1,812 research outputs found
Scrutinizing and De-Biasing Intuitive Physics with Neural Stethoscopes
Visually predicting the stability of block towers is a popular task in the
domain of intuitive physics. While previous work focusses on prediction
accuracy, a one-dimensional performance measure, we provide a broader analysis
of the learned physical understanding of the final model and how the learning
process can be guided. To this end, we introduce neural stethoscopes as a
general purpose framework for quantifying the degree of importance of specific
factors of influence in deep neural networks as well as for actively promoting
and suppressing information as appropriate. In doing so, we unify concepts from
multitask learning as well as training with auxiliary and adversarial losses.
We apply neural stethoscopes to analyse the state-of-the-art neural network for
stability prediction. We show that the baseline model is susceptible to being
misled by incorrect visual cues. This leads to a performance breakdown to the
level of random guessing when training on scenarios where visual cues are
inversely correlated with stability. Using stethoscopes to promote meaningful
feature extraction increases performance from 51% to 90% prediction accuracy.
Conversely, training on an easy dataset where visual cues are positively
correlated with stability, the baseline model learns a bias leading to poor
performance on a harder dataset. Using an adversarial stethoscope, the network
is successfully de-biased, leading to a performance increase from 66% to 88%
Influence of static Jahn-Teller distortion on the magnetic excitation spectrum of PrO2: A synchrotron x-ray and neutron inelastic scattering study
A synchrotron x-ray diffraction study of the crystallographic structure of
PrO2 in the Jahn-Teller distorted phase is reported. The distortion of the
oxygen sublattice, which was previously ambiguous, is shown to be a chiral
structure in which neighbouring oxygen chains have opposite chiralities. A
temperature dependent study of the magnetic excitation spectrum, probed by
neutron inelastic scattering, is also reported. Changes in the energies and
relative intensities of the crystal field transitions provide an insight into
the interplay between the static and dynamic Jahn-Teller effects.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Falling Incapacity Benefit claims in a former industrial city: policy impacts or labour market improvement?
This article provides an in-depth study of Incapacity Benefit (IB) claims in a major city and of the factors behind their changing level. It relates to the regime prior to the introduction of the Employment and Support Allowance (ESA) in 2008. Glasgow has had one of the highest levels of IB in Britain with a peak of almost one fifth of the working age population on IB or Severe Disablement Allowance (SDA). However, over the past decade the number of IB claimants in Glasgow, as in other high claiming areas, has fallen at a faster rate than elsewhere, and Glasgow now has twice the national proportion of working-age people on IB/SDA rather than its peak of three times. The rise in IB in Glasgow can be attributed primarily to deindustrialisation; between 1971 and 1991, over 100,000 manufacturing jobs were lost in the city. Policy response was belated. Lack of local statistics on IB led to a lengthy delay in official recognition of the scale of the issue, and targeted programmes to divert or return IB claimants to work did not begin on any scale until around 2004. Evidence presented in the article suggests that the reduction in claims, which has mainly occurred since about 2003, has been due more to a strengthening labour market than to national policy changes or local programmes. This gives strong support to the view that excess IB claims are a form of disguised unemployment. Further detailed evaluation of ongoing programmes is required to develop the evidence base for this complex area. However, the study casts some doubt on the need for the post-2006 round of IB reforms in high-claim areas, since rapid decline in the number of claimants was already occurring in these areas. The article also indicates the importance of close joint working between national and local agencies, and further development of local level statistics on IB claimants
Inelastic neutron scattering studies of Crystal Field Levels in PrOsAs
We use neutron scattering to study the Pr crystalline electric field
(CEF) excitations in the filled skutterudite PrOsAs. By comparing
the observed levels and their strengths under neutron excitation with the
theoretical spectrum and neutron excitation intensities, we identify the
Pr CEF levels, and show that the ground state is a magnetic
triplet, and the excited states ,
and are at 0.4, 13 and 23 meV, respectively. A comparison of the
observed CEF levels in PrOsAs with the heavy fermion superconductor
PrOsSb reveals the microscopic origin of the differences in the
ground states of these two filled skutterudites.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Skin friction and pressure: The footprints of turbulence
Abstract The problems of exact state reconstruction and approximate state estimation based on wall information in a wall-bounded incompressible unsteady flow are addressed. It is shown that, if in an arbitrarily small neighborhood of time t precise measurements are made of the two components of wall skin friction and the wall pressure, all terms in the Taylor-series expansions of the unsteady flow state near the wall at time t may be determined (in the linear setting, this determination may be made based on skin-friction measurements alone). Combining this fact with the analyticity of solutions of the nonlinear Navier-Stokes equation and the unique continuation theorem for analytic functions, in theory complete reconstruction of a fully-developed turbulent flow in a channel at any Reynolds number at time t is possible given only information about the unsteady flow available at the wall in a neighborhood of time t, without knowledge of the initial conditions of the flow. Thus, skin-friction and pressure measurements on the wall in a neighborhood of time t provide a unique "footprint" of the entire unsteady turbulent flow state; no other flow can have the same footprint. Indeed, higher-order terms are shown to uniformly improve the correlation of truncated Taylor-series expansions with the DNS of a turbulent flow near the wall. However, such series extrapolations amplify measurement noise, as they require differentiation in both space and time of the measurements, and the radius of convergence of the Taylor series expansions is less than 10 wall units. The so-called linear stochastic estimation technique, in which the polynomials forming the basis of the series expansion are replaced by well-behaved functions (such as POD modes) on the entire flow domain also demonstrates very poor convergence. In light of these limitations on direct extrapolations from measurements in the practical setting, an adjoint-based algorithm is presented and numerically tested for estimating the state of an entire turbulent channel-flow system based on a time history of noisy measurements at the wall. This algorithm effectively uses the * Corresponding author
Collisions of micron-sized, charged water droplets in still air
We investigate the effect of electrical charge on collisions of
hydrodynamically interacting, micron-sized water droplets settling through
quiescent air. The relative dynamics of charged droplets is determined by
hydrodynamic interactions, particle and fluid inertia, and electrostatic
forces. We analyse the resulting relative dynamics of oppositely charged
droplets by determining its fixed points and their stable and unstable
manifolds. The stable manifold of a saddle point forms a separatrix that
separates colliding trajectories from those that do not collide. The
qualitative conclusions from this theory are in excellent agreement with
experiments.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, supplemental materia
An Artificial Intelligence Approach for Tackling Conformational Energy Uncertainties in Chiroptical Spectroscopies
Determination of the absolute configuration of chiral molecules is a prerequisite for obtaining a fundamental understanding in any chirality-related field. The interaction with polarised light has proven to be a powerful means to determine this absolute configuration, but its application rests on the comparison between experimental and computed spectra for which the inherent uncertainty in conformational Boltzmann factors has proven to be extremely hard to tackle. Here we present a novel approach that overcomes this issue by combining a genetic algorithm that identifies the relevant conformers by accounting for the uncertainties in DFT relative energies, and a hierarchical clustering algorithm that analyses the trends in the spectra of the considered conformers and identifies on-the-fly when a given chiroptical technique is not able to make reliable predictions. The effectiveness of this approach is demonstrated by considering the challenging cases of papuamine and haliclonadiamine, two bis-indane natural products with eight chiral centres and considerable conformational heterogeneity that could not be assigned unambiguously with current approaches.</p
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