18,130 research outputs found
Beyond Stemming and Lemmatization: Ultra-stemming to Improve Automatic Text Summarization
In Automatic Text Summarization, preprocessing is an important phase to
reduce the space of textual representation. Classically, stemming and
lemmatization have been widely used for normalizing words. However, even using
normalization on large texts, the curse of dimensionality can disturb the
performance of summarizers. This paper describes a new method for normalization
of words to further reduce the space of representation. We propose to reduce
each word to its initial letters, as a form of Ultra-stemming. The results show
that Ultra-stemming not only preserve the content of summaries produced by this
representation, but often the performances of the systems can be dramatically
improved. Summaries on trilingual corpora were evaluated automatically with
Fresa. Results confirm an increase in the performance, regardless of summarizer
system used.Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures, 9 table
Perturbative quantum analysis and classical limit of the electron scattering by a solenoidal magnetic field
A well known example in quantum electrodynamics (QED) shows that Coulomb
scattering of unpolarized electrons, calculated to lowest order in perturbation
theory, yields a results that exactly coincides (in the non-relativistic limit)
with the Rutherford formula. We examine an analogous example, the classical and
perturbative quantum scattering of an electron by a magnetic field confined in
an infinite solenoid of finite radius. The results obtained for the classical
and the quantum differential cross sections display marked differences. While
this may not be a complete surprise, one should expect to recover the classical
expression by applying the classical limit to the quantum result. This turn not
to be the case. Surprisingly enough, it is shown that the classical result can
not be recuperated even if higher order corrections are included. To recover
the classic correspondence of the quantum scattering problem a suitable
non-perturbative methodology should be applied.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of 13th Mexican School of Particles and
Fields (MSPF 2008), San Carlos, Sonora, Mexico, 2-11 Oct 2008. 6 pages, 2
Postscript figure
FRAGILE STATES: DEFINING DIFFICULT ENVIRONMENTS FOR POVERTY REDUCTION
Food Security and Poverty,
DRIVERS OF FRAGILITY: WHAT MAKES STATES FRAGILE?
Food Security and Poverty,
UNIFORM OUTPUT SUBSIDIES IN AN ECONOMIC UNION WITH FIRMS HETEROGENEITY
In this paper we show the importance of cost asymmetry and demand curvature in the effect of a uniform output subsidy policy in an economic union. We consider an economic union formed by two countries each with a single firm producing a homogeneous good. We find that when firms have different cost, the optimal level of the uniform subsidy can be negative if the demand is concave enough. The low cost firm expands its market share if the demand function is sufficiently convex whereas in the case of a concave demand function it is the higher cost firm which gains market share. This implies that a uniform output subsidy policy may cause a change in production e¹ciency. Finally, we consider how a divergence between private and social costs of public funds may a€ect the desirability of such a subsidy policy.Uniform output subsidy policy, economic union, social welfare, cost differences
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