18,285 research outputs found

    Investigating Retrieval Method Selection with Axiomatic Features

    Get PDF
    We consider algorithm selection in the context of ad-hoc information retrieval. Given a query and a pair of retrieval methods, we propose a meta-learner that predicts how to combine the methods' relevance scores into an overall relevance score. Inspired by neural models' different properties with regard to IR axioms, these predictions are based on features that quantify axiom-related properties of the query and its top ranked documents. We conduct an evaluation on TREC Web Track data and find that the meta-learner often significantly improves over the individual methods. Finally, we conduct feature and query weight analyses to investigate the meta-learner's behavior

    Design and Development of a Class EF2 Inverter and Rectifier for Multi-megahertz Wireless Power Transfer Systems

    Get PDF
    This paper presents the design and implementation of a Class EF2 inverter and Class EF2 rectifier for two -W wireless power transfer (WPT) systems, one operating at 6.78 MHz and the other at 27.12 MHz. It will be shown that the Class EF2 circuits can be designed to have beneficial features for WPT applications such as reduced second-harmonic component and lower total harmonic distortion, higher power-output capability, reduction in magnetic core requirements and operation at higher frequencies in rectification compared to other circuit topologies. A model will first be presented to analyze the circuits and to derive values of its components to achieve optimum switching operation. Additional analysis regarding harmonic content, magnetic core requirements and open-circuit protection will also be performed. The design and implementation process of the two Class-EF2-based WPT systems will be discussed and compared to an equivalent Class-E-based WPT system. Experimental results will be provided to confirm validity of the analysis. A dc-dc efficiency of 75% was achieved with Class-EF2-based systems

    Courts and Executives

    Full text link
    William Howard Taft was both our twenty-seventh president and the tenth Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court -- the only person to have ever held both high positions in our country. He once famously commented that presidents may come and go, but the Supreme Court goes on forever (Pringle 1998). His remark reminds us that presidents serve only four-year terms (and are now limited to two of them), but justices of the Supreme court are appointed for life and leave a legacy of precedent-setting cases after departing the High Court. Of course, presidents also leave a legacy of important decisions, not the least of which being their appointment of federal judges. [excerpt

    Arithmetic properties of eigenvalues of generalized Harper operators on graphs

    Full text link
    Let \Qbar denote the field of complex algebraic numbers. A discrete group GG is said to have the σ\sigma-multiplier algebraic eigenvalue property, if for every matrix AA with entries in the twisted group ring over the complex algebraic numbers M_d(\Qbar(G,\sigma)), regarded as an operator on l2(G)dl^2(G)^d, the eigenvalues of AA are algebraic numbers, where σ\sigma is an algebraic multiplier. Such operators include the Harper operator and the discrete magnetic Laplacian that occur in solid state physics. We prove that any finitely generated amenable, free or surface group has this property for any algebraic multiplier σ\sigma. In the special case when σ\sigma is rational (σn\sigma^n=1 for some positive integer nn) this property holds for a larger class of groups, containing free groups and amenable groups, and closed under taking directed unions and extensions with amenable quotients. Included in the paper are proofs of other spectral properties of such operators.Comment: 28 pages, latex2e, paper revise

    A mission synthesis algorithm for editing variable amplitude fatigue signals

    Get PDF
    This paper presents a wavelet-based fatigue data editing algorithm, known as Wavelet Bump Extraction (WBE), to summarise long record of fatigue loadings. The key point of this algorithm is to produce a shorter time history (mission signal) that retains the majority of the original fatigue damage whilst preserving cycle sequence information. In WBE, features or bumps are identified in characteristic frequency bands using the Daubechies’ wavelet transform. Comparison of the fatigue life between the original and mission signals was performed to validate the algorithm. The fatigue life was predicted using a variable amplitude fatigue damage model and the results showed a good correlation between the damage caused by the original and mission signals. Finally, the findings suggest that WBE is a suitable approach for producing a shortened mission signal for accelerated fatigue testing

    A mission synthesis algorithm for fatigue damage analysis

    Get PDF
    This paper presents a signal processing based algorithm, the Mildly Nonstationary Mission Synthesis (MNMS), which produces a short mission signal from long records of experimental data. The algorithm uses the Discrete Fourier Transform, Orthogonal Wavelet Transform and bump reinsertion procedures. In order to observe the algorithm effectiveness a fatigue damage case study was performed for a vehicle lower suspension arm using signals containing tensile and compressive preloading. The mission synthesis results were compared to the original road data in terms of both the global signal statistics and the fatigue damage variation as a function of compression ratio. Three bump reinsertion methods were used and evaluated. The methods differed in the manner in which bumps (shock events) from different wavelet groups (frequency bands) were synchronised during the reinsertion process. One method, based on time synchronised section reinsertion, produced the best results in terms of mission signal kurtosis, crest factor, root-mean-square level and power spectral density. For improved algorithm performance, bump selection was identified as the main control parameter requiring optimisation

    Benefits realisation for healthcare

    Get PDF
    Following the emergent importance of benefits realisation applied to healthcare infrastructure and service development programs, HaCIRIC has undertaken a research initiative targeting the development of a robust and comprehensive Benefits Realisation (BeReal©) process. The resulting model is focusing on how benefits should be elicited at the initial strategic stages, and how benefits should be deployed, managed and traced along the lifecycle of a programme so their realisation contributes to successful health outcomes. Subsequently BeReal© aspires to be an appropriate method to drive and control the programme plan; providing tools and techniques for defining specific benefits. It also allows the measurement and evaluation of the extent to which those benefits are delivered. We have set ourselves the objective of identifying current best practices and demonstrate how to improve benefits realisation in healthcare infrastructure provision. The HaCIRIC team in active collaboration with leading industry partners have undertaken various case and comparator studies not only to define a business critical process but to set out an ideology which places benefits realisation at the heart of securing wholly integrated (collective) change. We believe that to deliver consistent high quality infrastructure and services within an ever changing investment model requires a different level of thinking and understanding towards benefits realisation. The challenge of answering community needs through intelligent investment in infrastructure is complex and demands a deeper and inclusive awareness and appreciation of how to deliver benefits and effectively allocate resources. The BeReal© initiative seeks to contribute methodologically and intends to help spending money intelligently, working with programme and project related stakeholders, securing that the best possible benefits are obtained for the overall healthcare communities. This report highlights selected performed initiatives and summarises BeReal© process’s major characteristics, covering far more than the follow-up of a competitive tendering process and of the development of a traditional business case. BeReal© copes with a detailed definition of changing activities, breakdown of (needs into) benefits that drive the investment, supports decision-making, proposes the development of controlling initiatives and suggests major awareness to the implementation of corrective actions. We seek to continue innovating, stimulate learning, contributing to an increase of health and care performance that properly answers to community needs and intelligently invests public and private resources

    CEDR: Contextualized Embeddings for Document Ranking

    No full text
    Although considerable attention has been given to neural ranking architectures recently, far less attention has been paid to the term representations that are used as input to these models. In this work, we investigate how two pretrained contextualized language modes (ELMo and BERT) can be utilized for ad-hoc document ranking. Through experiments on TREC benchmarks, we find that several existing neural ranking architectures can benefit from the additional context provided by contextualized language models. Furthermore, we propose a joint approach that incorporates BERT's classification vector into existing neural models and show that it outperforms state-of-the-art ad-hoc ranking baselines. We call this joint approach CEDR (Contextualized Embeddings for Document Ranking). We also address practical challenges in using these models for ranking, including the maximum input length imposed by BERT and runtime performance impacts of contextualized language models

    An experimental validation of the fatigue damaging events extracted using the wavelet bump extraction (WBE) algorithm

    Get PDF
    This paper describes an experimental validation of the fatigue damaging events that were identified and extracted using a wavelet-based fatigue data editing technique. This technique, known as the Wavelet Bump Extraction (WBE) algorithm, is specifically designed to summarise a long record of fatigue variable amplitude (VA) loading whilst preserving the original load cycle sequence. Using WBE the fatigue damaging events were identified and extracted in order to produce a mission signal. In order to validate the effectiveness of WBE in practical applications a VA road load time history that was measured on a road vehicle suspension arm was taken as a case study. Uniaxial fatigue tests were performed using the original signal, the WBE mission signal and the individual WBE extracted segments. A mirror polished specimen of SAE 1042 steel was tested using a servo-hydraulic machine. The fatigue lives measured for these VA loadings were then compared to the fatigue lives calculated from a VA strain loading fatigue damage model. The results show a good fatigue life correlation at the coefficient of 0.98 between the prediction and experiment. For the road load time history considered, the WBE mission signal was found to be only 40% the time duration of the original time history while maintaining 60% of the fatigue damage according to analytical calculation and 87% according to experimental testing
    corecore