1,726 research outputs found

    Five Minutes with Tim Gowers and Tyler Neylon: ā€œThe boycott has made Elsevier more concerned about its public imageā€

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    Earlier this year Tim Gowers sparked debate about the future of academic publishing when he declared his intentions to boycott Elsevier. With Tyler Neylonā€™s work on the Cost of Knowledge website, the pair discuss how they made a splash in the comfy world of academic publishing

    Junior Recital:Tyler Mitchell, violin

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    This recital is presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Bachelor of Music in Performance Mr. Mitchell studies violin with Helen Kim.https://digitalcommons.kennesaw.edu/musicprograms/1646/thumbnail.jp

    Adding Support for Delay Tolerance to IPv6 Networks

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    AbstractAs we continue to connect ever lower power and more power constrained devices to the Internet of Things the problem of main- taining constant end to end connectivity becomes harder. Accepting that continuous end to end connectivity cannot be maintained, we are forced to seek solutions to allow good operating function. Delay Tolerant Networking, an evolution of existing store and forward systems is a candidate for resolving this issue, however, current implementations are not ideal for use in constrained Inter- net of Things environments. We propose a solution to this by integrating the capabilities of Delay Tolerant Networking into the IP layer, in such a way as to maintain compatibility with existing and future systems and minimising additional overhead. This has been achieved by developing a new IPv6 Hop by Hop option header which contains the information required for messages to be delayed. This solution is then demonstrated to be implementable within the limitations of current Internet of Things hardware

    Conserved Currents are Not Anomaly-Safe

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    New vector bosons that are coupled to conserved currents in the Standard Model exhibit enhanced rates below the electroweak scale from anomalous triangle amplitudes, leading to (energy/vector mass)2^2 enhancements to rare Z decays and flavor-changing meson decays into the longitudinally polarized vector boson. In the case of a vector boson gauging U(1)Bāˆ’LU(1)_{B-L}, the mass gap between the top quark and the remaining SM fermions leads to (energy/vector mass)2^2 enhancements for processes with momentum transfer below the top mass. In addition, we examine the case of an intergenerational U(1)B3āˆ’L2U(1)_{B_3 - L_2} that has been proposed to resolve the (gāˆ’2)Ī¼(g-2)_\mu anomaly with an MeV scale DM candidate, and we find that these enhanced processes constrain the entire parameter space.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl

    A flexible map of flourishing: The dynamics and drivers of flourishing, well-being, health, and happiness

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    Concepts like flourishing, well-being, health, and happiness are of increasing interest across many fields, from psychology and medicine to politics and economics. However, these terms are used in diverse and contested ways, which makes it hard to find common ground and understanding. To attempt to help remedy the confusion, this paper offers an overarching conceptual ā€œmapā€ within which these concepts can be situated, thereby providing a common language and framework for their consideration. Moreover, while the overall configuration of this map is conceptually and logically stable, its specific elements are more flexible, particularly in terms of scalable granularity (allowing fine-grained differentiation of internal regions) and epistemological openness (allowing revisions in light of gains in knowledge). As such, the map can be adapted to suit different fields, and updated to accommodate advances in understanding. To that end, we clarify topics of investigation that are still in need of development, providing a roadmap for future research

    A global history of happiness

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    Happiness is an increasingly prominent topic of interest across numerous academic fields. However, the literature can sometimes imply it is predominantly a modern concern. Relatedly, critics have argued that contemporary scholarship on happiness is Western-centric, yet in so doing can appear to suggest that happiness is mainly a Western preoccupation. However, taking an expansive view of happiness ā€“ defining it broadly as a desirable mental experience ā€“ one can appreciate that versions of this phenomenon have been of interest to humans across cultures and throughout history. To articulate this perspective, this paper offers a brief overview of 14 different eras, spanning a range of global regions, in each case highlighting concepts and concerns that bear some close resemblance to happiness. In so doing, the paper encourages a deeper and more inclusive understanding of this vital topic

    Similarities in fan preferences for minor-league baseball across the American southeast

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    Three Minor League Baseball leagues across the Southeastern United States are studied in order to determine what drives fan attendance. Individual game attendance and game characteristics are examined for three leagues located in the American southeast, the Florida State League, the Southern League, and the South Atlantic League. Despite the three leagues encompassing different levels of play (from A to AA), the determinants of attendance are similar across leagues. Factors affecting attendance such as winning percentage, weather conditions, local income and population, and individual game promotions, such as fireworks, are explored

    The varieties of vitality: A cross-cultural lexical analysis

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    Vitality has been underappreciated and underexplored by academia at large. This oversight is potentially explained by the Western-centric nature of most fields, with vitality having been comparatively neglected in the West relative to elsewhere. One explanation for this lacuna is that vitality is not easily pigeonholed within the ontological categories dominant in the West, such as mind and body. This paper therefore aims to learn from cultures that have cultivated a greater understanding of vitality, doing so by engaging with relevant ā€˜untranslatableā€™ words (i.e., those without exact equivalent in English), thus enriching our conceptual map of this topic. Over 200 relevant terms were located and analyzed using an adapted form of grounded theory. Three themes were identified, each with four subthemes: spirit (life force, channels, soul, and transcendence); energy (fortitude, channeling, willpower, and recharging); and heart (desire, passion, affection, and satisfaction). The paper thus refines our understanding of this important topic and provides a foundation for future research.

    Spatial patterns in the oxygen isotope composition of daily rainfall in the British Isles

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    Understanding the modern day relationship between climate and the oxygen isotopic composition of precipitation (Ī“18OP) is crucial for obtaining rigorous palaeoclimate reconstructions from a variety of archives. To date, the majority of empirical studies into the meteorological controls over Ī“18OP rely upon daily, event scale, or monthly time series from individual locations, resulting in uncertainties concerning the representativeness of statistical models and the mechanisms behind those relationships. Here, we take an alternative approach by analysing daily patterns in Ī“18OP from multiple stations across the British Isles (n = 10ā€“70 stations). We use these data to examine the spatial and seasonal heterogeneity of regression statistics between Ī“18OP and common predictors (temperature, precipitation amount and the North Atlantic Oscillation index; NAO). Temperature and NAO are poor predictors of daily Ī“18OP in the British Isles, exhibiting weak and/or inconsistent effects both spatially and between seasons. By contrast Ī“18OP and rainfall amount consistently correlate at most locations, and for all months analysed, with spatial and temporal variability in the regression coefficients. The maps also allow comparison with daily synoptic weather types, and suggest characteristic Ī“18OP patterns, particularly associated with Cylonic Lamb Weather Types. Mapping daily Ī“18OP across the British Isles therefore provides a more coherent picture of the patterns in Ī“18OP, which will ultimately lead to a better understanding of the climatic controls. These observations are another step forward towards developing a more detailed, mechanistic framework for interpreting stable isotopes in rainfall as a palaeoclimate and hydrological tracer
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