7 research outputs found
A partial taxonomy of judgment aggregation rules, and their properties
The literature on judgment aggregation is moving from studying impossibility
results regarding aggregation rules towards studying specific judgment
aggregation rules. Here we give a structured list of most rules that have been
proposed and studied recently in the literature, together with various
properties of such rules. We first focus on the majority-preservation property,
which generalizes Condorcet-consistency, and identify which of the rules
satisfy it. We study the inclusion relationships that hold between the rules.
Finally, we consider two forms of unanimity, monotonicity, homogeneity, and
reinforcement, and we identify which of the rules satisfy these properties
Cheryl's Birthday
We present four logic puzzles and after that their solutions. Joseph Yeo
designed 'Cheryl's Birthday'. Mike Hartley came up with a novel solution for
'One Hundred Prisoners and a Light Bulb'. Jonathan Welton designed 'A Blind
Guess' and 'Abby's Birthday'. Hans van Ditmarsch and Barteld Kooi authored the
puzzlebook 'One Hundred Prisoners and a Light Bulb' that contains other
knowledge puzzles, and that can also be found on the webpage
http://personal.us.es/hvd/lightbulb.html dedicated to the book.Comment: In Proceedings TARK 2017, arXiv:1707.0825
Nest attentiveness drives nest predation in arctic sandpipers
International audienceMost birds incubate their eggs to allow embryo development. This behaviour limits the ability of adults to perform other activities. Hence, incubating adults trade off incubation and nest protection with foraging to meet their own needs. Parents can either cooperate to sustain this tradeoff or incubate alone. The main cause of reproductive failure at this reproductive stage is predation and adults reduce this risk by keeping the nest location secret. Arctic sandpipers are interesting biological models to investigate parental care evolution as they may use several parental care strategies. The three main incubation strategies include both parents sharing incubation duties ('biparental'), one parent incubating alone ('uniparental'), or a flexible strategy with both uniparental and biparental incubation within a population ('mixed'). By monitoring the incubation behaviour in 714 nests of seven sandpiper species across 12 arctic sites, we studied the relationship between incubation strategy and nest predation. First, we described how the frequency of incubation recesses (NR), their mean duration (MDR), and the daily total duration of recesses (TDR) vary among strategies. Then, we examined how the relationship between the daily predation rate and these components of incubation behaviour varies across strategies using two complementary survival analysis. For uniparental and biparental species, the daily predation rate increased with the daily total duration of recesses and with the mean duration of recesses. In contrast, daily predation rate increased with the daily number of recesses for biparental species only. These patterns may be attributed to two independent mechanisms: cryptic incubating adults are more difficult to locate than unattended nests and adults departing the nest or feeding close to the nest can draw predators' attention. Our results demonstrate that incubation behaviour as mediated by incubation strategy has important consequences for sandpipers' reproductive success