3,396 research outputs found

    The C@merata Task at MediaEval 2014: Natural Language Queries on Classical Music Scores

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    This paper summarises the C@merata task in which participants built systems to answer short natural language queries about classical music scores in MusicXML. The task thus combined natural language processing with music information retrieval. Five groups from four countries submitted eight runs. The best submission scored Beat Precision 0.713 and Beat Recall 0.904

    Dogs perceive and spontaneously normalise formant-related speaker and vowel differences in human speech sounds

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    Domesticated animals have been shown to recognise basic phonemic information from human speech sounds and to recognise familiar speakers from their voices. However, whether animals can spontaneously identify words across unfamiliar speakers (speaker normalisation) or spontaneously discriminate between unfamiliar speakers across words remains to be investigated. Here, we assessed these abilities in domestic dogs using the habituation-dishabituation paradigm. We found that while dogs habituated to the presentation of a series of different short words from the same unfamiliar speaker, they significantly dishabituated to the presentation of a novel word from a new speaker of the same gender. This suggests that dogs spontaneously categorised the initial speaker across different words. Conversely, dogs who habituated to the same short word produced by different speakers of the same gender significantly dishabituated to a novel word, suggesting that they had spontaneously categorised the word across different speakers. Our results indicate that the ability to spontaneously recognise both the same phonemes across different speakers, and cues to identity across speech utterances from unfamiliar speakers, is present in domestic dogs and thus not a uniquely human trait

    Renormalons in the effective potential of the vectorial (φ2)2(\vec{\varphi}^{2})^{2} model

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    We study the properties of ultraviolet renormalons in the vectorial (ϕ2)2(\vec{\phi}^{2})^{2} model. This is achieved by studying the effective potential of the theory at next to leading order of the 1/N1/N expansion, the appearence ofthe renormalons in the perturbative series and their relation to the imaginary part of the potential. We also consider the mechanism of renormalon cancellation by `irrelevant" higher dimensional operators.Comment: 20 pages, Latex, 3 Postscript figure

    Comment on studying the corrections to factorization in B -> D(*) X

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    We propose studying the mechanism of factorization in exclusive decays of the form B->D(*)X by examining the differential decay rate as a function of the invariant mass of the light hadronic state X. If factorization works primarily due to the large N_c limit then its accuracy is not expected to decrease as the X invariant mass increases. However, if factorization is mostly a consequence of perturbative QCD then the corrections should grow with the X invariant mass. Combining data for hadronic tau decays and semileptonic B decays allows tests of factorization to be made for a variety of final states. We discuss the examples of B->D^*\pi^+\pi^-\pi^-\pi^0 and B->D^*\omega\pi^-. The mode B->D^*\omega\pi^- will allow a precision study of the dependence of the corrections to factorization on the invariant mass of the light hadronic state.Comment: 7 pages, minor clarifications to tex

    Dallas with balls: televized sport, soap opera and male and female pleasures

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    Two of the most popular of television genres, soap opera and sports coverage have been very much differentiated along gender lines in terms of their audiences. Soap opera has been regarded very much as a 'gynocentric' genre with a large female viewing audience while the audiences for television sport have been predominantly male. Gender differentiation between the genres has had implications for the popular image of each. Soap opera has been perceived as inferior; as mere fantasy and escapism for women while television sports has been perceived as a legitimate, even edifying experience for men. In this article the authors challenge the view that soap opera and television sport are radically different and argue that they are, in fact, very similar in a number of significant ways. They suggest that both genres invoke similar structures of feeling and sensibility in their respective audiences and that television sport is a 'male soap opera'. They consider the ways in which the viewing context of each genre is related to domestic life and leisure, the ways in which the textual structure and conventions of each genre invoke emotional identification, and finally, the ways in which both genres re-affirm gender identities

    New electron source concept for single-shot sub-100 fs electron diffraction in the 100 keV range

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    We present a method for producing sub-100 fs electron bunches that are suitable for single-shot ultrafast electron diffraction experiments in the 100 keV energy range. A combination of analytical results and state-of-the-art numerical simulations show that it is possible to create 100 keV, 0.1 pC, 20 fs electron bunches with a spotsize smaller than 500 micron and a transverse coherence length of 3 nm, using established technologies in a table-top set-up. The system operates in the space-charge dominated regime to produce energy-correlated bunches that are recompressed by established radio-frequency techniques. With this approach we overcome the Coulomb expansion of the bunch, providing an entirely new ultrafast electron diffraction source concept

    Testing nonperturbative techniques in the scalar sector of the standard model

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    We discuss the current picture of the standard model's scalar sector at strong coupling. We compare the pattern observed in the scalar sector in perturbation theory up to two-loop with the nonperturbative solution obtained by a next-to-leading order 1/N expansion. In particular, we analyze two resonant Higgs scattering processes, ff -> H -> f'f' and ff -> H -> ZZ, WW. We describe the ingredients of the nonperturbative calculation, such as the tachyonic regularization, the higher order 1/N intermediate renormalization, and the numerical methods for evaluating the graphs. We discuss briefly the perspectives and usefulness of extending these nonperturbative methods to other theories

    The Gauged Vector Model in Four-Dimensions: Resolution of an Old Problem?

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    A calculation of the renormalization group improved effective potential for the gauged U(N) vector model, coupled to NfN_f fermions in the fundamental representation, computed to leading order in 1/N, all orders in the scalar self-coupling λ\lambda, and lowest order in gauge coupling g2g^2, with NfN_f of order NN, is presented. It is shown that the theory has two phases, one of which is asymptotically free, and the other not, where the asymptotically free phase occurs if 0<λ/g2<4/3(NfN1)0 < \lambda /g^2 < {4/3} (\frac{N_f}{N} - 1), and NfN<11/2\frac{N_f}{N} < {11/2}. In the asymptotically free phase, the effective potential behaves qualitatively like the tree-level potential. In the other phase, the theory exhibits all the difficulties of the ungauged (g2=0)(g^2 = 0) vector model. Therefore the theory appears to be consistent (only) in the asymptotically free phase.Comment: Latex, 18 pages plus 3 figures using epsf. Substantially revised to correct a factor of 2 error in the previous version of equation (2.5b). This has significant effects on the results. The model has also been revised to include fermion
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