821 research outputs found
Sudakov Logarithm Resummation for Vector Boson Production at Hadron Colliders
A complete description of W and Z boson production at high-energy colliders
requires the resummation of large Sudakov logarithms which dominate the
production at small transverse momentum. Currently there are two techniques for
performing this resummation: impact parameter space and transverse momentum
space. We argue that the latter can be formulated in a way which retains the
advantages of the former, while at the same time allowing a smooth transition
to finite order dominance at high transverse momentum.Comment: 5 pages, LaTeX, 2 figures, epsfig, contribution to the proceedings of
the UK Phenomenology Workshop on Collider Physics, 19-24 September 1999,
Durham, to be published in J. Phys.
A Comparison of Predictions for SM Higgs Boson Production at the LHC
This paper describes a comparison of most of the available predictions for
the cross section and transverse momentum distribution for a 125 GeV mass Higgs
at the LHC, including those from the PYTHIA and HERWIG parton shower Monte
Carlos and from four resummation calculations.Comment: 7 pages, submitted to proceedings of the Workshop on Physics at TeV
Colliders, Les Houches 200
Analysis of Contextual Factors Influence on Auditors Informal Learning
In the next decade, more than 1 billion people will need reskilling as professional roles evolve. Even more importantly, the COVID-19 pandemic is forcing organizations to rethink the entire role of organizational learning in both the short- and long-term. As a consequence of this change, professionals need to be motivated to continually further their own skill sets in addition to organizational needs. The purpose of this study was to investigate the hours auditors engage in learning activities integrated into daily work tasks and factors that support engagement in learning. Further, the study provided insight into auditorsâ informal learning preferences at different levels of work experience and auditorsâ tendency to participate given the level of the perceived organizational learning culture
Parity-Odd Asymmetries in W-Jet Events at the Tevatron
Parity-odd asymmetries in the decay angular distribution of a W boson
produced with a hard jet in p\bar{p} collisions arise only from QCD
rescattering effects. If observed, these asymmetries will provide a first
demonstration that perturbative QCD calculation is valid for the absorptive
part of scattering amplitudes. We propose a simple observable to measure these
asymmetries and perform realistic Monte Carlo simulations at Tevatron energies.
It is shown that the Tevatron Run-II should provide sufficient statistics to
test the prediction.Comment: 4pages, 2figures, revtex, references and discussions added, version
to appear in PRL, typo correcte
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Where Are My Intelligent Assistant's Mistakes? A Systematic Testing Approach
Intelligent assistants are handling increasingly critical tasks, but until now, end users have had no way to systematically assess where their assistants make mistakes. For some intelligent assistants, this is a serious problem: if the assistant is doing work that is important, such as assisting with qualitative research or monitoring an elderly parentâs safety, the user may pay a high cost for unnoticed mistakes. This paper addresses the problem with WYSIWYT/ML (What You See Is What You Test for Machine Learning), a human/computer partnership that enables end users to systematically test intelligent assistants. Our empirical evaluation shows that WYSIWYT/ML helped end users find assistantsâ mistakes significantly more effectively than ad hoc testing. Not only did it allow users to assess an assistantâs work on an average of 117 predictions in only 10 minutes, it also scaled to a much larger data set, assessing an assistantâs work on 623 out of 1,448 predictions using only the usersâ original 10 minutesâ testing effort
Same-sign W pair production as a probe of double parton scattering at the LHC
We study the production of same-sign W boson pairs at the LHC in double
parton interactions. Compared with simple factorised double parton
distributions (dPDFs), we show that the recently developed dPDFs, GS09, lead to
non-trivial kinematic correlations between the W bosons. A numerical study of
the prospects for observing this process using same-sign dilepton signatures,
including same-sign WWjj, di-boson and heavy flavour backgrounds, at 14 TeV
centre-of-mass energy is then performed. It is shown that a small excess of
same-sign dilepton events from double parton scattering over a background
dominated by single scattering WZ(gamma*) production could be observed at the
LHC.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures. Added references, slight changes in the text
150 Credit-Hours: Stakeholdersâ Benefits and Studentsâ Skills and Attributes
With evolving professional expectations of todayâs CPAs, the current changes to the CPA exam focus on higher-order cognitive skills of analysis including data analytics and digital dataset skills. Considering the flexibility in how students are fulfilling the 150 credit-hours requirement, a chosen pathway curriculum may not afford students with the opportunity to acquire these skills and competencies necessary to meet workplace expectations. The findings from this study provide insights into the trending education pathway, perceived benefits gained, and offer a perspective into how educators can improve their accounting curriculum to better prepare students for the needs of the accounting profession
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Tell me more?: the effects of mental model soundness on personalizing an intelligent agent
What does a user need to know to productively work with an intelligent agent? Intelligent agents and recommender systems are gaining widespread use, potentially creating a need for end users to understand how these systems operate in order to fix their agent's personalized behavior. This paper explores the effects of mental model soundness on such personalization by providing structural knowledge of a music recommender system in an empirical study. Our findings show that participants were able to quickly build sound mental models of the recommender system's reasoning, and that participants who most improved their mental models during the study were significantly more likely to make the recommender operate to their satisfaction. These results suggest that by helping end users understand a system's reasoning, intelligent agents may elicit more and better feedback, thus more closely aligning their output with each user's intentions
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