4,229 research outputs found
Few-Shot Single-View 3-D Object Reconstruction with Compositional Priors
The impressive performance of deep convolutional neural networks in
single-view 3D reconstruction suggests that these models perform non-trivial
reasoning about the 3D structure of the output space. However, recent work has
challenged this belief, showing that complex encoder-decoder architectures
perform similarly to nearest-neighbor baselines or simple linear decoder models
that exploit large amounts of per category data in standard benchmarks. On the
other hand settings where 3D shape must be inferred for new categories with few
examples are more natural and require models that generalize about shapes. In
this work we demonstrate experimentally that naive baselines do not apply when
the goal is to learn to reconstruct novel objects using very few examples, and
that in a \emph{few-shot} learning setting, the network must learn concepts
that can be applied to new categories, avoiding rote memorization. To address
deficiencies in existing approaches to this problem, we propose three
approaches that efficiently integrate a class prior into a 3D reconstruction
model, allowing to account for intra-class variability and imposing an implicit
compositional structure that the model should learn. Experiments on the popular
ShapeNet database demonstrate that our method significantly outperform existing
baselines on this task in the few-shot setting
Transmission Investment and Expansion Planning in Electricity Market Environment
One of the most serious challenges for power industry restructuring is to maintain power system reliability at an acceptable level and to promote the overall economic efficiency of the whole power industry. To this end, transmission investment and expansion is inevitable. In the past decade, much effort has been made to address institutional structures, business models, incentives and regulation to assure appropriate transmission investments be made, and to develop workable assessment and planning methods for the deregulated environment. In this paper, a comprehensive survey is made on the state-of-the-art of several important issues associated with transmission investment and expansion planning in the electricity market environment, including: challenges of transmission investment and planning in the competitive market environment; transmission investment; merchant transmission; transmission rights; business models; transmission regulation; management of transmission investment and expansion; transmission planning methods; international experience.8 輸電監管在電力市場環境下,仍然需要對輸電系統進行監管,因為其仍具有自然壟斷特征,且要為實現公平競爭提供必要的場所。輸電監管的一個主要目標就是要促使輸電系統在滿足給定的可靠性要求的同時使經濟成本最低或經濟效益最高,例如使系統以最小的總成本向用戶供電。具體來講,對基于管制的輸電投資與擴展規劃進行監管的主要目的是降低未來不能有效利用輸電設備的風險,而對基于市場驅動的輸電投資與擴展規劃進行監管的主要目的是遏制有損整體社會福利的輸電投資
Elemental distribution within the long-period stacking ordered structure in a Mg-Gd-Zn-Mn alloy
High angle annular dark field scanning transmission electron microscope imaging and electron energy loss spectroscopy was used to elucidate the elemental distribution (Gd, Zn, Mn) within the long-period stacking ordered (LPSO) structure in a Mg-15Gd-0.8Zn-0.8Mn (wt%) alloy. While Gd and Zn enrichment was observed within the LPSO structure, no significant enrichment in Mn was observed. After averaging over a large region, a very weak Mn signal was resolved but no significant variations in Mn signal were observed over this region, suggesting that Mn is indeed present. These results provide useful information to support the future development of high performance Mg alloys
Surveillance and Genome Analysis of Human Bocavirus in Patients with Respiratory Infection in Guangzhou, China.
Human bocavirus (HBoV) is a novel parvovirus associated with respiratory tract diseases and gastrointestinal illness in adult and pediatric patients throughout the world. To investigate the epidemiological and genetic variation of HBoV in Guangzhou, South China, we screened 3460 throat swab samples from 1686 children and 1774 adults with acute respiratory infection symptoms for HBoV between March 2010 and February 2011, and analyzed the complete genome sequence of 2 HBoV strains. Specimens were screened for HBoV by real-time PCR and other 6 common respiratory viruses by RT-PCR or PCR. HBoV was detected in 58 (1.68%) out of 3460 samples, mostly from pediatric patients (52/58) and inpatient children (47/58). Six adult patients were detected as HBoV positive and 5 were emergency cases. Of these HBoV positive cases, 19 (32.76%) had co-pathogens including influenza virus (n = 5), RSV (n = 5), parainfluenza (n = 4), adenovirus (n = 1), coronavirus (n = 7). The complete genome sequences of 2 HBoVs strains (Genbank no. JN794565 and JN794566) were analyzed. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the 2 HBoV strains were HBoV1, and were most genetically close to ST2 (GenBank accession number DQ0000496). Recombination analysis confirmed that HBoV strain GZ9081 was an intra-genotype recombinant strain among HBoV1 variants.published_or_final_versio
Optical Lattices: Theory
This chapter presents an overview of the properties of a Bose-Einstein
condensate (BEC) trapped in a periodic potential. This system has attracted a
wide interest in the last years, and a few excellent reviews of the field have
already appeared in the literature (see, for instance, [1-3] and references
therein). For this reason, and because of the huge amount of published results,
we do not pretend here to be comprehensive, but we will be content to provide a
flavor of the richness of this subject, together with some useful references.
On the other hand, there are good reasons for our effort. Probably, the most
significant is that BEC in periodic potentials is a truly interdisciplinary
problem, with obvious connections with electrons in crystal lattices, polarons
and photons in optical fibers. Moreover, the BEC experimentalists have reached
such a high level of accuracy to create in the lab, so to speak, paradigmatic
Hamiltonians, which were first introduced as idealized theoretical models to
study, among others, dynamical instabilities or quantum phase transitions.Comment: Chapter 13 in Part VIII: "Optical Lattices" of "Emergent Nonlinear
Phenomena in Bose-Einstein Condensates: Theory and Experiment," edited by P.
G. Kevrekidis, D. J. Frantzeskakis, and R. Carretero-Gonzalez (Springer
Series on Atomic, Optical, and Plasma Physics, 2007) - pages 247-26
Hot Jupiters from Secular Planet--Planet Interactions
About 25 per cent of `hot Jupiters' (extrasolar Jovian-mass planets with
close-in orbits) are actually orbiting counter to the spin direction of the
star. Perturbations from a distant binary star companion can produce high
inclinations, but cannot explain orbits that are retrograde with respect to the
total angular momentum of the system. Such orbits in a stellar context can be
produced through secular (that is, long term) perturbations in hierarchical
triple-star systems. Here we report a similar analysis of planetary bodies,
including both octupole-order effects and tidal friction, and find that we can
produce hot Jupiters in orbits that are retrograde with respect to the total
angular momentum. With distant stellar mass perturbers, such an outcome is not
possible. With planetary perturbers, the inner orbit's angular momentum
component parallel to the total angular momentum need not be constant. In fact,
as we show here, it can even change sign, leading to a retrograde orbit. A
brief excursion to very high eccentricity during the chaotic evolution of the
inner orbit allows planet-star tidal interactions to rapidly circularize that
orbit, decoupling the planets and forming a retrograde hot Jupiter.Comment: accepted for publication by Nature, 3 figures (version after proof -
some typos corrected
Phase-slip induced dissipation in an atomic Bose-Hubbard system
Phase slips play a primary role in dissipation across a wide spectrum of
bosonic systems, from determining the critical velocity of superfluid helium to
generating resistance in thin superconducting wires. This subject has also
inspired much technological interest, largely motivated by applications
involving nanoscale superconducting circuit elements, e.g., standards based on
quantum phase-slip junctions. While phase slips caused by thermal fluctuations
at high temperatures are well understood, controversy remains over the role of
phase slips in small-scale superconductors. In solids, problems such as
uncontrolled noise sources and disorder complicate the study and application of
phase slips. Here we show that phase slips can lead to dissipation for a clean
and well-characterized Bose-Hubbard (BH) system by experimentally studying
transport using ultra-cold atoms trapped in an optical lattice. In contrast to
previous work, we explore a low velocity regime described by the 3D BH model
which is not affected by instabilities, and we measure the effect of
temperature on the dissipation strength. We show that the damping rate of
atomic motion-the analogue of electrical resistance in a solid-in the confining
parabolic potential fits well to a model that includes finite damping at zero
temperature. The low-temperature behaviour is consistent with the theory of
quantum tunnelling of phase slips, while at higher temperatures a cross-over
consistent with the transition to thermal activation of phase slips is evident.
Motion-induced features reminiscent of vortices and vortex rings associated
with phase slips are also observed in time-of-flight imaging.Comment: published in Nature 453, 76 (2008
ABCD Neurocognitive Prediction Challenge 2019: Predicting Individual Residual Fluid Intelligence Scores from Cortical Grey Matter Morphology
We predicted fluid intelligence from T1-weighted MRI data available as part of the ABCD NP Challenge 2019, using morphological similarity of grey-matter regions across the cortex. Individual structural covariance networks (SCN) were abstracted into graph-theory metrics averaged over nodes across the brain and in data-driven communities/modules. Metrics included degree, path length, clustering coefficient, centrality, rich club coefficient, and small-worldness. These features derived from the training set were used to build various regression models for predicting residual fluid intelligence scores, with performance evaluated both using cross-validation within the training set and using the held-out validation set. Our predictions on the test set were generated with a support vector regression model trained on the training set. We found minimal improvement over predicting a zero residual fluid intelligence score across the sample population, implying that structural covariance networks calculated from T1-weighted MR imaging data provide little information about residual fluid intelligence
- …