6,794 research outputs found
A New Chamber for Studying the Behavior of Drosophila
Methods available for quickly and objectively quantifying the behavioral phenotypes of the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, lag behind in sophistication the tools developed for manipulating their genotypes. We have developed a simple, easy-to-replicate, general-purpose experimental chamber for studying the ground-based behaviors of fruit flies. The major innovative feature of our design is that it restricts flies to a shallow volume of space, forcing all behavioral interactions to take place within a monolayer of individuals. The design lessens the frequency that flies occlude or obscure each other, limits the variability in their appearance, and promotes a greater number of flies to move throughout the center of the chamber, thereby increasing the frequency of their interactions. The new chamber design improves the quality of data collected by digital video and was conceived and designed to complement automated machine vision methodologies for studying behavior. Novel and improved methodologies for better quantifying the complex behavioral phenotypes of Drosophila will facilitate studies related to human disease and fundamental questions of behavioral neuroscience
A Nanoscale Experiment Measuring Gravity's Role in Breaking the Unitarity of Quantum Dynamics
Modern, state of the art nanomechanical devices are capable of creating
spatial superpositions that are massive enough to begin to experimentally
access the quantum to classical crossover, and thus force us to consider the
possible ways in which the usual quantum dynamics may be affected. One recent
theoretical proposal describes the crossover from unitary quantum mechanics to
classical dynamics as a form of spontaneous symmetry breaking. Here, we propose
a specific experimental setup capable of identifying the source of unitarity
breaking in such a mechanism. The experiment is aimed specifically at
clarifying the role played by gravity, and distinguishes the resulting dynamics
from that suggested by alternative scenarios for the quantum to classical
crossover. We give both a theoretical description of the expected dynamics, and
a discussion of the involved experimental parameter values and the proposed
experimental protocol.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures; final versio
A nonsymmetric version of Okounkov's BC-type interpolation Macdonald polynomials
Symmetric and nonsymmetric interpolation Laurent polynomials are introduced
with the interpolation points depending on and a -tuple of parameters
. For the principal specialization
the symmetric interpolation Laurent polynomials reduce to
Okounkov's -type interpolation Macdonald polynomials and the nonsymmetric
interpolation Laurent polynomials become their nonsymmetric variants. We expand
the symmetric interpolation Laurent polynomials in the nonsymmetric ones. We
show that Okounkov's -type interpolation Macdonald polynomials can also be
obtained from their nonsymmetric versions using a one-parameter family of
actions of the finite Hecke algebra of type in terms of Demazure-Lusztig
operators. In the Appendix we give some experimental results and conjectures
about extra vanishing.Comment: 30 pages, 9 figures; v4: experimental results and conjectures added
about extra vanishin
Power and Bandwidth Efficient Coded Modulation for Linear Gaussian Channels
A scheme for power- and bandwidth-efficient communication on the linear Gaussian channel is proposed. A scenario is assumed in which the channel is stationary in time and the channel characteristics are known at the transmitter. Using interleaving, the linear Gaussian channel with its intersymbol interference is decomposed into a set of memoryless subchannels. Each subchannel is further decomposed into parallel binary memoryless channels, to enable the use of binary codes. Code bits from these parallel binary channels are mapped to higher-order near-Gaussian distributed constellation symbols. At the receiver, the code bits are detected and decoded in a multistage fashion. The scheme is demonstrated on a simple instance of the linear Gaussian channel. Simulations show that the scheme achieves reliable communication at 1.2 dB away from the Shannon capacity using a moderate number of subchannels
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