4,948 research outputs found
Commissioning of the ATLAS Pixel Detector
The ATLAS pixel detector is a high precision silicon tracking device located
closest to the LHC interaction point. It belongs to the first generation of its
kind in a hadron collider experiment. It will provide crucial pattern
recognition information and will largely determine the ability of ATLAS to
precisely track particle trajectories and find secondary vertices. It was the
last detector to be installed in ATLAS in June 2007, has been fully connected
and tested in-situ during spring and summer 2008. It is currently in a
commissioning phase using cosmic-ray events. We present the highlights of the
past and future commissioning activities of the ATLAS pixel system.Comment: Poster at ICHEP08, Philadelphia, USA, July 2008. 3 pages, LaTeX, 2
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Status of the ATLAS Pixel Detector
The pixel detector is a high precision silicon tracking detector located closest to the ATLAS interaction point. It provides crucial pattern recognition information and largely determines the ability for ATLAS to precisely track particle trajectories and find secondary vertices. This paper describes the design requirements, the components and the readout architecture of the pixel detector. It also describes the integration, testing and recent installation of the pixel detector inside the ATLAS detector
Universal crossing probability in anisotropic systems
Scale-invariant universal crossing probabilities are studied for critical
anisotropic systems in two dimensions. For weakly anisotropic standard
percolation in a rectangular-shaped system, Cardy's exact formula is
generalized using a length-rescaling procedure. For strongly anisotropic
systems in 1+1 dimensions, exact results are obtained for the random walk with
absorbing boundary conditions, which can be considered as a linearized
mean-field approximation for directed percolation. The bond and site directed
percolation problem is itself studied numerically via Monte Carlo simulations
on the diagonal square lattice with either free or periodic boundary
conditions. A scale-invariant critical crossing probability is still obtained,
which is a universal function of the effective aspect ratio r_eff=c r where
r=L/t^z, z is the dynamical exponent and c is a non-universal amplitude.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Determination of the Jet Energy Scale at the Collider Detector at Fermilab
A precise determination of the energy scale of jets at the Collider Detector
at Fermilab at the Tevatron collider is described. Jets are used in
many analyses to estimate the energies of partons resulting from the underlying
physics process. Several correction factors are developed to estimate the
original parton energy from the observed jet energy in the calorimeter. The jet
energy response is compared between data and Monte Carlo simulation for various
physics processes, and systematic uncertainties on the jet energy scale are
determined. For jets with transverse momenta above 50 GeV the jet energy scale
is determined with a 3% systematic uncertainty
Interpolating the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick replica trick
The interpolation techniques have become, in the past decades, a powerful
approach to lighten several properties of spin glasses within a simple
mathematical framework. Intrinsically, for their construction, these schemes
were naturally implemented into the cavity field technique, or its variants as
the stochastic stability or the random overlap structures. However the first
and most famous approach to mean field statistical mechanics with quenched
disorder is the replica trick. Among the models where these methods have been
used (namely, dealing with frustration and complexity), probably the best known
is the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick spin glass: In this paper we are pleased to
apply the interpolation scheme to the replica trick framework and test it
directly to the cited paradigmatic model: interestingly this allows to obtain
easily the replica-symmetric control and, synergically with the broken replica
bounds, a description of the full RSB scenario, both coupled with several minor
theorems. Furthermore, by treating the amount of replicas as an
interpolating parameter (far from its original interpretation) this can be
though of as a quenching temperature close to the one introduce in
off-equilibrium approaches and, within this viewpoint, the proof of the
attended commutativity of the zero replica and the infinite volume limits can
be obtained.Comment: This article is dedicated to David Sherrington on the occasion of his
seventieth birthda
On the distribution of maximum value of the characteristic polynomial of GUE random matrices
Motivated by recently discovered relations between logarithmically correlated Gaussian processes and characteristic polynomials of large random NĂN matrices H from the Gaussian Unitary Ensemble (GUE), we consider the problem of characterising the distribution of the global maximum of DN(x):=âlog|det(xIâH)| as Nââ and xâ(â1,1). We arrive at an explicit expression for the asymptotic probability density of the (appropriately shifted) maximum by combining the rigorous Fisher-Hartwig asymptotics due to Krasovsky \cite{K07} with the heuristic {\it freezing transition} scenario for logarithmically correlated processes. Although the general idea behind the method is the same as for the earlier considered case of the Circular Unitary Ensemble, the present GUE case poses new challenges. In particular we show how the conjectured {\it self-duality} in the freezing scenario plays the crucial role in our selection of the form of the maximum distribution. Finally, we demonstrate a good agreement of the found probability density with the results of direct numerical simulations of the maxima of DN(x)
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Economics of Malaria Prevention in US Travelers to West Africa
Background. Pretravel health consultations help international travelers manage travel-related illness risks through education, vaccination, and medication. This study evaluated costs and benefits of that portion of the health consultation associated with malaria prevention provided to US travelers bound for West Africa. Methods. The estimated change in disease risk and associated costs and benefits resulting from traveler adherence to malaria chemoprophylaxis were calculated from 2 perspectives: the healthcare payer's and the traveler's. We used data from the Global TravEpiNet network of US travel clinics that collect de-identified pretravel data for international travelers. Disease risk and chemoprophylaxis effectiveness were estimated from published medical reports. Direct medical costs were obtained from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample and published literature. Results. We analyzed 1029 records from January 2009 to January 2011. Assuming full adherence to chemoprophylaxis regimens, consultations saved healthcare payers a per-traveler average of 372 (30-day trip). For travelers, consultations resulted in a range of net cost of 32 (30-day trip). Differences were mostly driven by risk of malaria in the destination country. Conclusions. Our model suggests that healthcare payers save money for short- and longer-term trips, and that travelers save money for longer trips when travelers adhere to malaria recommendations and prophylactic regimens in West Africa. This is a potential incentive to healthcare payers to offer consistent pretravel preventive care to travelers. This financial benefit complements the medical benefit of reducing the risk of malaria
Stereo disparity facilitates view generalization during shape recognition for solid multipart objects
Current theories of object recognition in human vision make different predictions about whether the recognition of complex, multipart objects should be influenced by shape information about surface depth orientation and curvature derived from stereo disparity. We examined this issue in five experiments using a recognition memory paradigm in which observers (N = 134) memorized and then discriminated sets of 3D novel objects at trained and untrained viewpoints under either mono or stereo viewing conditions. In order to explore the conditions under which stereo-defined shape information contributes to object recognition we systematically varied the difficulty of view generalization by increasing the angular disparity between trained and untrained views. In one series of experiments, objects were presented from either previously trained views or untrained views rotated (15°, 30°, or 60°) along the same plane. In separate experiments we examined whether view generalization effects interacted with the vertical or horizontal plane of object rotation across 40° viewpoint changes. The results showed robust viewpoint-dependent performance costs: Observers were more efficient in recognizing learned objects from trained than from untrained views, and recognition was worse for extrapolated than for interpolated untrained views. We also found that performance was enhanced by stereo viewing but only at larger angular disparities between trained and untrained views. These findings show that object recognition is not based solely on 2D image information but that it can be facilitated by shape information derived from stereo disparity
State of malaria diagnostic testing at clinical laboratories in the United States, 2010: a nationwide survey
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The diagnosis of malaria can be difficult in non-endemic areas, such as the United States, and delays in diagnosis and errors in treatment occur too often.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A nationwide survey of laboratories in the United States and its nine dependent territories was conducted in 2010 to determine factors that may contribute to shortcomings in the diagnosis of malaria. This survey explored the availability of malaria diagnostic tests, techniques used, and reporting practices.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The survey was completed by 201 participants. Ninety percent reported that their laboratories had at least one type of malaria diagnostic test available on-site. Nearly all of the respondents' laboratories performed thick and thin smears on-site; approximately 50% had access to molecular testing; and only 17% had access to rapid diagnostic tests on-site. Seventy-three percent reported fewer than five confirmed cases of malaria in their laboratory during the 12-month period preceding the survey. Twenty-eight percent stated that results of species identification took more than 24 hours to report. Only five of 149 respondents that performed testing 24 hours a day, 7 days a week complied with all of the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) guidelines for analysis and reporting of results.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Although malaria diagnostic testing services were available to a majority of U.S. laboratories surveyed, very few were in complete compliance with all of the CLSI guidelines for analysis and reporting of results, and most respondents reported very few cases of malaria annually. Laboratories' difficulty in adhering to the rigorous CLSI guidelines and their personnel's lack of practice and proficiency may account for delays and errors in diagnosis. It is recommended that laboratories that infrequently process samples for malaria seek opportunities for practice and proficiency training annually and take advantage of available resources to assist in species identification.</p
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