8,529 research outputs found
My impossible dream.
The article presents the author's views on leisure studies. The author says, "I have always thought of myself as different. Different in the sense that while growing up I never, in my mind, seemed to fit into what society deemed "normal." For me this society was Southern California, home to movie stars and the latest fashion trends; the so-called "beautiful people." In the 1980s and 1990s, this society demanded a certain look that was anything but normal, and growing up in this shadow of influence, if you did not fit in "you knew it. It is still much the same today. Anywhere you go, advertisements and media coverage about beauty, diet and how to live bombard you. People who stand out are often targeted and made fun of for being and looking different from the ideal
Informational Substitutes
We propose definitions of substitutes and complements for pieces of
information ("signals") in the context of a decision or optimization problem,
with game-theoretic and algorithmic applications. In a game-theoretic context,
substitutes capture diminishing marginal value of information to a rational
decision maker. We use the definitions to address the question of how and when
information is aggregated in prediction markets. Substitutes characterize
"best-possible" equilibria with immediate information aggregation, while
complements characterize "worst-possible", delayed aggregation. Game-theoretic
applications also include settings such as crowdsourcing contests and Q\&A
forums. In an algorithmic context, where substitutes capture diminishing
marginal improvement of information to an optimization problem, substitutes
imply efficient approximation algorithms for a very general class of (adaptive)
information acquisition problems.
In tandem with these broad applications, we examine the structure and design
of informational substitutes and complements. They have equivalent, intuitive
definitions from disparate perspectives: submodularity, geometry, and
information theory. We also consider the design of scoring rules or
optimization problems so as to encourage substitutability or complementarity,
with positive and negative results. Taken as a whole, the results give some
evidence that, in parallel with substitutable items, informational substitutes
play a natural conceptual and formal role in game theory and algorithms.Comment: Full version of FOCS 2016 paper. Single-column, 61 pages (48 main
text, 13 references and appendix
Computational wing design studies relating to natural laminar flow
Two research studies are described which directly relate to the application of natural laminar flow (NLF) technology to transonic transport-type wing planforms. Each involved using state-of-the-art computational methods to design three-dimensional wing contours which generate significant runs of favorable pressure gradients. The first study supported the Variable Sweep Transition Flight Experiment and involves design of a full-span glove which extends from the leading edge to the spoiler hinge line on the upper surface of an F-14 outer wing panel. A wing was designed computationally for a corporate transport aircraft in the second study. The resulting wing design generated favorable pressure gradients from the leading edge aft to the mid-chord on both upper and lower surfaces at the cruise design point. Detailed descriptions of the computational design approach are presented along with the various constraints imposed on each of the designs
Spline methods for extracting interest rate curves from coupon bond prices
Cubic splines have long been used to extract the discount, yield, and forward rate curves from coupon bond data. McCulloch used regression splines to estimate the discount function, and, more recently, Fisher, Nychka, and Zervos used smoothed splines, with the roughness penalty selected by generalized cross-validation, to estimate the forward rate curve. I propose using a smoothed spline but with a roughness penalty that can vary across maturities, to estimate the forward rate curve. This method is tested against the methods of McCulloch and Fisher, Nychka, and Zervos using monthly bond data from 1970 through 1995.Econometric models ; Financial markets ; Prices ; Statistics
Forest Inventories: Discrepancies and Uncertainties
Credits for sequestered carbon augment forestsâ already considerable value as natural habitat and as producers of timber and biomass, making their accurate inventory more critical than ever before. This article examines discrepancies in inventories of forest attributes and their sources in four variables: area, timber volume per area, biomass per timber volume, and carbon concentration. Documented discrepancies range up to a multibillion-ton difference in the global stock of carbon in trees. Because the variables are multiplied together to estimate an attribute like carbon stock, more precise measurement of the most certain variable improves accuracy little, and a 10 percent error in biomass per timber levers a discrepancy as much as a mistake in millions of hectares. More precise measurements of, say, accessible stands cannot remedy inaccuracies from biased sampling of regional forests. The discrepancies and uncertainties documented here underscore the obligation to improve monitoring of global forests.forest monitoring, Forest Identity, forest carbon, remote sensing
Waggoner, Darvin interviewed by Jean Strader
Transcript of an interview with Darvin and Charlotte Waggoner, residents of southeast Kansas, and participants in the Southeast Kansas Oral History Project.https://digitalcommons.pittstate.edu/seks_farm_oral/1040/thumbnail.jp
- âŠ