4,070 research outputs found
Statement of John C. Read on Behalf of the National Association of Manufacturers Before the Commission on the Future of Worker-Management Relations
Testimony_Read_090894.pdf: 120 downloads, before Oct. 1, 2020
Weakly-supervised appraisal analysis
This article is concerned with the computational treatment of Appraisal, a Systemic Functional Linguistic theory of the types of language employed to communicate opinion in English. The theory considers aspects such as Attitude (how writers communicate their point of view), Engagement (how writers align themselves with respect to the opinions of others) and Graduation (how writers amplify or diminish their attitudes and engagements). To analyse text according to the theory we employ a weakly-supervised approach to text classification, which involves comparing the similarity of words with prototypical examples of classes. We evaluate the method's performance using a collection of book reviews annotated according to the Appraisal theory
Operator algebras with contractive approximate identities II
We make several contributions to our recent program investigating structural
properties of algebras of operators on a Hilbert space. For example, we make
substantial contributions to the noncommutative peak interpolation program
begun by Hay and the first author, Hay and Neal. Another sample result: an
operator algebra has a contractive approximate identity iff the linear span of
the elements with positive real part is dense. We also extend the theory of
compact projections to the most general case. Despite the title, our algebras
are often allowed to have no approximate identity.Comment: 18 pages. To appear J. Functional Analysi
Order theory and interpolation in operator algebras
We continue our study of operator algebras with and contractive approximate
identities (cais). In earlier papers we have introduced and studied a new
notion of positivity in operator algebras, with an eye to extending certain
C*-algebraic results and theories to more general algebras. Here we continue to
develop this positivity and its associated ordering, proving many foundational
facts. We also give many applications, for example to noncommutative topology,
noncommutative peak sets, lifting problems, peak interpolation, approximate
identities, and to order relations between an operator algebra and the
C*-algebra it generates. In much of this it is not necessary that the algebra
have an approximate identity. Many of our results apply immediately to function
algebras, but we will not take the time to point these out, although most of
these applications seem new.Comment: 27 pages. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1308.272
The Northern Anchovy reduction fishery for the 1978-79 through 1981-82 seasons
Nearly 49,000 metric tons (MT) of anchovies were taken during the 1978-79 season, followed by 32,390 MT in 1979-80, 60,678 MT in 1980-81 and 45,150 MT in 1981-82. A total of 14,076 fish was sampled during the four seasons for age,
length and sex. The fishery during the four seasons consisted mainly of young-of-the-year and age groups I and II fish. The 1978 and 1979 yr classes comprised the major
share of the catch. Seasonal mean lengths varied from 112 mm standard length (SL) in the 1979-80 season to 122 mm SL for the 1981-82 season. Female to male sex ratios ranged from 1.17:l (1978-79 season) to 1.59:l (1979-80 season). (28pp.
Ideals and hereditary subalgebras in operator algebras
This paper may be viewed as having two aims. First, we continue our study of
algebras of operators on a Hilbert space which have a contractive approximate
identity, this time from a more Banach algebraic point of view. Namely, we
mainly investigate topics concerned with the ideal structure, and hereditary
subalgebras (HSA's), which are in some sense generalization of ideals. Second,
we study properties of operator algebras which are hereditary subalgebras in
their bidual, or equivalently which are `weakly compact'. We also give several
examples answering natural questions that arise in such an investigation.Comment: 24 page
- ā¦