756 research outputs found
Reversing conditional orderings
We analyze some specific aspects concerning conditional orderings and relations among them. To this purpose we define a suitable concept of reversed conditional ordering and prove some related results. In particular we aim to compare the univariate stochastic orderings ≤ st, ≤ hr, and ≤ lr in terms of differences among different notions of conditional orderings. Some applications of our result to the analysis of positive dependence will be detailed. We concentrate attention to the case of a pair of scalar random variables X, Y . Suitable extensions to multivariate cases are possible
Detecting Sarcasm in Multimodal Social Platforms
Sarcasm is a peculiar form of sentiment expression, where the surface
sentiment differs from the implied sentiment. The detection of sarcasm in
social media platforms has been applied in the past mainly to textual
utterances where lexical indicators (such as interjections and intensifiers),
linguistic markers, and contextual information (such as user profiles, or past
conversations) were used to detect the sarcastic tone. However, modern social
media platforms allow to create multimodal messages where audiovisual content
is integrated with the text, making the analysis of a mode in isolation
partial. In our work, we first study the relationship between the textual and
visual aspects in multimodal posts from three major social media platforms,
i.e., Instagram, Tumblr and Twitter, and we run a crowdsourcing task to
quantify the extent to which images are perceived as necessary by human
annotators. Moreover, we propose two different computational frameworks to
detect sarcasm that integrate the textual and visual modalities. The first
approach exploits visual semantics trained on an external dataset, and
concatenates the semantics features with state-of-the-art textual features. The
second method adapts a visual neural network initialized with parameters
trained on ImageNet to multimodal sarcastic posts. Results show the positive
effect of combining modalities for the detection of sarcasm across platforms
and methods.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, final version published in the Proceedings of
ACM Multimedia 201
Transport Properties of Solitons
We calculate in this article the transport coefficients which characterize
the dynamics of solitons in quantum field theory using the methods of
dissipative quantum systems. We show how the damping and diffusion coefficients
of soliton-like excitations can be calculated using the integral functional
formalism. The model obtained in this article has new features which cannot be
obtained in the standard models of dissipation in quantum mechanics.Comment: 16 Pages, RevTeX, Preprint UIU
Parametrization of the octupole degrees of freedom
A simple parametrization for the octupole collective variables is proposed
and the symmetries of the wave functions are discussed in terms of the
solutions corresponding to the vibrational limit. [PACS: 21.60Ev, 21.60.Fw,
21.10.Re]Comment: 14 page
The influence of selenium and zinc addition in food on concentration of these elements in blood and milk, on somatic cells number and histological characteristics of cows udders
The experiment included 30 cows of Holstein-Friesian breed, out of which 15
were receiving selenium and zinc in optimal doses before calving, while the
others had never been supplemented with these micronutrients. There was
analysed the concentration of selenium and zinc in blood and milk serum as
well as the average number of somatic cells in corresponding lactation. After
the cows exclusion from production, histological characteristics of cows
udders were examined. The results of the investigation have shown that
addition of selenium and zinc before calving has a positive effect on the
values of these microelements in the blood and milk during the period of
early lactation, that is, the concentration of these elements was
significantly higher in the blood and milk of the cows that obtained selenium
and zinc supplements. Also, in these cows there was significantly lower
number of somatic cells during the following lacation period. In the
parenchyma of the udder there was found less pronounced infiltration of
leukocytes, notably thicker keratin layer of ductus papillaris and less
expressed repairing processes that indicate a chronic inflammation of the
udder in the samples after exclusion of the cows from production. There was a
significant positive correlation between selenium in blood and milk, while
there was not observed such a correlation for zinc. On the other hand, there
was a significant negative correlation between the concentration of selenium
in the blood and milk with the average number of somatic cells and the degree
of infiltration of leukocytes, while its influence on the keratin layer of
ductus papillarus was not shown. Zinc from blood and udder had a negative
correlation with the number of somatic cells, had a positive correlation with
the thickness of ductus papillaris keratin layer and had no influence on the
level of leukocyte infiltration of udder parenchyma. Zinc demonstrates a
positive influence on the formation of ductus papillaris keratin layer and
protects the udder from pathogens penetration, while selenium stimulates the
immunological response of the udder. Their positive impact can be defined as
additive, because athough they have effect on two morphologically separate
udder parts, adding both of them significantly decreases the number of
somatic cells in milk. [Projekat Ministarstva nauke Republike Srbije, br.
TR31062
An alternative approach for the dynamics of polarons in one dimension
We developed a new method based on functional integration to treat the
dynamics of polarons in one-dimensional systems. We treat the acoustical and
the optical case in an unified manner, showing their differences and
similarities. The mobility and diffusion coefficients are calculated in the
Markovian approximation in the strong coupling limit.Comment: 57 page
A spinor approach to Walker geometry
A four-dimensional Walker geometry is a four-dimensional manifold M with a
neutral metric g and a parallel distribution of totally null two-planes. This
distribution has a natural characterization as a projective spinor field
subject to a certain constraint. Spinors therefore provide a natural tool for
studying Walker geometry, which we exploit to draw together several themes in
recent explicit studies of Walker geometry and in other work of Dunajski (2002)
and Plebanski (1975) in which Walker geometry is implicit. In addition to
studying local Walker geometry, we address a global question raised by the use
of spinors.Comment: 41 pages. Typos which persisted into published version corrected,
notably at (2.15
Can we rate public support for democracy in a comparable way? Cross-national equivalence of democratic attitudes in the World Value Survey
In this study we examine the cross-cultural equivalence of two scales that measure attitudes toward democracy across 36 countries in the World Value Survey (WVS) 2000. We examine the equivalence of these scales in order to explore if we can meaningfully compare democratic attitudes across countries. Multiple group confirmatory factor analyses (MGCFA) is applied to answer this question. The analyses indicate that the scales may be compared but only to a certain extent and not across all the countries. We close this article by discussing the implications of the findings
New Lump-like Structures in Scalar-field Models
In this work we investigate lump-like solutions in models described by a
single real scalar field. We start considering non-topological solutions with
the usual lump-like form, and then we study other models, where the bell-shape
profile may have varying amplitude and width, or develop a flat plateau at its
top, or even induce a lump on top of another lump. We suggest possible
applications where these exotic solutions might be used in several distinct
branches of physics.Comment: REvTex4, twocolumn, 10 pages, 9 figures; new reference added, to
appear in EPJ
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