3,319 research outputs found
Are bullies more productive? Empirical study of affectiveness vs. issue fixing time
Human Affectiveness, i.e., The emotional state of a person, plays a crucial role in many domains where it can make or break a team's ability to produce successful products. Software development is a collaborative activity as well, yet there is little information on how affectiveness impacts software productivity. As a first measure of this impact, this paper analyzes the relation between sentiment, emotions and politeness of developers in more than 560K Jira comments with the time to fix a Jira issue. We found that the happier developers are (expressing emotions such as JOY and LOVE in their comments), the shorter the issue fixing time is likely to be. In contrast, negative emotions such as SADNESS, are linked with longer issue fixing time. Politeness plays a more complex role and we empirically analyze its impact on developers' productivity
Ash dieback on the island of Ireland
Book sectionThis publication is based on the work of Action FP1103 FRAXBACK,
supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology)On the island of Ireland it is estimated that there are over half a million kilometres of hedgerows (400,000+ km
in the Republic of Ireland (Rep. Ireland) and 113,000+ in Northern Ireland (Northern Ireland). Ash (Fraxinus
excelsior) is the second most important component, after hawthorn (Crataegus monogyna), in large proportions
of this hedgerow network. In the Rep. Ireland over 20,000 ha of ash have been planted since 1990, primarily for
sawlogs and to provide material for the manufacture of hurleys, which are used in an important national sport
called hurling, and for camogie sticks used to play camogie. Ash dieback, caused by Hymenoscyphus fraxineus,
was first identified on the island in October 2012 and since then has been detected at 306 sites (195 in Rep.
Ireland and 111 in Northern Ireland). In the vast majority of cases the outbreaks have been on young, imported
trees planted within the previous 5 – 6 years and it was evident that the pathogen had been introduced on trees
for planting. On a small number of occasions there was evidence of the pathogen cycling within a plantation or
moving from the plantation to infect neighbouring hedgerow trees. One possible mechanism by which the
pathogen can build up sufficient inoculum is by the formation of apothecia on infected woody tissue high up on
the plants. Rep. Ireland and Northern Ireland have strict policies of eradication and containment, as set out in the
All-Ireland Chalara Control Strategy. To date over 2.1 million trees have been destroyed as part of an
eradication strategy. It is considered that this prompt and far-reaching action has had a significant impact,
significantly mitigating and preventing the rapid establishment of the pathogen and limiting its spread. The
interventions since the disease was first confirmed have helped to protect the considerable investment in ash
plantations of the last 20 years. The pathogen has not, however, been eradicated from the island of Ireland and it
remains to be seen how widespread, and how quickly ash dieback will become established on the island of
Ireland. The latest figures from the Republic of Ireland are that 733 hectares of ash plantation has been
reconstituted with another species as a result of Chalara and this has cost our state €2.6 million so far; in
addition, Chalara has been found and confirmed in all 26 counties of the Republic of Ireland to a greater or lesser
extent. As a result the current policies and procedures regarding Chalara are under review.This publication is based on the work of Action FP1103 FRAXBACK,
supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology
The emotional side of software developers in JIRA
Issue tracking systems store valuable data for testing hypotheses concerning maintenance, building statistical prediction models and (recently) investigating developer affectiveness. For the latter, issue tracking systems can be mined to explore developers emotions, sentiments and politeness |affects for short. However, research on affect detection in software artefacts is still in its early stage due to the lack of manually validated data and tools. In this paper, we contribute to the research of affects on software artefacts by providing a labeling of emotions present on issue comments. We manually labeled 2,000 issue comments and 4,000 sentences written by developers with emotions such as love, joy, surprise, anger, sadness and fear. Labeled comments and sentences are linked to software artefacts reported in our previously published dataset (containing more than 1K projects, more than 700K issue reports and more than 2 million issue comments). The enriched dataset presented in this paper allows the investigation of the role of affects in software development
Effects of azimuth-symmetric acceptance cutoffs on the measured asymmetry in unpolarized Drell-Yan fixed target experiments
Fixed-target unpolarized Drell-Yan experiments often feature an acceptance
depending on the polar angle of the lepton tracks in the laboratory frame.
Typically leptons are detected in a defined angular range, with a dead zone in
the forward region. If the cutoffs imposed by the angular acceptance are
independent of the azimuth, at first sight they do not appear dangerous for a
measurement of the cos(2\phi)-asymmetry, relevant because of its association
with the violation of the Lam-Tung rule and with the Boer-Mulders function. On
the contrary, direct simulations show that up to 10 percent asymmetries are
produced by these cutoffs. These artificial asymmetries present qualitative
features that allow them to mimic the physical ones. They introduce some
model-dependence in the measurements of the cos(2\phi)-asymmetry, since a
precise reconstruction of the acceptance in the Collins-Soper frame requires a
Monte Carlo simulation, that in turn requires some detailed physical input to
generate event distributions. Although experiments in the eighties seem to have
been aware of this problem, the possibility of using the Boer-Mulders function
as an input parameter in the extraction of Transversity has much increased the
requirements of precision on this measurement. Our simulations show that the
safest approach to these measurements is a strong cutoff on the Collins-Soper
polar angle. This reduces statistics, but does not necessarily decrease the
precision in a measurement of the Boer-Mulders function.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figure
A Cylindrical GEM Inner Tracker for the BESIII experiment at IHEP
The Beijing Electron Spectrometer III (BESIII) is a multipurpose detector
that collects data provided by the collision in the Beijing Electron Positron
Collider II (BEPCII), hosted at the Institute of High Energy Physics of
Beijing. Since the beginning of its operation, BESIII has collected the world
largest sample of J/{\psi} and {\psi}(2s). Due to the increase of the
luminosity up to its nominal value of 10^33 cm-2 s-1 and aging effect, the MDC
decreases its efficiency in the first layers up to 35% with respect to the
value in 2014. Since BESIII has to take data up to 2022 with the chance to
continue up to 2027, the Italian collaboration proposed to replace the inner
part of the MDC with three independent layers of Cylindrical triple-GEM (CGEM).
The CGEM-IT project will deploy several new features and innovation with
respect the other current GEM based detector: the {\mu}TPC and analog readout,
with time and charge measurements will allow to reach the 130 {\mu}m spatial
resolution in 1 T magnetic field requested by the BESIII collaboration. In this
proceeding, an update of the status of the project will be presented, with a
particular focus on the results with planar and cylindrical prototypes with
test beams data. These results are beyond the state of the art for GEM
technology in magnetic field
Latest results and hardware activities from BESIII
The BESIII spectrometer is hosted at the BEPCII e+e−
collider of the IHEP, Beijing. Since July 2008, it has collected the largest data sample available in the world at the energies of the J/ψ, ψ(2S), ψ(3770) and ψ(4040) resonances; data taking at high luminosities will go on for years. In this work I will describe the experiment peculiarities, showing in particular some of the most recent results involving light hadron spectroscopy, charmonium spectra and transitions, and charm physics. I will also describe in details those contributions coming from the Italian component of the Collaboration, focusing on those hardware projects (Zero Degree Detector, ZDD, and cylindrical GEMs, CGEM) the Italian BESIII researchers have
devoted most of their efforts to
A model to explain angular distributions of and decays into and
BESIII data show a particular angular distribution for the decay of the
and mesons into the hyperons
and . More in details the angular distribution of
the decay exhibits an opposite trend
with respect to that of the other three channels: , and
. We define a model to explain the
origin of this phenomenon.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, to be published in Chinese Physics
Deep sub-threshold production in Ar+KCl reactions at 1.76A GeV
We report first results on a deep sub-threshold production of the doubly
strange hyperon in a heavy-ion reaction. At a beam energy of 1.76A GeV
the reaction Ar+KCl was studied with the High Acceptance Di-Electron
Spectrometer (HADES) at SIS18/GSI. A high-statistics and high-purity
sample was collected, allowing for the investigation of the decay channel
. The deduced production
ratio of is significantly larger
than available model predictions.Comment: 4 pages, including 4 figure
In-Medium Effects on K0 Mesons in Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collisions
We present the transverse momentum spectra and rapidity distributions of
and K in Ar+KCl reactions at a beam kinetic energy of 1.756 A
GeV measured with the spectrometer HADES. The reconstructed K sample is
characterized by good event statistics for a wide range in momentum and
rapidity. We compare the experimental and K distributions to
predictions by the IQMD model. The model calculations show that K at low
tranverse momenta constitute a particularly well suited tool to investigate the
kaon in-medium potential. Our K data suggest a strong repulsive in-medium
K potential of about 40 MeV strength.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, accepted by Phys. Rev.
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