1,918 research outputs found
Creating Full Individual-level Location Timelines from Sparse Social Media Data
In many domain applications, a continuous timeline of human locations is
critical; for example for understanding possible locations where a disease may
spread, or the flow of traffic. While data sources such as GPS trackers or Call
Data Records are temporally-rich, they are expensive, often not publicly
available or garnered only in select locations, restricting their wide use.
Conversely, geo-located social media data are publicly and freely available,
but present challenges especially for full timeline inference due to their
sparse nature. We propose a stochastic framework, Intermediate Location
Computing (ILC) which uses prior knowledge about human mobility patterns to
predict every missing location from an individual's social media timeline. We
compare ILC with a state-of-the-art RNN baseline as well as methods that are
optimized for next-location prediction only. For three major cities, ILC
predicts the top 1 location for all missing locations in a timeline, at 1 and
2-hour resolution, with up to 77.2% accuracy (up to 6% better accuracy than all
compared methods). Specifically, ILC also outperforms the RNN in settings of
low data; both cases of very small number of users (under 50), as well as
settings with more users, but with sparser timelines. In general, the RNN model
needs a higher number of users to achieve the same performance as ILC. Overall,
this work illustrates the tradeoff between prior knowledge of heuristics and
more data, for an important societal problem of filling in entire timelines
using freely available, but sparse social media data.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, 2 table
Photoluminescent characteristics of Ni-catalyzed GaN nanowires
The authors report on time-integrated and time-resolved photoluminescence (PL) of GaN nanowires grown by the Ni-catalyst-assisted vapor-liquid-solid method. From PL spectra of Ni-catalyzed GaN nanowires at 10 K, several PL peaks were observed at 3.472, 3.437, and 3.266 eV, respectively. PL peaks at 3.472 and 3.266 eV are attributed to neutral-donor-bound excitons and donor-acceptor pair, respectively. Furthermore, according to the results from temperature-dependent and time-resolved PL measurements, the origin of the PL peak at 3.437 eV is also discussed. (c) 2006 American Institute of Physics.X1147sciescopu
Susceptibility of South Korea to Extremes Affecting the Global Food System
Food security in South Korea is tightly linked to the global food system. The country's production of major grains declined from 5.8 million metric tons (mmt) in 1998 to 4.8 mmt in 2014, which caused the country's grain self suciency to decline from 31.4% to 24%. This decline is a consequence of several factors including reductions in domestic agricultural land, governmental policies supporting industry over agriculture, and a push towards trade liberalization. South Korea's self suciency is now one of the lowest among Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries, leaving it vulnerable to disruptions in the global food system
Real-time Measurement of Stress and Damage Evolution During Initial Lithiation of Crystalline Silicon
Crystalline to amorphous phase transformation during initial lithiation in
(100) silicon-wafers is studied in an electrochemical cell with lithium metal
as the counter and reference electrode. It is demonstrated that severe stress
jumps across the phase boundary lead to fracture and damage, which is an
essential consideration in designing silicon based anodes for lithium ion
batteries. During initial lithiation, a moving phase boundary advances into the
wafer starting from the surface facing the lithium electrode, transforming
crystalline silicon into amorphous LixSi. The resulting biaxial compressive
stress in the amorphous layer is measured in situ and it was observed to be ca.
0.5 GPa. HRTEM images reveal that the crystalline-amorphous phase boundary is
very sharp, with a thickness of ~ 1 nm. Upon delithiation, the stress rapidly
reverses, becomes tensile and the amorphous layer begins to deform plastically
at around 0.5 GPa. With continued delithiation, the yield stress increases in
magnitude, culminating in sudden fracture of the amorphous layer into
micro-fragments and the cracks extend into the underlying crystalline silicon.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Heart Rate Variability Monitoring Using a Wearable Armband
A wearable electrocardiogram (ECG) monitor is evaluated as heart rate variability (HRV) monitor. The device consists of an armband designed to be worn on the left upper arm which provides 3 ECG channels based on 3 pairs of dry (no hydrogel) electrodes. Armband-ECG and conventional-Holter-ECG signals were simultaneously recorded from 14 subjects during 5 minutes in supine position. Spacial principal component analysis was used to obtain a unique armband ECG signal in which the electromyogram contribution is attenuated. QRS complexes were automatically detected. Five traditional HRV parameters were derived: SDNN, RMSSD, pNN50, and powers within low frequency (LF, [0.04, 0.15] Hz) and high frequency (HF, [0.15, 0.4] Hz) bands. The Pearson''s correlation coefficient between the measurements from the armband device and the measures from the Holter device was computed. Results show very high correlations (1.0000, 0.9999, 0.9984, 1.0000, and 0.9999 for SDNN, RMSSD, pNN50, and powers at LF and HF, respectively), suggesting that the quality of armband-ECG signals is enough to estimate HRV parameters during stationary movement restricted conditions
Lensed CMB power spectra from all-sky correlation functions
Weak lensing of the CMB changes the unlensed temperature anisotropy and
polarization power spectra. Accounting for the lensing effect will be crucial
to obtain accurate parameter constraints from sensitive CMB observations.
Methods for computing the lensed power spectra using a low-order perturbative
expansion are not good enough for percent-level accuracy. Non-perturbative
flat-sky methods are more accurate, but curvature effects change the spectra at
the 0.3-1% level. We describe a new, accurate and fast, full-sky
correlation-function method for computing the lensing effect on CMB power
spectra to better than 0.1% at l<2500 (within the approximation that the
lensing potential is linear and Gaussian). We also discuss the effect of
non-linear evolution of the gravitational potential on the lensed power
spectra. Our fast numerical code is publicly available.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures. Changes to match PRD version including new
section on non-linear corrections. CAMB code available at http://camb.info
How frequent are close supermassive binary black holes in powerful jet sources?
24 pages, 36 figures. © 2018 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society This article is published and distributed under the terms of the Oxford University Press, Standard Journals Publication Model (https://academic.oup.com/journals/pages/open_access/funder_policies/chorus/standard_publication_model)Supermassive black hole binariesmay be detectable by an upcoming suite of gravitationalwave experiments. Their binary nature can also be revealed by radio jets via a short-period precession driven by the orbital motion as well as the geodetic precession at typically longer periods. We have investigated Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array and Multi-Element Radio Linked Interferometer Network (MERLIN) radio maps of powerful jet sources for morphological evidence of geodetic precession. For perhaps the best-studied source, Cygnus A, we find strong evidence for geodetic precession. Projection effects can enhance precession features, for which we find indications in strongly projected sources. For a complete sample of 33 3CR radio sources, we find strong evidence for jet precession in 24 cases (73 per cent). The morphology of the radio maps suggests that the precession periods are of the order of 10 6- 10 7 yr. We consider different explanations for the morphological features and conclude that geodetic precession is the best explanation. The frequently observed gradual jet angle changes in samples of powerful blazars can be explained by orbital motion. Both observations can be explained simultaneously by postulating that a high fraction of powerful radio sources have subparsec supermassive black hole binaries.We consider complementary evidence and discuss if any jetted supermassive black hole with some indication of precession could be detected as individual gravitational wave source in the near future. This appears unlikely, with the possible exception of M87.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
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