619 research outputs found
Warped metrics for location-scale models
This paper argues that a class of Riemannian metrics, called warped metrics,
plays a fundamental role in statistical problems involving location-scale
models. The paper reports three new results : i) the Rao-Fisher metric of any
location-scale model is a warped metric, provided that this model satisfies a
natural invariance condition, ii) the analytic expression of the sectional
curvature of this metric, iii) the exact analytic solution of the geodesic
equation of this metric. The paper applies these new results to several
examples of interest, where it shows that warped metrics turn location-scale
models into complete Riemannian manifolds of negative sectional curvature. This
is a very suitable situation for developing algorithms which solve problems of
classification and on-line estimation. Thus, by revealing the connection
between warped metrics and location-scale models, the present paper paves the
way to the introduction of new efficient statistical algorithms.Comment: preprint of a submission to GSI 2017 conferenc
Free Differential Algebras: Their Use in Field Theory and Dual Formulation
The gauging of free differential algebras (FDA's) produces gauge field
theories containing antisymmetric tensors. The FDA's extend the Cartan-Maurer
equations of ordinary Lie algebras by incorporating p-form potentials (). We study here the algebra of FDA transformations. To every p-form in the
FDA we associate an extended Lie derivative generating a corresponding
``gauge" transformation. The field theory based on the FDA is invariant under
these new transformations. This gives geometrical meaning to the antisymmetric
tensors. The algebra of Lie derivatives is shown to close and provides the dual
formulation of FDA's.Comment: 10 pages, latex, no figures. Talk presented at the 4-th Colloquium on
"Quantum Groups and Integrable Sysytems", Prague, June 199
Reconstructing the geometric structure of a Riemannian symmetric space from its Satake diagram
The local geometry of a Riemannian symmetric space is described completely by
the Riemannian metric and the Riemannian curvature tensor of the space. In the
present article I describe how to compute these tensors for any Riemannian
symmetric space from the Satake diagram, in a way that is suited for the use
with computer algebra systems. As an example application, the totally geodesic
submanifolds of the Riemannian symmetric space SU(3)/SO(3) are classified.
The submission also contains an example implementation of the algorithms and
formulas of the paper as a package for Maple 10, the technical documentation
for this implementation, and a worksheet carrying out the computations for the
space SU(3)/SO(3) used in the proof of Proposition 6.1 of the paper.Comment: 23 pages, also contains two Maple worksheets and technical
documentatio
Population demography of an endangered lizard, the Blue Mountains Water Skink.
BACKGROUND: Information on the age structure within populations of an endangered species can facilitate effective management. The Blue Mountains Water Skink (Eulamprus leuraensis) is a viviparous scincid lizard that is restricted to < 40 isolated montane swamps in south-eastern Australia. We used skeletochronology of phalanges (corroborated by mark-recapture data) to estimate ages of 222 individuals from 13 populations.
RESULTS: These lizards grow rapidly, from neonatal size (30 mm snout-vent length) to adult size (about 70 mm SVL) within two to three years. Fecundity is low (mean 2.9 offspring per litter) and is affected by maternal body length and age. Offspring quality may decline with maternal age, based upon captive-born neonates (older females gave birth to slower offspring). In contrast to its broadly sympatric (and abundant) congener E. tympanum, E. leuraensis is short-lived (maximum 6 years, vs 15 years for E. tympanum). Litter size and offspring size are similar in the two species, but female E. leuraensis reproduce annually whereas many E. tympanum produce litters biennially. Thus, a low survival rate (rather than delayed maturation or low annual fecundity) is the key reason why E. leuraensis is endangered. Our 13 populations exhibited similar growth rates and population age structures despite substantial variation in elevation, geographic location and swamp size. However, larger populations (based on a genetic estimate of effective population size) contained older lizards, and thus a wider variance in ages.
CONCLUSION: Our study suggests that low adult survival rates, as well as specialisation on a rare and fragmented habitat type (montane swamps) contribute to the endangered status of the Blue Mountains Water Skink
Pubertal timing and body mass index gain from birth to maturity in relation with femoral neck BMD and distal tibia microstructure in healthy female subjects
Summary: Childhood body mass index (BMI) gain is linked to hip fracture risk in elderly. In healthy girls, menarcheal age is inversely related to BMI gain during childhood and to femoral neck areal bone mass density (aBMD) and distal tibia structural components at maturity. This study underscores the importance of pubertal timing in age-related fragility fracture risk. Introduction: Recent data point to a relationship between BMI change during childhood and hip fracture risk in later life. We hypothesized that BMI development is linked to variation in pubertal timing as assessed by menarcheal age (MENA) which in turn, is related to peak bone mass (PBM) and hip fracture risk in elderly. Methods: We studied in a 124 healthy female cohort the relationship between MENA and BMI from birth to maturity, and DXA-measured femoral neck (FN) aBMD at 20.4year. At this age, we also measured bone strength related microstructure components of distal tibia by HR-pQCT. Results: At 20.4 ± 0.6year, FN aBMD (mg/cm2), cortical thickness (μm), and trabecular density (mgHA/cm3) of distal tibia were inversely related to MENA (P = 0.023, 0.015, and 0.041, respectively) and positively to BMI changes from 1.0 to 12.4years (P = 0.031, 0.089, 0.016, respectively). Significant inverse (P < 0.022 to <0.001) correlations (R = −0.21 to -0.42) were found between MENA and BMI from 7.9 to 20.4years, but neither at birth nor at 1.0year. Linear regression indicated that MENA Z-score was inversely related to BMI changes not only from 1.0 to 12.4years (R = −0.35, P = 0.001), but also from 1.0 to 8.9years, (R = −0.24, P = 0.017), i.e., before pubertal maturation. Conclusion: BMI gain during childhood is associated with pubertal timing, which in turn, is correlated with several bone traits measured at PBM including FN aBMD, cortical thickness, and volumetric trabecular density of distal tibia. These data complement the reported relationship between childhood BMI gain and hip fracture risk in later lif
On the embeddability of certain infinitely divisible probability measures on Lie groups
We describe certain sufficient conditions for an infinitely divisible
probability measure on a class of connected Lie groups to be embeddable in a
continuous one-parameter convolution semigroup of probability measures.
(Theorem 1.3). This enables us in particular to conclude the embeddability of
all infinitely divisible probability measures on certain Lie groups, including
the so called Walnut group (Corollary 1.5). The embeddability is concluded also
under certain other conditions (Corollary 1.4 and Theorem 1.6).Comment: 24 page
Quantum affine Cartan matrices, Poincare series of binary polyhedral groups, and reflection representations
We first review some invariant theoretic results about the finite subgroups
of SU(2) in a quick algebraic way by using the McKay correspondence and quantum
affine Cartan matrices. By the way it turns out that some parameters
(a,b,h;p,q,r) that one usually associates with such a group and hence with a
simply-laced Coxeter-Dynkin diagram have a meaningful definition for the
non-simply-laced diagrams, too, and as a byproduct we extend Saito's formula
for the determinant of the Cartan matrix to all cases. Returning to invariant
theory we show that for each irreducible representation i of a binary
tetrahedral, octahedral, or icosahedral group one can find a homomorphism into
a finite complex reflection group whose defining reflection representation
restricts to i.Comment: 19 page
A spacetime not characterised by its invariants is of aligned type II
By using invariant theory we show that a (higher-dimensional) Lorentzian
metric that is not characterised by its invariants must be of aligned type II;
i.e., there exists a frame such that all the curvature tensors are
simultaneously of type II. This implies, using the boost-weight decomposition,
that for such a metric there exists a frame such that all positive boost-weight
components are zero. Indeed, we show a more general result, namely that any set
of tensors which is not characterised by its invariants, must be of aligned
type II. This result enables us to prove a number of related results, among
them the algebraic VSI conjecture.Comment: 14pages, CQG to appea
Generalized Weierstrass Relations and Frobenius reciprocity
This article investigates local properties of the further generalized
Weierstrass relations for a spin manifold immersed in a higher dimensional
spin manifold from viewpoint of study of submanifold quantum mechanics. We
show that kernel of a certain Dirac operator defined over , which we call
submanifold Dirac operator, gives the data of the immersion. In the derivation,
the simple Frobenius reciprocity of Clifford algebras and plays
important roles.Comment: 17pages. to be published in Mathematical Physics, Analysis and
Geometr
A planar extrapolation of the correlation problem that permits pairing
It was observed previously that an SU(N) extension of the Hubbard model is
dominated, at large N, by planar diagrams in the sense of 't Hooft, but the
possibility of superconducting pairing got lost in this extrapolation. To allow
for this possibility, we replace SU(N) by U(N,q), the unitary group in a vector
space of quaternions. At the level of the free energy, the difference between
the SU(N)and U(N,q) extrapolations appears only to first nonleading order in N.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
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