13,875 research outputs found

    Frequency support characteristics of grid-interactive power converters based on the synchronous power controller

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    Grid-interactive converters with primary frequency control and inertia emulation have emerged and are promising for future renewable generation plants because of the contribution in power system stabilization. This paper gives a synchronous active power control solution for gridinteractive converters , as a way to emulate synchronous generators for inerita characteristics and load sharing. As design considerations, the virtual angle stability and transient response are both analyzed, and the detailed implementation structure is also given without entailing any difficulty in practice. The analytical and experimental validation of frequency support characteristics differentiates the work from other publications on generator emulation control. The 10 kW simulation and experimental frequency sweep tests on a regenerative source test bed present good performance of the proposed control in showing inertia and droop characteristics, as well as the controllable transient response.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Trade Policy and Factor Prices: An Empirical Strategy

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    This paper presents a new empirical strategy for estimating the effects of trade policy on domestic factor prices when policy endogeneity is suspected. Absent income effectson factor supplies or domestic prices, the coefficient on the terms of trade can provide an unbiased estimator of the effect of trade barriers on the factor distribution of income for a small economy. In the more general case where income effects are allowed for, we provide a means to quantify and control for the possible bias. We implement our strategy on a cross-national data set of trade policies and income shares of capital and labor. We find little evidence of the existence of Stolper-Samuelson effects, both for the sample as a whole as well as within cones of diversification. Consistent with a model of wage bargaining, we find that the effect of openness on capital shares is greater for countries with higher unionization rates.Factor prices, trade policy, Stolper-Samuelson theorem, wage bargaining

    TALP-UPC at MediaEval 2014 Placing Task: Combining geographical knowledge bases and language models for large-scale textual georeferencing

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    This paper describes our Georeferencing approaches, experiments, and results at the MediaEval 2014 Placing Task evaluation. The task consists of predicting the most probable geographical coordinates of Flickr images and videos using its visual, audio and metadata associated features. Our approaches used only Flickr users textual metadata annotations and tagsets. We used four approaches for this task: 1) an approach based on Geographical Knowledge Bases (GeoKB), 2) the Hiemstra Language Model (HLM) approach with Re-Ranking, 3) a combination of the GeoKB and the HLM (GeoFusion). 4) a combination of the GeoFusion with a HLM model derived from the English Wikipedia georeferenced pages. The HLM approach with Re-Ranking showed the best performance within 10m to 1km distances. The GeoFusion approaches achieved the best results within the margin of errors from 10km to 5000km. This work has been supported by the Spanish Research Department (SKATER Project: TIN2012-38584-C06-01). TALP Research Center is recognized as a Quality Research Group (2014 SGR 1338) by AGAUR, the Research Department of the Catalan Government.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    A Full Non-Monotonic Transition System for Unrestricted Non-Projective Parsing

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    Restricted non-monotonicity has been shown beneficial for the projective arc-eager dependency parser in previous research, as posterior decisions can repair mistakes made in previous states due to the lack of information. In this paper, we propose a novel, fully non-monotonic transition system based on the non-projective Covington algorithm. As a non-monotonic system requires exploration of erroneous actions during the training process, we develop several non-monotonic variants of the recently defined dynamic oracle for the Covington parser, based on tight approximations of the loss. Experiments on datasets from the CoNLL-X and CoNLL-XI shared tasks show that a non-monotonic dynamic oracle outperforms the monotonic version in the majority of languages.Comment: 11 pages. Accepted for publication at ACL 201
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