56,144 research outputs found
Analysing partner selection through exchange values
Dynamic and resource-constrained environments raise interesting issues for partnership formation and multi-agent systems. In a scenario in which agents interact with each other to exchange services, if computational resources are limited, agents cannot always accept a request, and may take time to find available partners to delegate their needed services. Several approaches are available to solve this problem, which we explore through an experimental evaluation in this paper. In particular, we provide a computational implementation of Piaget's exchange-values theory, and compare its performance against alternatives
Evolution of Helping and Harming in Viscous Populations When Group Size Varies
Funding: Balliol College and the Royal Society.Recent years have seen huge interest in understanding how demographic factors mediate the evolution of social behavior in viscous populations. Here we study the impact of variation in group size on the evolution of helping and harming behavior. Although variation in group size influences the degree of relatedness and the degree of competition between groupmates, we find that these effects often exactly cancel, so as to give no net impact of variation in group size on the evolution of helping and harming. Specifically, (1) obligate helping and harming are never mediated by variation in group size, (2) facultative helping and harming are not mediated by variation in group size when this variation is spatial only, (3) facultative helping and harming are mediated by variation in group size only when this variation is temporal or both spatial and temporal, and (4) when there is an effect of variation in group size, facultative helping is favored in big groups and facultative harming is favored in little groups. Moreover, we find that spatial and temporal heterogeneity in individual fecundity may interact with patch-size heterogeneity to change these predictions, promoting the evolution of harming in big patches and of helping in little patches.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Probabilistic Argumentation. An Equational Approach
There is a generic way to add any new feature to a system. It involves 1)
identifying the basic units which build up the system and 2) introducing the
new feature to each of these basic units.
In the case where the system is argumentation and the feature is
probabilistic we have the following. The basic units are: a. the nature of the
arguments involved; b. the membership relation in the set S of arguments; c.
the attack relation; and d. the choice of extensions.
Generically to add a new aspect (probabilistic, or fuzzy, or temporal, etc)
to an argumentation network can be done by adding this feature to each
component a-d. This is a brute-force method and may yield a non-intuitive or
meaningful result.
A better way is to meaningfully translate the object system into another
target system which does have the aspect required and then let the target
system endow the aspect on the initial system. In our case we translate
argumentation into classical propositional logic and get probabilistic
argumentation from the translation.
Of course what we get depends on how we translate.
In fact, in this paper we introduce probabilistic semantics to abstract
argumentation theory based on the equational approach to argumentation
networks. We then compare our semantics with existing proposals in the
literature including the approaches by M. Thimm and by A. Hunter. Our
methodology in general is discussed in the conclusion
Conditional tests for elliptical symmetry using robust estimators
This paper presents a procedure for testing the hypothesis that the
underlying distribution of the data is elliptical when using robust location
and scatter estimators instead of the sample mean and covariance matrix. Under
mild assumptions that include elliptical distributions without first moments,
we derive the test statistic asymptotic behaviour under the null hypothesis and
under special alternatives. Numerical experiments allow to compare the
behaviour of the tests based on the sample mean and covariance matrix with that
based on robust estimators, under various elliptical distributions and
different alternatives. This comparison was done looking not only at the
observed level and power but we rather use the size-corrected relative exact
power which provides a tool to assess the test statistic skill to detect
alternatives. We also provide a numerical comparison with other competing
tests.Comment: In press in Communications in Statistics: Theory and Methods, 201
Tourism Demand in Portugal: Market Perspectives
Tourism has experienced different levels of development in the different regions of Portugal.
To frame this development, several panel data models were estimated. The main
objective is to explain the evolution of overnight stays by nationality in each region. Secondary
data from 2000 to 2010 was used. The analysis includes the main tourism markets,
such as the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands, Ireland, France and Spain.
Tourism literature suggests that, among others, the main determinants of tourism demand
are Income (GDP), population, tourist´s income by place of residence, households’
consumption, unemployment rate, inflation rate, compensation of employees, comparative
prices and households’ investment rate. It is observed that, although significant, the
explanatory power of these variables varies according to the origin and the destination
region considered
An inspection on the Borel masses relation used in QCD sum rules
In this work, we studied the Borel masses relation used in QCDSR
calculations. These masses are the parameters of the Borel transform used when
the three point function is calculated. We analised an usual and a more general
linear relations. We concluded that a general linear relation between these
masses provides the best results regarding the standard deviation.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, Prepared for 11th Hadron Physic
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