2,104 research outputs found
Explicit Lp-norm estimates of infinitely divisible random vectors in Hilbert spaces with applications
I give explicit estimates of the Lp-norm of a mean zero infinitely divisible random vector taking values in a Hilbert space in terms of a certain mixture of the L2- and Lp-norms of the Levy measure. Using decoupling inequalities, the stochastic integral driven by an infinitely divisible random measure is defined. As a first application utilizing the Lp-norm estimates, computation of Ito Isomorphisms for different types of stochastic integrals are given. As a second application, I consider the discrete time signal-observation model in the presence of an alpha-stable noise environment. Formulation is given to compute the optimal linear estimate of the system state
Automated Annotation of Functional Imaging Experiments via Multi-Label Classification
Identifying the experimental methods in human neuroimaging papers is important for grouping meaningfully similar experiments for meta-analyses. Currently, this can only be done by human readers. We present the performance of common machine learning (text mining) methods applied to the problem of automatically classifying or labeling this literature. Labeling terms are from the Cognitive Paradigm Ontology (CogPO), the text corpora are abstracts of published functional neuroimaging papers, and the methods use the performance of a human expert as training data. We aim to replicate the expertās annotation of multiple labels per abstract identifying the experimental stimuli, cognitive paradigms, response types, and other relevant dimensions of the experiments. We use several standard machine learning methods: naive Bayes (NB), k -nearest neighbor, and support vector machines (specifically SMO or sequential minimal optimization). Exact match performance ranged from only 15% in the worst cases to 78% in the best cases. NB methods combined with binary relevance transformations performed strongly and were robust to overfitting. This collection of results demonstrates what can be achieved with off-the-shelf software components and little to no pre-processing of raw text
Review of The Politics of Scale: A History of Range Science by Nathan Sayre
Book details Sayre, NF The Politics of Scale: A History of Range Science Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 2017 288 pages, ISBN: Paper 978-022-608-
Non-equilibrium raft-like membrane domains under continuous recycling
We present a model for the kinetics of spontaneous membrane domain (raft)
assembly that includes the effect of membrane recycling ubiquitous in living
cells. We show that the domains have a broad power-law distribution with an
average radius that scales with the 1/4 power of the domain lifetime when the
line tension at the domain edges is large. For biologically reasonable
recycling and diffusion rates the average domain radius is in the tens of nm
range, consistent with observations. This represents one possible link between
signaling (involving rafts) and traffic (recycling) in cells. Finally, we
present evidence that suggests that the average raft size may be the same for
all scale-free recycling schemes.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Picoradian deflection measurement with an interferometric quasi-autocollimator using weak value amplification
We present an "interferometric quasi-autocollimator" that employs weak value
amplification to measure angular deflections of a target mirror. The device has
been designed to be insensitive to all translations of the target. We present a
conceptual explanation of the amplification effect used by the device. An
implementation of the device demonstrates sensitivities better than 10
picoradians per root hertz between 10 and 200 hertz.Comment: To be published in Optics Letter
- ā¦