31,741 research outputs found
Comment on ``Analytic Structure of One-Dimensional Localization Theory: Re-Examining Mott's Law''
The low-frequency conductivity of a disordered Fermi gas in one spatial
dimension is governed by the Mott-Berezinskii law . In a recent Letter [Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 1760 (2000)]
A. O. Gogolin claimed that this law is invalid, challenging our basic
understanding of disordered systems and a massive amount of previous
theoretical work. We point out two calculational errors in Gogolin's paper.
Once we correct them, the Mott-Berezinskii formula is fully recovered. We also
present numerical results supporting the Mott-Berezinskii formula but ruling
out that of Gogolin.Comment: 1 page, 1 figure, RevTeX
Endogenous Health Care, Life Expectancy, and Economic Development
We study the endogenous relationship between health care, life expectancy and output in a modified neoclassical growth model. While health care competes resources away from goods production, it prolongs life expectancy which in turn leads to higher capital accumulation. We show that savings and health care are complements in equilibrium, with both rising with economic development. Our model is therefore consistent with several stylized facts, namely, (i) countries spend more on health care as they prosper, (ii) individuals in rich countries tend to live longer, and (iii) population aging is more pronounced in rich countries. Moreover, through simulation, health care and health production technology are found to be growth and welfare enhancing.life expectancy, health care, economic growth, population aging
Single-image measurements of monochromatic subdiffraction dimolecular separations
Measuring subdiffraction separations between single fluorescent particles is
important for biological, nano-, and medical-technology studies. Major
challenges include (i) measuring changing molecular separations with high
temporal resolution while (ii) using identical fluorescent labels. Here we
report a method that measures subdiffraction separations between two identical
fluorophores by using a single image of milliseconds exposure time and a
standard single-molecule fluorescent imaging setup. The fluorophores do not
need to be bleached and the separations can be measured down to 40 nm with
nanometer precision. The method is called single-molecule image deconvolution
-- SMID, and in this article it measures the standard deviation (SD) of
Gaussian-approximated combined fluorescent intensity profiles of the two
subdiffraction-separated fluorophores. This study enables measurements of (i)
subdiffraction dimolecular separations using a single image, lifting the
temporal resolution of seconds to milliseconds, while (ii) using identical
fluorophores. The single-image nature of this dimer separation study makes it a
single-image molecular analysis (SIMA) study.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
Fiscal and Monetary Policies and the Cost of Sudden Stops
This article investigates the effects of macroeconomic policy (monetary and fiscal) on output growth during financial crises characterized by a âsudden stopâ in net capital inflows in developing and emerging market economies. We investigate 83 sudden stop crises in 77 countries over 1982-2003 using a baseline empirical model to control for the various determinants of output losses during sudden stop crises. Extending the baseline model to account for policies-- contractionary as well as expansionary-- we measure the marginal effects of policy on output losses. Simple descriptive statistics indicate no apparent correlation between the costs of financial crises and the economic policies pursed at the time. Once controlling for various pre-conditions and other factors, however, we find that monetary and fiscal tightening at the time of a sudden stop crisis significantly worsens output losses.Output losses, financial crises, sudden stops, fiscal policy, financial policy
Nested Hierarchical Dirichlet Processes
We develop a nested hierarchical Dirichlet process (nHDP) for hierarchical
topic modeling. The nHDP is a generalization of the nested Chinese restaurant
process (nCRP) that allows each word to follow its own path to a topic node
according to a document-specific distribution on a shared tree. This alleviates
the rigid, single-path formulation of the nCRP, allowing a document to more
easily express thematic borrowings as a random effect. We derive a stochastic
variational inference algorithm for the model, in addition to a greedy subtree
selection method for each document, which allows for efficient inference using
massive collections of text documents. We demonstrate our algorithm on 1.8
million documents from The New York Times and 3.3 million documents from
Wikipedia.Comment: To appear in IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine
Intelligence, Special Issue on Bayesian Nonparametric
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