170 research outputs found

    Low-Loss All-Optical Zeno Switch in a Microdisk Cavity Using EIT

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    We present theoretical results of a low-loss all-optical switch based on electromagnetically induced transparency and the classical Zeno effect in a microdisk resonator. We show that a control beam can modify the atomic absorption of the evanescent field which suppresses the cavity field buildup and alters the path of a weak signal beam. We predict more than 35 dB of switching contrast with less than 0.1 dB loss using just 2 micro-Watts of control-beam power for signal beams with less than single photon intensities inside the cavity.Comment: Updated with new references, corrected Eq 2a, and added introductory text. 7 pages, 5 figures, 3 table

    Standards for Psychotherapy

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    Clinical versus Actuarial Prediction

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    Probabilistic Thinking

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    Influence of tool shoulder geometry on properties of friction stir welds in thin copper sheets

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    The aim of this work is to study the influence of the shoulder geometry on friction stir welding of 1 mm-thick copper-DHP plates. The welds were produced using three different shoulder geometries, flat, conical and scrolled, and varying the rotation and traverse speeds of the tool. The flat shoulder tool proved to be inadequate for performing welds, because many defects were produced for all welding conditions. In turn, the scrolled shoulder tool is more effective than the conical one in the production of defect free welds. However, both geometries required a minimum rotational speed to avoid internal defects. For the same welding parameters, greater grain refinement, higher hardness and improved strength are also achieved in the nugget of the welds, using the scrolled tool

    Subadditivity in Memory for Personal Events

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    The criminal profiling illusion:what's behind the smoke and mirrors?

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    There is a belief that criminal profilers can predict a criminal's characteristics from crime scene evidence. In this article, the authors argue that this belief may be an illusion and explain how people may have been misled into believing that criminal profiling (CP) works despite no sound theoretical grounding and no strong empirical support for this possibility. Potentially responsible for this illusory belief is the information that people acquire about CP, which is heavily influenced by anecdotes, repetition of the message that profiling works, the expert profiler label, and a disproportionate emphasis on correct predictions. Also potentially responsible are aspects of information processing such as reasoning errors, creating meaning out of ambiguous information, imitating good ideas, and inferring fact from fiction. The authors conclude that CP should not be used as an investigative tool because it lacks scientific support

    Potential AI Strategies to Solve the Commons Game: A Position Paper

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    Published version of an article from the book: Advances in Artificial Intelligence : 23rd Canadian Conference on Artificial Intelligence. The original publication is available at Springerlink. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-13059-5_45In this paper, we propose the use of hill climbing and particle swarm optimization to find strategies in order to play the Commons Game (CG). The game, which is a non-trivial N-person non-zero-sum game, presents a simple mechanism to formulate how different parties can use shared resources. If the parties cooperate, the resources are sustainable. However, the resources get depleted if used indiscriminately. We consider the case when a single player has to determine the “optimal” solution, and when the other N − 1 players play the game by choosing the options with a fixed probability vector
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