796 research outputs found

    Adapting Sequence Models for Sentence Correction

    Full text link
    In a controlled experiment of sequence-to-sequence approaches for the task of sentence correction, we find that character-based models are generally more effective than word-based models and models that encode subword information via convolutions, and that modeling the output data as a series of diffs improves effectiveness over standard approaches. Our strongest sequence-to-sequence model improves over our strongest phrase-based statistical machine translation model, with access to the same data, by 6 M2 (0.5 GLEU) points. Additionally, in the data environment of the standard CoNLL-2014 setup, we demonstrate that modeling (and tuning against) diffs yields similar or better M2 scores with simpler models and/or significantly less data than previous sequence-to-sequence approaches.Comment: EMNLP 201

    Treatment Foster Parents\u27 Perceptions of Their Role with the Primary Family of Foster Youth

    Get PDF
    This study provides a description of treatment foster parents\u27 perceptions of their role with the primary family of foster youth. This study also identifies a baseline measure of treatment foster parents\u27 perceptions which can be utilized for agency program planning, policy and administration. The study sample includes 98 treatment foster parents licensed by the state of North Dakota, and supervised by Professional Association of Treatment Homes (PATH). A mail survey explores different levels of involvement between the treatment foster family and the foster child\u27s primary family, whether or not treatment foster parents believe they can impact the primary families of foster youth, how they might impact the primary families of foster youth and what they consider to be important elements of a treatment foster care program. Study findings with a 60% response rate, indicate that 90% of the treatment foster parents believe they can impact the foster youth and their primary families. Findings show that 57% of the respondents believe that the most effective ways they can impact the foster youth and their primary family are by role modeling or mentoring and 52% by having frequent, open communication. A total of 56% of the respondents believe the most important element of a treatment foster care program is the ability to individualize treatment plans. Only 5% of the respondents believe that treatment plans should be family-focused compared to 51% who believe that treatment plans should be child-focused. This is incongruent with other perceptions, which indicate at least moderate of foster parent involvement with the primary families of foster youth. This incongruency implies a need for agency program planning, policy and administration that reflects a family based service approach to treatment foster care to maximize reunification efforts

    Deconstructing Gaugino Mediation

    Get PDF
    We present a model of supersymmetry breaking which produces gaugino masses and negligible scalar masses at a high scale. The model is inspired by ``deconstructing'' or ``latticizing'' models in extra dimensions where supersymmetry breaking and visible matter are spatially separated. We find a simple four-dimensional model which only requires two lattice sites (or gauge groups) to reproduce the phenomenology.Comment: LaTeX, 9 pages, acknowledgements adde

    Collective Quartics and Dangerous Singlets in Little Higgs

    Full text link
    Any extension of the standard model that aims to describe TeV-scale physics without fine-tuning must have a radiatively-stable Higgs potential. In little Higgs theories, radiative stability is achieved through so-called collective symmetry breaking. In this letter, we focus on the necessary conditions for a little Higgs to have a collective Higgs quartic coupling. In one-Higgs doublet models, a collective quartic requires an electroweak triplet scalar. In two-Higgs doublet models, a collective quartic requires a triplet or singlet scalar. As a corollary of this study, we show that some little Higgs theories have dangerous singlets, a pathology where collective symmetry breaking does not suppress quadratically-divergent corrections to the Higgs mass.Comment: 4 pages; v2: clarified the existing literature; v3: version to appear in JHE

    The Little Hierarchy in Universal Extra Dimensions

    Get PDF
    In the standard model in universal extra dimensions (UED) the mass of the Higgs field is driven to the cutoff of the higher-dimensional theory. This re-introduces a small hierarchy since the compactification scale 1/R should not be smaller than the weak scale. In this paper we study possible solutions to this problem by considering five-dimensional theories where the Higgs field potential vanishes at tree level due to a global symmetry. We consider two avenues: a Little Higgs model and a Twin Higgs model. An obstacle for the embedding of these four-dimensional models in five dimensions is that their logarithmic sensitivity to the cutoff will result in linear divergences in the higher dimensional theory. We show that, despite the increased cutoff sensitivity of higher dimensional theories, it is possible to control the Higgs mass in these two scenarios. For the Little Higgs model studied, the phenomenology will be significantly different from the case of the standard model in UED. This is due to the fact that the compactification scale approximately coincides with the scale where the masses of the new states appear. For the case of the Twin Higgs model, the compactification scale may be considerably lower than the scale where the new states appear. If it is as low as allowed by current limits, it would be possible to experimentally observe the standard model Kaluza-Klein states as well as a new heavy quark. On the other hand, if the compactification scale is higher, then the phenomenology at colliders would coincide with the one for the standard model in UED.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figure

    Little Higgs Model Completed with a Chiral Fermionic Sector

    Full text link
    The implementation of the little Higgs mechanism to solve the hierarchy problem provides an interesting guiding principle to build particle physics models beyond the electroweak scale. Most model building works, however, pay not much attention to the fermionic sector. Through a case example, we illustrate how a complete and consistent fermionic sector of the TeV effective field theory may actually be largely dictated by the gauge structure of the model. The completed fermionic sector has specific flavor physics structure, and many phenomenological constraints on the model can thus be obtained beyond gauge, Higgs, and top physics. We take a first look on some of the quark sector constraints.Comment: 14 revtex pages with no figure, largely a re-written version of hep-ph/0307250 with elaboration on flavor sector FCNC constraints; accepted for publication in Phys.Rev.

    Getting Things Right in the History of Philosophy

    Get PDF
    • …
    corecore