349 research outputs found
QCD-aware partonic jet clustering for truth-jet flavour labelling
We present an algorithm for deriving partonic flavour labels to be applied to
truth particle jets in Monte Carlo event simulations. The inputs to this
approach are final pre-hadronization partons, to remove dependence on
unphysical details such as the order of matrix element calculation and shower
generator frame recoil treatment. These are clustered using standard jet
algorithms, modified to restrict the allowed pseudojet combinations to those in
which tracked flavour labels are consistent with QCD and QED Feynman rules. The
resulting algorithm is shown to be portable between the major families of
shower generators, and largely insensitive to many possible systematic
variations: it hence offers significant advantages over existing ad hoc
labelling schemes. However, it is shown that contamination from multi-parton
scattering simulations can disrupt the labelling results. Suggestions are made
for further extension to incorporate more detailed QCD splitting function
kinematics, robustness improvements, and potential uses for truth-level physics
object definitions and tagging
The role of social interactions in conservation conflict: goose management across Scotland
Increasing anthropogenic influence has left no corner of the natural world untouched. As the negative impacts of people on the natural world have become more prominent, pro-conservation actions have been incentivised across scales, from individual to societal to intergovernmental. Clashes over conservation objectives, when there is a perception that one party is asserting its interests at the expense of the other, is termed Conservation Conflict, and causes negative outcomes for biodiversity and people. Conservation conflicts are complex problems, the successful management of which can rarely be undertaken unilaterally, for both practical and ethical reasons. Finding the best ways for encouraging social interactions and cooperative behaviours are therefore vital in managing conservation conflict.
I take a conservation conflict surrounding the damaging of crops by hyper-abundant flocks of wild geese across Scotland as a case study to explore the roles of social interactions in conservation conflict. In Chapter 2 I start at the network scale by modelling the interactions between individuals and organisations involved in the goose conflict at two locations. I test the networks for the prevalence of particular sets of network configurations which represent individuals forming interactions in response to either a coordination problem (where solutions are sought and implemented efficiently to tackle an agreed goal) or to a cooperation problem (where goals are not shared, and for which solutions must be sought through negotiation). I find that interaction networks in both locations were formed in response to, and have the function to tackle, coordination problems. This is useful for dealing with coordination problems such as the practical management of geese. Interaction networks formed in response to, and having the function to tackle, cooperation problems were less prevalent. This presents a problem when collective problem solving requires negotiation, such as for managing conservation conflict. Networks at both locations would benefit from forming certain types of interactions to strengthen the network for future cooperation problems.
To effectively manage conservation conflicts in-depth knowledge of the cooperative behaviours of the people involved is required. In Chapter 3 I use stakeholder interviews, to investigate how and why individual members of three important stakeholder groups (farmers & crofters, conservation managers, and shooters) cooperated with one another and what barriers to cooperation they faced. I identify three dimensions of cooperation in the goose conflict: i) that the lack of horizontal interactions (between actors who interact with others at a similar organisational scale, for example farmers communicating with other farmers or conservation project managers communicating with other conservation project managers) and vertical interactions (between actors across different organisational scales, for example farmers communicating with farming union representatives, or conservation project managers communicating with senior management) linking widely distributed actors meant both shared learning and the perception of fairness suffer. Building up horizontal and vertical interactions could bypass these scientific and political barriers; ii) a false belief in uniformity among stakeholder groups can be the source of poor system understanding, which can be prevented by developing wider or alternative stakeholder representation; and iii) for long-term, complex issues, identification and discussion of trade-offs is needed to avoid poor outcomes throughout the process, not just at the planning stages.
Laboratory experiments with volunteers show cooperation is less likely in the presence of uncertainty. Much less is known about how stakeholders in real-life conservation conflicts respond to different types of uncertainty. In Chapter 4, I test the effect of different sources of uncertainty on cooperative behaviour using a framed field experiment and interviews with crofters in Scotland. The experiment compared a baseline scenario of perfect certainty with scenarios including either: i) scientific uncertainty about the effectiveness of a conflict-reduction intervention; ii) administrative uncertainty about intervention funding; or iii) political uncertainty about the extent of community support. I find that crofters’ intention to cooperate is high but lessened by uncertainty, especially over the commitment from other stakeholders to cooperate on goose management. I conclude that existing cooperation on goose management may be at risk if uncertainty isn’t reduced outright or if commitments between parties are not strengthened. To avert this issue researchers and government advisers need to: i) determine how uncertainty will impact intention of stakeholders to cooperate; and ii) take steps (such as uncertainty reduction, communication, or acceptance) to reduce the negative impact of uncertainty on cooperation.
In Chapter 5 I use the findings from Chapters 2 to 4 in conjunction with a conservation conflict management tool to evaluate goose conflict management in Scotland. I find many existing structures and processes of goose conflict management in Scotland were successful, but in order to build on these successes I propose several practical interventions. Increasing interactions between disparate groups; building data commons for shared learning; identification, acknowledgement, discussion and inclusion of trade-offs as they emerge; and making commitments to balance and fairness across the system. Enacting these recommendations would give goose conflict management in Scotland greater ability to deliver positive outcomes in what is a highly dynamic issue.
This thesis uses mixed methods to investigate the role of social interaction in conservation conflict. The work succeeds in both identifying interventions specific for managing the goose conflict in Scotland and developing the theory of social interactions and cooperation in conservation conflict management more widely
Assessing the Impact of Retreat Mechanisms in a Simple Antarctic Ice Sheet Model Using Bayesian Calibration
The response of the Antarctic ice sheet (AIS) to changing climate forcings is
an important driver of sea-level changes. Anthropogenic climate change may
drive a sizeable AIS tipping point response with subsequent increases in
coastal flooding risks. Many studies analyzing flood risks use simple models to
project the future responses of AIS and its sea-level contributions. These
analyses have provided important new insights, but they are often silent on the
effects of potentially important processes such as Marine Ice Sheet Instability
(MISI) or Marine Ice Cliff Instability (MICI). These approximations can be well
justified and result in more parsimonious and transparent model structures.
This raises the question of how this approximation impacts hindcasts and
projections. Here, we calibrate a previously published and relatively simple
AIS model, which neglects the effects of MICI and regional characteristics,
using a combination of observational constraints and a Bayesian inversion
method. Specifically, we approximate the effects of missing MICI by comparing
our results to those from expert assessments with more realistic models and
quantify the bias during the last interglacial when MICI may have been
triggered. Our results suggest that the model can approximate the process of
MISI and reproduce the projected median melt from some previous expert
assessments in the year 2100. Yet, our mean hindcast is roughly 3/4 of the
observed data during the last interglacial period and our mean projection is
roughly 1/6 and 1/10 of the mean from a model accounting for MICI in the year
2100. These results suggest that missing MICI and/or regional characteristics
can lead to a low-bias during warming period AIS melting and hence a potential
low-bias in projected sea levels and flood risks.Comment: v1: 16 pages, 4 figures, 7 supplementary files; v2: 15 pages, 4
figures, 7 supplementary files, corrected typos, revised title, updated
according to revisions made through publication proces
Hierarchical Neural Simulation-Based Inference Over Event Ensembles
When analyzing real-world data it is common to work with event ensembles,
which comprise sets of observations that collectively constrain the parameters
of an underlying model of interest. Such models often have a hierarchical
structure, where "local" parameters impact individual events and "global"
parameters influence the entire dataset. We introduce practical approaches for
optimal dataset-wide probabilistic inference in cases where the likelihood is
intractable, but simulations can be realized via forward modeling. We construct
neural estimators for the likelihood(-ratio) or posterior and show that
explicitly accounting for the model's hierarchical structure can lead to
tighter parameter constraints. We ground our discussion using case studies from
the physical sciences, focusing on examples from particle physics (particle
collider data) and astrophysics (strong gravitational lensing observations).Comment: 10+4 pages, 5 figure
Flow Away your Differences: Conditional Normalizing Flows as an Improvement to Reweighting
We present an alternative to reweighting techniques for modifying
distributions to account for a desired change in an underlying conditional
distribution, as is often needed to correct for mis-modelling in a simulated
sample. We employ conditional normalizing flows to learn the full conditional
probability distribution from which we sample new events for conditional values
drawn from the target distribution to produce the desired, altered
distribution. In contrast to common reweighting techniques, this procedure is
independent of binning choice and does not rely on an estimate of the density
ratio between two distributions.
In several toy examples we show that normalizing flows outperform reweighting
approaches to match the distribution of the target.We demonstrate that the
corrected distribution closes well with the ground truth, and a statistical
uncertainty on the training dataset can be ascertained with bootstrapping. In
our examples, this leads to a statistical precision up to three times greater
than using reweighting techniques with identical sample sizes for the source
and target distributions. We also explore an application in the context of high
energy particle physics.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figure
Prospectus, April 9, 1980
SPECIAL APRIL FOOL\u27S FRONT PAGE; FBI probe links Vance with wife\u27s death; New courses offered in Fall; Drinking law blamed for PC student\u27s tragic death; Unknown student turns into lamp; Weak in Review; But seriously, folks…; Graduates prepare; Register for courses between Aprul 14-25; Stroke Club meets; PATH schedules Awareness Week; Nat\u27l Guard needs members; Week in Review; Dodds, Miller file petition for Board of Trustees; Buses capture eye, will peak curiosity; Census teams counting those unaccounted for; Week in Review: World, Nation; Dr. Kleiber presents program; Jazz highlights Krannert events; Placement office says summer jobs are scarce; Workshop for women Saturday; Health Fair is today; Sanders\u27 book: a shocker; Police reggaes out; Sweet gets bitter; Classifieds; Tolono woman wins Fla. trip sweepstakes; Hobby for Paxton man: Trapping takes know-how; Babysitting class offered; U. of I. rec center to serve handicapped; Cobras split four-game series with LLCC; Otloe places 10th at SIU; Equine Club hosts show; Cox wins in Louisville Relays; Parkland College Outdoor Track Schedule; Bogus Sports in Review: Baseball, Football, Basketball, Rifle, Milestones, Wrestlinghttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1980/1031/thumbnail.jp
Prospectus, April 16, 1980
EARTH DAY SCHEDULED; Procrastination hurts registration; Colleges effects on community studied; Letters to the Editor: Questioner is back; Student poets submit for anthology book; Women sponsors women\u27s music; CPD offers reduced tickets for Six Flags; Tornado warnings/watch procedures listed for emergency use if needed; Diabetes workshop; Children\u27s toys are more computerized; Chapin gives views on World Hunger Year; Dates to live by; Four great nights for Jazz Festival; London Calling could be most important release; Classifieds; Sports in Review: Baseball, Basketball Playoffs, College Recruits, Golf, Olympics; It\u27s not too late to turn in census; Cobras win \u27em in the fourth inning; School records fall at EIU; Hitting improves: Cobras win 3; Jacksonville b-ballers to play for Cobras; Park District sponsors kids dog show Sat.https://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1980/1030/thumbnail.jp
A Qualitative Exploration of Using Experiential Groups to Train Future Group Counselors
As counselors routinely provide both individual and group-based services, it is important to prepare trainees to effectively utilize both approaches. One popular method for engaging students in group work training requires them to participate in experiential small groups. Although this requirement meets CACREP’s (2015) standard that students engage in 10 hours of group membership, less specific focus is placed on engaging students in active group facilitation training. This study analyzes qualitative interviews with seven counseling graduates who participated in experiential small groups during their training. Five emergent themes provide insight for counselor educators and accreditors into students’ group training experiences
Prospectus, May 14, 1980
GRADUATES, OR ALMOST GRADUATES, ARE LOOKING TO THE YEARS AHEAD; Intellectual Freedom Essay winner: Maybe they know something in the 2nd grade that we don\u27t; My momma was cumulus; Reporter blows it, Twist blues it; Stars highlight Sullivan; Staerkel bids farewell; Attention; Doomsday schedule; Letters to the Editor; It takes a week, but you can try out your water bed before you buy; Dates to live by; Classifieds; The softball nine win conference; Bench Warmer: LaBadie\u27s enthusiasm rubs off on athletes; Cobras beat Danville, 23-7; Complete Parkland Baseball Statisticshttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1980/1026/thumbnail.jp
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