1,842 research outputs found

    Testing matter effects in propagation of atmospheric and long-baseline neutrinos

    Full text link
    We quantify our current knowledge of the size and flavor structure of the matter effects in the evolution of atmospheric and long-baseline neutrinos based solely on the analysis of the corresponding neutrino data. To this aim we generalize the matter potential of the Standard Model by rescaling its strength, rotating it away from the e-e sector, and rephasing it with respect to the vacuum term. This phenomenological parametrization can be easily translated in terms of non-standard neutrino interactions in matter. We show that in the most general case, the strength of the potential cannot be determined solely by atmospheric and long-baseline data. However its flavor composition is very much constrained and the present determination of the neutrino masses and mixing is robust under its presence. We also present an update of the constraints arising from this analysis in the particular case in which no potential is present in the e-mu and e-tau sectors. Finally we quantify to what degree in this scenario it is possible to alleviate the tension between the oscillation results for neutrinos and antineutrinos in the MINOS experiment and show the relevance of the high energy part of the spectrum measured at MINOS.Comment: PDFLaTeX file using JHEP3 class, 25 pages, 7 figures included. Accepted for publication in JHE

    BFF: A tool for eliciting tie strength and user communities in social networking services

    Get PDF
    The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1007/s10796-013-9453-6The use of social networking services (SNSs) such as Facebook has explosively grown in the last few years. Users see these SNSs as useful tools to find friends and interact with them. Moreover, SNSs allow their users to share photos, videos, and express their thoughts and feelings. However, users are usually concerned about their privacy when using SNSs. This is because the public image of a subject can be affected by photos or comments posted on a social network. In this way, recent studies demonstrate that users are demanding better mechanisms to protect their privacy. An appropriate approximation to solve this could be a privacy assistant software agent that automatically suggests a privacy policy for any item to be shared on a SNS. The first step for developing such an agent is to be able to elicit meaningful information that can lead to accurate privacy policy predictions. In particular, the information needed is user communities and the strength of users' relationships, which, as suggested by recent empirical evidence, are the most important factors that drive disclosure in SNSs. Given the number of friends that users can have and the number of communities they may be involved on, it is infeasible that users are able to provide this information without the whole eliciting process becoming confusing and time consuming. In this work, we present a tool called Best Friend Forever (BFF) that automatically classifies the friends of a user in communities and assigns a value to the strength of the relationship ties to each one. We also present an experimental evaluation involving 38 subjects that showed that BFF can significantly alleviate the burden of eliciting communities and relationship strength.This work has been partially supported by CONSOLIDER-INGENIO 2010 under grant CSD2007-00022, and TIN 2008-04446 and PROMETEO II/2013/019 projects. This article has been developed as a result of a mobility stay funded by the Erasmus Mundus Programme of the European Comission under the Transatlantic Partnership for Excellence in Engineering - TEE Project.López Fogués, R.; Such Aparicio, JM.; Espinosa Minguet, AR.; García-Fornes, A. (2014). BFF: A tool for eliciting tie strength and user communities in social networking services. Information Systems Frontiers. 16:225-237. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10796-013-9453-6S22523716Blondel, V.D., Guillaume, J.L., Lambiotte, R., Lefebvre, E. (2008). Fast unfolding of communities in large networks. Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment, 2008(10), P10008.Boyd, D., & Hargittai, E. (2010). Facebook privacy settings: who cares? First Monday, 15(8).Burt, R. (1995). Structural holes: the social structure of competition. Harvard University Pr.Culotta, A., Bekkerman, R., McCallum, A. (2004). Extracting social networks and contact information from email and the web.Ellison, N., Steinfield, C., Lampe, C. (2007). The benefits of facebook friends: social capital and college students use of online social network sites. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 12(4), 1143–1168.Fang, L., & LeFevre, K. (2010). Privacy wizards for social networking sites. In Proceedings of the 19th international conference on World wide web (pp. 351–360). ACM.Fortunato, S. (2010). Community detection in graphs. Physics Reports, 486(3-5), 75–174.Gilbert, E., & Karahalios, K. (2009). Predicting tie strength with social media. In Proceedings of the 27th international conference on human factors in computing systems (pp. 211–220). ACM.Girvan, M., & Newman, M. (2002). Community structure in social and biological networks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, 99(12), 7821.Granovetter, M. (1973). The strength of weak ties. American Journal of Sociology, 1360–1380.Gross, R., & Acquisti, A. (2005). Information revelation and privacy in online social networks. In Proceedings of the 2005 ACM workshop on privacy in the electronic society (pp. 71–80). ACM.Johnson, M., Egelman, S., Bellovin, S. (2012). Facebook and privacy: it’s complicated. In Proceedings of the eighth symposium on usable privacy and security (p. 9). ACM .Kahanda, I., & Neville, J. (2009). Using transactional information to predict link strength in online social networks. In Proceedings of the third international conference on weblogs and social media (ICWSM).Lancichinetti, A., & Fortunato, S. (2009). Community detection algorithms: a comparative analysis. Physical Review E, 80, 056–117.Lancichinetti, A., Fortunato, S., Kertsz, J. (2009). Detecting the overlapping and hierarchical community structure in complex networks. New Journal of Physics, 11(3), 033–015.Lin, N., Ensel, W., Vaughn, J. (1981). Social resources and strength of ties: Structural factors in occupational status attainment. American Sociological Review, 393–405.Lipford, H., Besmer, A., Watson, J. (2008). Understanding privacy settings in facebook with an audience view. In Proceedings of the 1st conference on usability, psychology, and security (pp. 1–8). Berkeley: USENIX Association.Liu, G., Wang, Y., Orgun, M. (2010). Optimal social trust path selection in complex social networks. In Proceedings of the 24th AAAI conference on artificial intelligence (pp. 139–1398). AAAI.Matsuo, Y., Mori, J., Hamasaki, M., Nishimura, T., Takeda, H., Hasida, K., Ishizuka, M. (2007). Polyphonet: an advanced social network extraction system from the web. Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web, 5(4), 262–278. World Wide Web Conference 2006 Semantic Web Track.Murukannaiah, P., & Singh, M. (2011). Platys social: relating shared places and private social circles. Internet Computing IEEE, 99, 1–1.Quercia, D., Lambiotte, R., Kosinski, M., Stillwell, D., Crowcroft, J. (2012). The personality of popular facebook users. In Proceedings of the ACM 2012 conference on computer supported cooperative work (CSCW’12).Rosvall, M., & Bergstrom, C. (2008). Maps of random walks on complex networks reveal community structure. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 105(4), 1118–1123.Sharma, G., Qiang, Y., Wenjun, S., Qi, L. (2013). Communication in virtual world: Second life and business opportunities. Information Systems Frontiers, 15(4), 677–694.Shen, K., Song, L., Yang, X., Zhang, W. (2010). A hierarchical diffusion algorithm for community detection in social networks. In 2010 international conference on cyber-enabled distributed computing and knowledge discovery (CyberC) (pp. 276–283). IEEE.Sierra, C., & Debenham, J. (2007). The LOGIC negotiation model. In AAMAS ’07: proceedings of the 6th international joint conference on autonomous agents and multiagent systems (pp. 1–8). ACM.Staddon, J., Huffaker, D., Brown, L., Sedley, A. (2012). Are privacy concerns a turn-off?: engagement and privacy in social networks. In Proceedings of the eighth symposium on usable privacy and security (p. 10). ACM.Strater, K., & Lipford, H.R. (2008). Strategies and struggles with privacy in an online social networking community. In Proceedings of the 22nd British HCI group annual conference on people and computers: culture, creativity, interaction, BCS-HCI ’08 (Vol. 1, pp. 111–119). Swinton: British Computer Society.Wellman, B., & Wortley, S. (1990). Different strokes from different folks: Community ties and social support. American Journal of Sociology, 558–588.Wiese, J., Kelley, P., Cranor, L., Dabbish, L., Hong, J., Zimmerman, J. (2011). Are you close with me? are you nearby? investigating social groups, closeness, and willingness to share. In Proceedings of the 13th international conference on Ubiquitous computing (pp. 197–206). ACM.Xiang, R., Neville, J., Rogati, M. (2010). Modeling relationship strength in online social networks. In Proceedings of the 19th international conference on World wide web (pp. 981–990). ACM

    Exploring novel correlations in trilepton channels at the LHC for the minimal supersymmetric inverse seesaw model

    Full text link
    We investigate signatures of the minimal supersymmetric inverse seesaw model at the large hadron collider (LHC) with three isolated leptons and large missing energy (3\ell + \mET or 2\ell + 1\tau + \mET, with \ell=e,\mu) in the final state. This signal has its origin in the decay of chargino-neutralino (\chpm1\ntrl2) pair, produced in pp collisions. The two body decays of the lighter chargino into a charged lepton and a singlet sneutrino has a characteristic decay pattern which is correlated with the observed large atmospheric neutrino mixing angle. This correlation is potentially observable at the LHC by looking at the ratios of cross sections of the trilepton + \mET channels in certain flavour specific modes. We show that even after considering possible leading standard model backgrounds these final states can lead to reasonable discovery significance at the LHC with both 7 TeV and 14 TeV center-of-mass energy.Comment: 28 pages, 9 .eps figures. 3 new figures and discussions on LHC observables added, minor modifications in text and in the abstract, 23 new references added, matches with the published version in JHE

    The Golden Ratio Prediction for the Solar Angle from a Natural Model with A5 Flavour Symmetry

    Full text link
    We formulate a consistent model predicting, in the leading order approximation, maximal atmospheric mixing angle, vanishing reactor angle and tan {\theta}_12 = 1/{\phi} where {\phi} is the Golden Ratio. The model is based on the flavour symmetry A5 \times Z5 \times Z3, spontaneously broken by a set of flavon fields. By minimizing the scalar potential of the theory up to the next-to-leading order in the symmetry breaking parameter, we demonstrate that this mixing pattern is naturally achieved in a finite portion of the parameter space, through the vacuum alignment of the flavon fields. The leading order approximation is stable against higher-order corrections. We also compare our construction to other models based on discrete symmetry groups.Comment: 28 pages, 2 figures. Minor changes, references added. Corrected typos in Appendix A. Version appeared on JHE

    Dynamical R-parity Breaking at the LHC

    Full text link
    In a class of extensions of the minimal supersymmetric standard model with (B-L)/left-right symmetry that explains the neutrino masses, breaking R-parity symmetry is an essential and dynamical requirement for successful gauge symmetry breaking. Two consequences of these models are: (i) a new kind of R-parity breaking interaction that protects proton stability but adds new contributions to neutrinoless double beta decay and (ii) an upper bound on the extra gauge and parity symmetry breaking scale which is within the large hadron collider (LHC) energy range. We point out that an important prediction of such theories is a potentially large mixing between the right-handed charged lepton (ece^c) and the superpartner of the right-handed gauge boson (W~R+\widetilde W_R^+), which leads to a brand new class of R-parity violating interactions of type μc~νμcec\widetilde{\mu^c}^\dagger\nu_\mu^c e^c and \widetilde{d^c}^\dagger\u^c e^c. We analyze the relevant constraints on the sparticle mass spectrum and the LHC signatures for the case with smuon/stau NLSP and gravitino LSP. We note the "smoking gun" signals for such models to be lepton flavor/number violating processes: ppμ±μ±e+ejjpp\to \mu^\pm\mu^\pm e^+e^-jj (or τ±τ±e+ejj\tau^\pm\tau^\pm e^+e^-jj) and ppμ±e±bbˉjjpp\to\mu^\pm e^\pm b \bar{b} jj (or τ±e±bbˉjj\tau^\pm e^\pm b \bar{b} jj) without significant missing energy. The predicted multi-lepton final states and the flavor structure make the model be distinguishable even in the early running of the LHC.Comment: 30 pages, 13 figures, 6 tables, reference adde

    Nitrogen transfer from forage legumes to nine neighbouring plants in a multi-species grassland

    Get PDF
    Legumes play a crucial role in nitrogen supply to grass-legume mixtures for ruminant fodder. To quantify N transfer from legumes to neighbouring plants in multi-species grasslands we established a grass-legume-herb mixture on a loamy-sandy site in Denmark. White clover (Trifolium repens L.), red clover (Trifolium pratense L.) and lucerne (Medicago sativa L.) were leaf-labelled with 15N enriched urea during one growing season. N transfer to grasses (Lolium perenne L. and xfestulolium), white clover, red clover, lucerne, birdsfoot trefoil (Lotus corniculatus L.), chicory (Cichorium intybus L.), plantain (Plantago lanceolata L.), salad burnet (Sanguisorba minor L.)and caraway (Carum carvi L.) was assessed. Neighbouring plants contained greater amounts of N derived from white clover (4.8 gm-2) compared with red clover (2.2 gm-2) and lucerne (1.1 gm-2). Grasses having fibrous roots received greater amounts of N from legumes than dicotyledonous plants which generally have taproots. Slurry application mainly increased N transfer from legumes to grasses. During the growing season the three legumes transferred approximately 40 kg N ha-1 to neighbouring plants. Below-ground N transfer from legumes to neighbouring plants differed among nitrogen donors and nitrogen receivers and may depend on root characteristics and regrowth strategies of plant species in the multi-species grassland

    Developing a method to derive alcohol-attributable fractions for HIV/AIDS mortality based on alcohol's impact on adherence to antiretroviral medication

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Alcohol consumption is causally linked to nonadherence to antiretroviral treatment that in turn causes an increase in HIV/AIDS mortality. This article presents a method to calculate the percentage of HIV/AIDS deaths attributable to alcohol consumption and the associated uncertainty.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>By combining information on risk relations from a number of published sources, we estimated alcohol-attributable fractions (AAFs) of HIV/AIDS in a stepwise procedure. First, we estimated the effect of alcohol consumption on adherence to antiretroviral treatment, and then we combined this estimate with the impact of nonadherence on death. The 95% uncertainty intervals were computed by estimating the variance of the AAFs using Taylor series expansions of one and multiple variables. AAFs were determined for each of the five Global Burden of Disease regions of Africa, based on country-specific treatment and alcohol consumption data from 2005.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The effects of alcohol on HIV/AIDS in the African Global Burden of Disease regions range from 0.03% to 0.34% for men and from 0% to 0.17% for women, depending on region and age category. The detrimental effect of alcohol consumption was statistically significant in every region and age category except for the North Africa/Middle East region.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Although the method has its limitations, it was shown to be feasible and provided estimates of the impact of alcohol use on the mortality outcome of HIV/AIDS.</p

    PGB pair production at LHC and ILC as a probe of the topcolor-assisted technicolor models

    Full text link
    The topcolor-assisted technicolor (TC2) model predicts some light pseudo goldstone bosons (PGBs), which may be accessible at the LHC or ILC. In this work we study the pair productions of the charged or neutral PGBs at the LHC and ILC. For the productions at the LHC we consider the processes proceeding through gluon-gluon fusion and quark-antiquark annihilation, while for the productions at the ILC we consider both the electron-positron collision and the photon-photon collision. We find that in a large part of parameter space the production cross sections at both colliders can be quite large compared with the low standard model backgrounds. Therefore, in future experiments these productions may be detectable and allow for probing TC2 model.Comment: 26 pages, 16 figures. slight changes in the text; notations for curves changed; references adde

    Decoupling property of the supersymmetric Higgs sector with four doublets

    Full text link
    In supersymmetric standard models with multi Higgs doublet fields, selfcoupling constants in the Higgs potential come only from the D-terms at the tree level. We investigate the decoupling property of additional two heavier Higgs doublet fields in the supersymmetric standard model with four Higgs doublets. In particular, we study how they can modify the predictions on the quantities well predicted in the minimal supersymmetric standard model (MSSM), when the extra doublet fields are rather heavy to be measured at collider experiments. The B-term mixing between these extra heavy Higgs bosons and the relatively light MSSM-like Higgs bosons can significantly change the predictions in the MSSM such as on the masses of MSSM-like Higgs bosons as well as the mixing angle for the two light CP-even scalar states. We first give formulae for deviations in the observables of the MSSM in the decoupling region for the extra two doublet fields. We then examine possible deviations in the Higgs sector numerically, and discuss their phenomenological implications.Comment: 26 pages, 24 figures, text sligtly modified,version to appear in Journal of High Energy Physic
    corecore