4,073 research outputs found
The ecological approach to multimodal system design
Following the ecological approach to visual perception, this paper presents a framework that emphasizes the role of vision on referring actions. In particular, affordances are utilized to explain gestures variability in a multimodal human-computer interaction. Such a proposal is consistent with empirical findings obtained in different simulation studies showing how referring gestures are determined by the mutuality of information coming from the target and the set of movements available to the speaker. A prototype that follows anthropomorphic perceptual principles to analyze gestures has been developed and tested in preliminary computational validations
Evaluation of a procedure to assess the adverse effects of illicit drugs.
The assessment procedure of new synthetic illicit drugs that are not documented in the UN treaty on psychotropic drugs was evaluated using a modified Electre model. Drugs were evaluated by an expert panel via the open Delphi approach, where the written score was discussed on 16 items, covering medical, health, legal, and criminalistic issues of the drugs. After this face-to-face discussion the drugs were scored again. Taking the assessment of ketamine as an example, it appeared that each expert used its own scale to score, and that policymakers do not score deviant from experts trained in the medical-biological field. Of the five drugs evaluated by the panel, p-methoxy-metamphetamine (PMMA), gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB), and 4-methylthio-amphetamine (MTA) were assessed as more adverse than ketamine and psilocine and psilocybine-containing mushrooms. Whereas some experts slightly adjusted during the assessment procedure their opinion on ketamine and PMMA, the opinion on mushrooms was not affected by the discussion held between the two scoring rounds. All experts rank the five drugs in a similar way on the adverse effect scale i.e., concordance scale of the Electre model, indicating unanimity in the expert panel with respect to the risk classification of these abused drugs
Ecological Interfaces: Extending the Pointing Paradigm by Visual Context
Following the ecological approach to visual perception, this paper presents an innovative framework for the design of multimodal systems. The proposal emphasises the role of the visual context on gestural communication. It is aimed at extending the concept of affordances to explain referring gesture variability. The validity of the approach is confirmed by results of a simulation experiment. A discussion of practical implications of our findings for software architecture design is presented
Spin-orbit coupled particle in a spin bath
We consider a spin-orbit coupled particle confined in a quantum dot in a bath
of impurity spins. We investigate the consequences of spin-orbit coupling on
the interactions that the particle mediates in the spin bath. We show that in
the presence of spin-orbit coupling, the impurity-impurity interactions are no
longer spin-conserving. We quantify the degree of this symmetry breaking and
show how it relates to the spin-orbit coupling strength. We identify several
ways how the impurity ensemble can in this way relax its spin by coupling to
phonons. A typical resulting relaxation rate for a self-assembled Mn-doped ZnTe
quantum dot populated by a hole is 1 s. We also show that decoherence
arising from nuclear spins in lateral quantum dots is still removable by a spin
echo protocol, even if the confined electron is spin-orbit coupled.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figur
Clinical determinants of vaginal dryness in patients with primary Sjögren's syndrome
Objective. The majority of women with primary Sjogren's syndrome (pSS) suffer from vaginal dryness, which negatively impacts daily and sexual activities. As little is known about the aetiology and clinical context of this complaint, this study investigated the relationship between vaginal dryness and other clinical parameters associated with pSS. Methods. Female participants of the REgistry of Sjogren syndrome at UMCG - LongiTudinal (RESULT) cohort who fulfilled ACR-EULAR and/or AECG classification criteria for pSS were included, using baseline data for analyses. Patient-reported vaginal dryness (range 0-10) was correlated with demographic characteristics, systemic disease activity (i.e. ESSDAI), Sjogren's Syndrome Disease Damage Index, salivary and lacrimal gland function, patient-reported outcomes (ESSPRI, MFI), serology and quality of life (SF-36, EQ-5D). Significantly associated parameters (p Results. This cross-sectional study included 199 women with pSS; mean age was 52 +/- 14 years, 53% were postmenopausal, and median vaginal dryness score was 5 (IQR 2-7). Vaginal dryness was significantly associated with older age, postmenopausal status, peripheral neuropathy, oral and ocular dryness, ESSPRI and SF-36 mental and general health. After correction for age, menopausal status and medication use, peripheral neuropathy (B=1.632), oral dryness (B=0.302), and ocular dryness (B=0.230) were independently associated with vaginal dryness. Conclusion. The independent association of vaginal dryness with oral and ocular dryness might imply that the aetiology of these symptoms is partly shared. Of all extraglandular features, only peripheral neuropathy was independently associated with vaginal dryness, suggesting that peripheral neuropathy plays a significant role in the pathology of vaginal dryness in pSS
Broad histogram relation for the bond number and its applications
We discuss Monte Carlo methods based on the cluster (graph) representation
for spin models. We derive a rigorous broad histogram relation (BHR) for the
bond number; a counterpart for the energy was derived by Oliveira previously. A
Monte Carlo dynamics based on the number of potential moves for the bond number
is proposed. We show the efficiency of the BHR for the bond number in
calculating the density of states and other physical quantities.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
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