in the design of cross-layer robust and resilient controller, secure network routing protocol at the data communication and networking layers, and the challenges of the information security at the management layer of the grid. The chapter will discuss the future directions of using game-theoretic tools in addressing multi-layer security issues in the smart grid.Comment: 16 page
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