10,872 research outputs found
Simulating nitrogen budgets in complex farming systems using INCA: calibration and scenario analyses for the Kervidy catchment (W. France)
International audienceThe integrated nitrogen model INCA (Integrated Nitrogen in Catchments) was used to analyse the nitrogen dynamics in a small rural catchment in Western France. The agrosystem studied is very complex, with: extensive use of different organic fertilisers, a variety of crop rotations, a structural excess of nitrogen (i.e. more animal N produced by the intensive farming than the N requirements of the crops and pastures), and nitrate retention in both hydrological stores and riparian zones. The original model features were adapted here to describe this complexity. The calibration results are satisfactory, although the daily variations in stream nitrate are not simulated in detail. Different climate scenarios, based on observed climate records, were tested; all produced a worsening of the pollution in the short term. Scenarios of alternative agricultural practices (reduced fertilisation and catch crops) were also analysed, suggesting that a reduction by 40% of the fertilisation combined with the introduction of catch crops would be necessary to stop the degradation of water quality. Keywords: diffuse pollution, nitrate, climate change, mode
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Cocaine Addiction as a Homeostatic Reinforcement Learning Disorder
Drug addiction implicates both reward learning and homeostatic regulation mechanisms of the brain. This has stimulated 2 partially successful theoretical perspectives on addiction. Many important aspects of addiction, however, remain to be explained within a single, unified framework that integrates the 2 mechanisms. Building upon a recently developed homeostatic reinforcement learning theory, the authors focus on a key transition stage of addiction that is well modeled in animals, escalation of drug use, and propose a computational theory of cocaine addiction where cocaine reinforces behavior due to its rapid homeostatic corrective effect, whereas its chronic use induces slow and long-lasting changes in homeostatic setpoint. Simulations show that our new theory accounts for key behavioral and neurobiological features of addiction, most notably, escalation of cocaine use, drug-primed craving and relapse, individual differences underlying dose-response curves, and dopamine D2-receptor downregulation in addicts. The theory also generates unique predictions about cocaine self-administration behavior in rats that are confirmed by new experimental results. Viewing addiction as a homeostatic reinforcement learning disorder coherently explains many behavioral and neurobiological aspects of the transition to cocaine addiction, and suggests a new perspective toward understanding addiction
Quasiperiodicity and non-computability in tilings
We study tilings of the plane that combine strong properties of different
nature: combinatorial and algorithmic. We prove existence of a tile set that
accepts only quasiperiodic and non-recursive tilings. Our construction is based
on the fixed point construction; we improve this general technique and make it
enforce the property of local regularity of tilings needed for
quasiperiodicity. We prove also a stronger result: any effectively closed set
can be recursively transformed into a tile set so that the Turing degrees of
the resulted tilings consists exactly of the upper cone based on the Turing
degrees of the later.Comment: v3: the version accepted to MFCS 201
Fixed Point and Aperiodic Tilings
An aperiodic tile set was first constructed by R.Berger while proving the
undecidability of the domino problem. It turned out that aperiodic tile sets
appear in many topics ranging from logic (the Entscheidungsproblem) to physics
(quasicrystals) We present a new construction of an aperiodic tile set that is
based on Kleene's fixed-point construction instead of geometric arguments. This
construction is similar to J. von Neumann self-reproducing automata; similar
ideas were also used by P. Gacs in the context of error-correcting
computations. The flexibility of this construction allows us to construct a
"robust" aperiodic tile set that does not have periodic (or close to periodic)
tilings even if we allow some (sparse enough) tiling errors. This property was
not known for any of the existing aperiodic tile sets.Comment: v5: technical revision (positions of figures are shifted
Composite mirror facets for ground based gamma ray astronomy
Composite mirrors for gamma-ray astronomy have been developed to fulfill the
specifications required for the next generation of Cherenkov telescopes
represented by CTA (Cherenkov Telescope Array). In addition to the basic
requirements on focus and reflection efficiency, the mirrors have to be stiff,
lightweight, durable and cost efficient. In this paper, the technology
developed to produce such mirrors is described, as well as some tests that have
been performed to validate them. It is shown that these mirrors comply with the
needs of CTA, making them good candidates for use on a significant part of the
array.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, accepted to be published on NIM
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