16,726 research outputs found
A New Look at Racial Profiling: Evidence from the Boston Police Department
This paper provides new evidence on the role of preference-based versus statistical discrimination in racial profiling using a unique data set that includes the race of both the driver and the officer. We first generalize the model presented in Knowles, Persico and Todd (2001) and show that the fundamental insight that allows them to distinguish between statistical discrimination and preference-based discrimination depends on the specialized shapes of the best response functions in their model. Thus, the test that they employ is not robust to a range of alternative modeling assumptions. However, we also show that if statistical discrimination alone explains differences in the rate at which the vehicles of drivers of different races are searched, then search decisions should be independent of officer race. We then test this prediction using data from the Boston Police Department. Consistent with preference-based discrimination, our baseline results demonstrate that officers are more likely to conduct a search if the race of the officer differs from the race of the driver. We then investigate and rule out two alternative explanations for our findings: race-based informational asymmetries between officers and the assignment of officers to neighborhoods.
Disentanglement and Decoherence without dissipation at non-zero temperatures
Decoherence is well understood, in contrast to disentanglement. According to
common lore, irreversible coupling to a dissipative environment is the
mechanism for loss of entanglement. Here, we show that, on the contrary,
disentanglement can in fact occur at large enough temperatures even for
vanishingly small dissipation (as we have shown previously for decoherence).
However, whereas the effect of on decoherence increases exponentially with
time, the effect of on disentanglement is constant for all times,
reflecting a fundamental difference between the two phenomena. Also, the
possibility of disentanglement at a particular increases with decreasing
initial entanglement.Comment: 3 page
A digital algorithm for spectral deconvolution with noise filtering and peak picking: NOFIPP-DECON
Noise-filtering, peak-picking deconvolution software incorporates multiple convoluted convolute integers and multiparameter optimization pattern search. The two theories are described and three aspects of the software package are discussed in detail. Noise-filtering deconvolution was applied to a number of experimental cases ranging from noisy, nondispersive X-ray analyzer data to very noisy photoelectric polarimeter data. Comparisons were made with published infrared data, and a man-machine interactive language has evolved for assisting in very difficult cases. A modified version of the program is being used for routine preprocessing of mass spectral and gas chromatographic data
Long time deviation from exponential decay: non-integral power laws
Quantal systems are predicted to show a change-over from exponential decay to
power law decay at very long times. Although most theoretical studies predict
integer power-law exponents, recent measurements by Rothe et al. of decay
luminescence of organic molecules in solution {Phys. Rev. Lett. 96 (2006)
163601} found non-integer exponents in most cases. We propose a physical
mechanism, within the realm of scattering from potentials with long tails,
which produces a continuous range of power law exponents. In the tractable case
of the repulsive inverse square potential, we demonstrate a simple relation
between the strength of the long range tail and the power law exponent. This
system is amenable to experimental scrutiny
Investigation of sputtering effects on the moon's surface Eleventh quarterly status report, 25 Oct. 1965 - 24 Jan. 1966
Implications of Lunar 9 moon probe, sputtering yield reduction due to surface roughness, water formation by solar wind bombardment, photometric function of moon, and chemical sputterin
Spectra and positions of galactic gamma-ray sources
The UCSD/MIT Hard X-Ray and Low Energy Gamma-Ray Experiment aboard HEAO-1 scanned the galactic center region during three epochs in 1977 and 1978 from 13 to 180 keV. The results are presented from the scanning epoch of 1978 September. Twenty-two known 2 to 10 keV source positions were necessary for an acceptable fit to the data. The spectra of the 16 strongest, least confused sources are all consistent with power laws with photon spectral indices ranging from 2.1 to 7.2. Acceptable fits to thermal bremsstrahlung models are also possible for most sources. No one source in this survey can be extrapolated to higher energy to match the intensity of the gamma-ray continuum as measured by HEAO-1 large field of view detectors, which implies that the continuum is a composite of contributions from a number of sources
A Quarter-Century of Observations of Comet 10P/Tempel 2 at Lowell Observatory: Continued Spin-Down, Coma Morphology, Production Rates, and Numerical Modeling
We report on photometry and imaging of Comet 10P/Tempel 2 obtained at Lowell
Observatory from 1983 through 2011. We measured a nucleus rotation period of
8.950 +/- 0.002 hr from 2010 September to 2011 January. This rotation period is
longer than the period we previously measured in 1999, which was itself longer
than the period measured in 1988. A nearly linear jet was observed which varied
little during a rotation cycle in both R and CN images acquired during the 1999
and 2010 apparitions. We measured the projected direction of this jet
throughout the two apparitions and, under the assumption that the source region
of the jet was near the comet's pole, determined a rotational pole direction of
RA/Dec = 151deg/+59deg from CN measurements and RA/Dec = 173deg/+57deg from
dust measurements (we estimate a circular uncertainty of 3deg for CN and 4deg
for dust). Different combinations of effects likely bias both gas and dust
solutions and we elected to average these solutions for a final pole of RA/Dec
= 162 +/- 11deg/+58 +/- 1deg. Photoelectric photometry was acquired in 1983,
1988, 1999/2000, and 2010/2011. The activity exhibited a steep turn-on ~3
months prior to perihelion (the exact timing of which varies) and a relatively
smooth decline after perihelion. The activity during the 1999 and 2010
apparitions was similar; limited data in 1983 and 1988 were systematically
higher and the difference cannot be explained entirely by the smaller
perihelion distance. We measured a "typical" composition, in agreement with
previous investigators. Monte Carlo numerical modeling with our pole solution
best replicated the observed coma morphology for a source region located near a
comet latitude of +80deg and having a radius of ~10deg. Our model reproduced
the seasonal changes in activity, suggesting that the majority of Tempel 2's
activity originates from a small active region located near the pole.Comment: Accepted by AJ; 29 pages of text (preprint style), 8 tables, 7
figure
The role of virtual reality in built environment education
This study builds upon previous research on the integration of Virtual Reality (VR) within the built environment curriculum and aims to investigate the role of VR and three-dimensional (3D) computer modelling on learning and teaching in a school of the built environment. In order to achieve this aim, a number of academic experiences were analysed to explore the applicability and viability of 3D computer modelling and VR into built environment subject areas. Although two-dimensional (2D) representations have been greatly accepted by built environment professions and education, 3D computer representations and VR applications, offering interactivity and immersiveness, are not yet widely accepted. The study attempts to understand the values and challenges of integrating visualisation technologies into built environment teaching and investigates tutors’ perceptions, opinions and concerns with respect to these technologies. The study reports on the integration process and considers how 3D computer modelling and VR technologies can combine with, and extend, the existing range of learning and teaching methods appropriate to different disciplines and programme areas
The conceptual relevance of assessment measures in patients with mild/mild-moderate Alzheimer\u27s disease
Introduction: This study aims to evaluate the conceptual relevance of four measures of disease activity in patients with mild/mild-moderate Alzheimer\u27s disease (AD): (1) the Alzheimer\u27s Disease Assessment Scale–Cognitive Subscale; (2) the Alzheimer\u27s Disease Cooperative Study–Activities of Daily Living Inventory; (3) the Neuropsychiatry Inventory; and (4) the Dependence Scale. Methods: A conceptual model depicting patient experience of mild AD was developed via literature review; concepts were compared with the items of the four measures. Relevance of the concepts included in the four measures was evaluated by patients with mild AD in a survey and follow-up interviews. Results: The four measures assessed few of the symptoms/impacts of mild AD identified within the literature. Measured items addressing emotional impacts were deemed most relevant by participants but were included in the measures only superficially. Discussion: The four assessment measures do not appear to capture the concepts most relevant to/important to patients with mild/mild-moderate AD. © 2018 The Author
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