2,979 research outputs found
Nonnegative/binary matrix factorization with a D-Wave quantum annealer
D-Wave quantum annealers represent a novel computational architecture and
have attracted significant interest, but have been used for few real-world
computations. Machine learning has been identified as an area where quantum
annealing may be useful. Here, we show that the D-Wave 2X can be effectively
used as part of an unsupervised machine learning method. This method can be
used to analyze large datasets. The D-Wave only limits the number of features
that can be extracted from the dataset. We apply this method to learn the
features from a set of facial images
Making Medical Homes Work: Moving From Concept to Practice
Explores practical considerations for implementing a medical home program of physician practices committed to coordinating and integrating care based on patient needs and priorities, such as how to qualify medical homes and how to match patients to them
The impact of phosphorus inputs from small discharges on designated freshwater sites
Natural England, with a contribution from the Broads Authority, commissioned the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (CEH) in 2009 to conduct a review of the potential risk posed by small domestic discharges, such as from septic tanks, to freshwater SSSIs. The particular focus of this work was the risk of phosphorus (P) pollution to sites that are vulnerable to hyper-eutrophication
In good company: risk, security and choice in young people's drug decisions
This article draws on original empirical research with young people to question the degree to which 'individualisation of risk', as developed in the work of Beck and Giddens, adequately explains the risks young people bear and take. It draws on alternative understandings and critiques of 'risk' not to refute the notion of the reflexive individual upon which 'individualisation of risk' is based but to re-read that reflexivity in a more hermeneutic way. It explores specific risk-laden moments – young people's drug use decisions – in their natural social and cultural context of the friendship group. Studying these decisions in context, it suggests, reveals the meaning of 'risk' to be not given, but constructed through group discussion, disagreement and consensus and decisions taken to be rooted in emotional relations of trust, mutual accountability and common security. The article concludes that 'the individualisation of risk' fails to take adequate account of the significance of intersubjectivity in risk-decisions. It argues also that addressing the theoretical overemphasis on the individual bearer of risk requires not only further empirical testing of the theory but appropriate methodological reflection
Fluctuations From Edge Defects in Superconducting Resonators
Superconducting resonators, used in astronomy and quantum computation, couple
strongly to microscopic two-level defects. We monitor the microwave response of
superconducting resonators and observe fluctuations in dissipation and
resonance frequency. We present a unified model where the observed dissipative
and dispersive effects can be explained as originating from a bath of
fluctuating two-level systems. From these measurements, we quantify the number
and distribution of the defects
Isobaric multiplet mass equation in the quartets
The observed mass excesses of analog nuclear states with the same mass number
and isospin can be used to test the isobaric multiplet mass equation
(IMME), which has, in most cases, been validated to a high degree of precision.
A recent measurement [Kankainen et al., Phys. Rev. C 93 041304(R) (2016)] of
the ground-state mass of Cl led to a substantial breakdown of the IMME
for the lowest quartet. The second-lowest
quartet is not complete, due to uncertainties associated with the identity of
the S member state. Using a fast Cl beam implanted into a plastic
scintillator and a high-purity Ge -ray detection array, rays
from the ClS sequence were measured. Shell-model
calculations using USDB and the recently-developed USDE interactions were
performed for comparison. Isospin mixing between the S isobaric analog
state (IAS) at 6279.0(6) keV and a nearby state at 6390.2(7) keV was observed.
The second state in S was observed at keV.
Isospin mixing in S does not by itself explain the IMME breakdown in the
lowest quartet, but it likely points to similar isospin mixing in the mirror
nucleus P, which would result in a perturbation of the P IAS
energy. USDB and USDE calculations both predict candidate P states
responsible for the mixing in the energy region slightly above
keV. The second quartet has been completed thanks to the identification of the
second S state, and the IMME is validated in this quartet
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