28,633 research outputs found
Variance Control in Weak Value Measurement Pointers
The variance of an arbitrary pointer observable is considered for the general
case that a complex weak value is measured using a complex valued pointer
state. For the typical cases where the pointer observable is either its
position or momentum, the associated expressions for the pointer's variance
after the measurement contain a term proportional to the product of the weak
value's imaginary part with the rate of change of the third central moment of
position relative to the initial pointer state just prior to the time of the
measurement interaction when position is the observable - or with the initial
pointer state's third central moment of momentum when momentum is the
observable. These terms provide a means for controlling pointer position and
momentum variance and identify control conditions which - when satisfied - can
yield variances that are smaller after the measurement than they were before
the measurement. Measurement sensitivities which are useful for estimating weak
value measurement accuracies are also briefly discussed.Comment: submitted to Phys Rev
Evaluating the Usability of Automatically Generated Captions for People who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing
The accuracy of Automated Speech Recognition (ASR) technology has improved,
but it is still imperfect in many settings. Researchers who evaluate ASR
performance often focus on improving the Word Error Rate (WER) metric, but WER
has been found to have little correlation with human-subject performance on
many applications. We propose a new captioning-focused evaluation metric that
better predicts the impact of ASR recognition errors on the usability of
automatically generated captions for people who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing
(DHH). Through a user study with 30 DHH users, we compared our new metric with
the traditional WER metric on a caption usability evaluation task. In a
side-by-side comparison of pairs of ASR text output (with identical WER), the
texts preferred by our new metric were preferred by DHH participants. Further,
our metric had significantly higher correlation with DHH participants'
subjective scores on the usability of a caption, as compared to the correlation
between WER metric and participant subjective scores. This new metric could be
used to select ASR systems for captioning applications, and it may be a better
metric for ASR researchers to consider when optimizing ASR systems.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, published in ACM SIGACCESS Conference on
Computers and Accessibility (ASSETS '17
Fracture mechanics approach to design analysis of notches, steps and internal cut-outs in planar components
A new approach to the assessment and optimization of geometric stress-concentrating features is proposed on the basis of the correspondence between sharp crack or corner stressfield intensity factors and conventional elastic stress concentration factors (SCFs) for radiused transitions. This approach complements the application of finite element analysis (FEA) and the use of standard SCF data from the literature. The method makes it possible to develop closed-form solutions for SCFs in cases where corresponding solutions for the sharp crack geometries exist. This is helpful in the context of design optimization. The analytical basis of the correspondence is shown, together with the limits on applicability where stress-free boundaries near the stress concentrating feature are present or adjacent features interact. Examples are given which compare parametric results derived from FEA with closed-form solutions based on the proposed method. New information is given on the stress state at a 90° corner or width step, where the magnitude of the stress field intensity is related to that of the corresponding crack geometry. This correspondence enables the user to extend further the application of crack-tip stress-field intensity information to square-cornered steps, external U-grooves, and internal cut-outs
Tris(hydroxypropyl)phosphine Oxide: A Chiral Three-Dimensional Material with Nonlinear Optical Properties
The achiral C_(3v) organic phosphine tris(hydroxypropyl)phosphine oxide (1) crystallizes in the unusual chiral hexagonal space group P6_3. The structure is highly ordered because each phosphine oxide moiety forms three hydrogen bonds with adjacent hydroxy groups from three different molecules. The properties of the crystals and the presence of hydrogen bonding interactions were investigated using single crystal Raman spectroscopy. The crystals show nonlinear optical properties and are capable of efficient second harmonic generation
High resolution spectroscopic study of red clump stars in the Galaxy: iron group elements
The main atmospheric parameters and abundances of the iron group elements
(vanadium, chromium, iron, cobalt and nickel) are determined for 62 red giant
"clump" stars revealed in the Galactic field by the Hipparcos orbiting
observatory. The stars form a homogeneous sample with the mean value of
temperature T=4750 +- 160K, of surface gravity log g = 2.41 +- 0.26 and the
mean value of metallicity [Fe/H] = -0.04 +- 0.15 dex. A Gaussian fit to the
[Fe/H] distribution produces the mean [Fe/H] = -0.01 dex and dispersion of
[Fe/H] = 0.08 dex. The near-solar metallicity and small dispersion of [Fe/H] of
clump stars of the Galaxy obtained in this work confirm the theoretical model
of the Hipparcos clump by Girardi & Salaris (2001). This suggests that nearby
clump stars are (in the mean) relatively young objects, reflecting mainly the
near-solar metallicities developed in the local disk during the last few Gyrs
of its history. We find iron group element to iron abundance ratios in clump
giants to be close to solar.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Types and correlates of school non-attendance in students with autism spectrum disorders
School non-attendance in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) has received very little attention to date. The study aimed to provide a comprehensive description of school non-attendance in students with ASD. Through an online survey, parents of 486 children (mean age 11 years) reported on school attendance over one month, and reasons for instances of non-attendance. On average, students missed five days of school of a possible 23 days. Persistent non-attendance (absent on 10%+ of available sessions) occurred among 43% of students. School non-attendance was associated with child older age, not living in a two-parent household, parental unemployment and, especially, attending a mainstream school. School refusal accounted for 43% of non-attendance. School exclusion and school withdrawal each accounted for 9% of absences. Truancy was almost non-existent. Non-problematic absenteeism (mostly related to medical appointments and illness) accounted for 32% of absences. Non-problematic absenteeism was more likely among those with intellectual disability, school refusal was more likely among older students, and school exclusion was more likely among students from single-parent, unemployed, and well educated households. Findings suggest school non-attendance in ASD is a significant issue, and that it is important to capture detail about attendance patterns and reasons for school non-attendance
Tele-operated high speed anthropomorphic dextrous hands with object shape and texture identification
This paper reports on the development of two number of robotic hands have been developed which focus on tele-operated high speed anthropomorphic dextrous robotic hands. The aim of developing these hands was to achieve a system that seamlessly interfaced between humans and robots. To provide sensory feedback, to a remote operator tactile sensors were developed to be mounted on the robotic hands. Two systems were developed, the first, being a skin sensor capable of shape reconstruction placed on the palm of the hand to feed back the shape of objects grasped and the second is a highly sensitive tactile array for surface texture identification
- …