46,391 research outputs found
The propositional nature of human associative learning
The past 50 years have seen an accumulation of evidence suggesting that associative learning depends oil high-level cognitive processes that give rise to propositional knowledge. Yet, many learning theorists maintain a belief in a learning mechanism in which links between mental representations are formed automatically. We characterize and highlight the differences between the propositional and link approaches, and review the relevant empirical evidence. We conclude that learning is the consequence of propositional reasoning processes that cooperate with the unconscious processes involved in memory retrieval and perception. We argue that this new conceptual framework allows many of the important recent advances in associative learning research to be retained, but recast in a model that provides a firmer foundation for both immediate application and future research
Developing an ontological sandbox : investigating multi-level modellingâs possible Metaphysical Structures
One of the central concerns of the multi-level modelling (MLM) community is the hierarchy of classifications that appear in conceptual models; what these are, how they are linked and how they should be organised into levels and modelled. Though there has been significant work done in this area, we believe that it could be enhanced by introducing a systematic way to investigate the ontological nature and requirements that underlie the frameworks and tools proposed by the community to support MLM (such as Orthogonal Classification Architecture and Melanee). In this paper, we introduce a key component for the investigation and understanding of the ontological requirements, an ontological sandbox. This is a conceptual framework for investigating and comparing multiple variations of possible ontologies â without having to commit to any of them â isolated from a full commitment to any foundational ontology. We discuss the sandbox framework as well as walking through an example of how it can be used to investigate a simple ontology. The example, despite its simplicity, illustrates how the constructional approach can help to expose and explain the metaphysical structures used in ontologies, and so reveal the underlying nature of MLM levelling
Spontaneous PT symmetry breaking of a ferromagnetic superfluid in a gradient field
We consider the interaction of a ferromagnetic spinor Bose-Einstein
condensate with a magnetic field gradient. The magnetic field gradient realizes
a spin-position coupling that explicitly breaks time-reversal symmetry T and
space parity P, but preserves the combined PT symmetry. We observe using
numerical simulations, a first-order phase transition spontaneously breaking
this re-maining symmetry. The transition to a low-gradient phase, in which
gradient effects are frozen out by the ferromagnetic interaction, suggests the
possibility of high-coherence magnetic sensors unaffected by gradient
dephasing
Semiclassical decay of strings with maximum angular momentum
We study the classical breaking of a highly excited (closed or open) string
state on the leading Regge trajectory, represented by a rotating soliton
solution, and we find the resulting solutions for the outgoing two pieces,
describing two specific excited string states. This classical picture
reproduces very accurately the precise analytical relation of the masses
and of the decay products found in a previous quantum computation. The
decay rate is naturally described in terms of a semiclassical formula. We also
point out some interesting features of the evolution after the splitting
process.Comment: 18 pages, latex, 7 figure
Green cities and health: a question of scale?
<p><b>Background:</b> Cities are expanding and accommodating an increasing proportion of the world's population. It is important to identify features of urban form that promote the health of city dwellers. Access to green space has been associated with health benefits at both individual and neighbourhood level. We investigated whether a relationship between green space coverage and selected mortality rates exists at the city level in the USA.</p>
<p><b>Methods:</b> An ecological cross-sectional study. A detailed land use data set was used to quantify green space for the largest US cities (n=49, combined population of 43 million). Linear regression models were used to examine the association between city-level âgreennessâ and city-level standardised rates of mortality from heart disease, diabetes, lung cancer, motor vehicle fatalities and all causes, after adjustment for confounders.</p>
<p><b>Results:</b> There was no association between greenness and mortality from heart disease, diabetes, lung cancer or automobile accidents. Mortality from all causes was significantly higher in greener cities.</p>
<p><b>Conclusions:</b> While considerable evidence suggests that access to green space yields health benefits, we found no such evidence at the scale of the American city. In the USA, greener cities tend also to be more sprawling and have higher levels of car dependency. Any benefits that the green space might offer seem easily eclipsed by these other conditions and the lifestyles that accompany them. The result merits further investigation as it has important implications for how we increase green space access in our cities.</p>
Atom-Resonant Heralded Single Photons by Interaction-Free Measurement
We demonstrate the generation of rubidium-resonant heralded single photons
for quantum memories. Photon pairs are created by cavity-enhanced
down-conversion and narrowed in bandwidth to 7 MHz with a novel atom-based
filter operating by "interaction-free measurement" principles. At least 94% of
the heralded photons are atom-resonant as demonstrated by a direct absorption
measurement with rubidium vapor. A heralded auto-correlation measurement shows
, i.e., suppression of multi-photon contributions
by a factor of 25 relative to a coherent state. The generated heralded photons
can readily be used in quantum memories and quantum networks.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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